169

Is there a way to take an existing window (split) and put it into a new tab?

0

4 Answers 4

298

As well as the previously suggested :tabedit approach, a quicker way of doing it is (in normal mode) to hit Ctrl-W Shift-T. Ctrl-W is the general prefix for a wide variety of window manipulation commands.

See:

:help Ctrl-W_T
:help Ctrl-W
8
  • 4
    Note that help Ctrl-W_T takes you to the help entry of Ctrl-W_t (lower case), however, further down the page is the Ctrl-W_T entry (with capital T), saying "Move the current window to a new tab page...." Oct 19, 2012 at 10:04
  • 1
    @DrAl and how we move a new tab window to split window? Dec 6, 2012 at 8:54
  • @RamizUddin There's no simple way of doing this (as it isn't obvious which window you want to split into). However, you can find out the buffer number for your current tab page with :echo bufnr("") and using this number you can split a window with :sp #3 or :sb 3 (assuming the number was 3). You may be able to come up with some mappings or functions to simplify this.
    – DrAl
    Feb 25, 2013 at 10:08
  • 1
    How do you move the buffer to a new tab, keeping it's undo/redo state. In other words, I don't want to open the same file in a new tab, I want to literally move the buffer to a new tab, so the edit history can be used in the new tab. If there is no default way to do this, I bet a plugin can be made that adds a new shortcut for doing this that writes the undo history to the swap file for the new buffer.
    – trusktr
    Mar 22, 2013 at 23:50
  • 2
    @trusktr I'd imagine that opening the buffer in a new tab with :sb would work, but with recent versions of Vim (>= 7.3) you can also use persistent undo by setting set undodir=/path/to/dir where /path/to/dir is a directory you've created for the purpose and then set undofile. This will allow you quit vim and then restart and still retain the undo/redo state.
    – DrAl
    Mar 25, 2013 at 8:31
107

Try

:tabedit %<CR>
7
  • 3
    Just curious why you included the <CR> with that.
    – Swiss
    Nov 18, 2009 at 19:25
  • 19
    For the same reason I did include ":". This is the complete vim keys combination in normal mode and you can use this in 'nnoremap' and in 'nmap' Nov 18, 2009 at 19:49
  • 6
    This works as well except it clones/duplicates the window to a new tab as opposed to closing it first and then opening it in a new tab. Not a big deal. Just something to be aware of.
    – A-Dubb
    Sep 15, 2012 at 1:08
  • 6
    This doesn't move the buffer to a new tab, it just opens the same file in a new tab, but you will not have undo/redo history, etc.
    – trusktr
    Mar 22, 2013 at 23:48
  • 6
    C-w T is faster way to do the same thing Feb 21, 2017 at 6:52
4

This moves the newest buffer in a new tab and restores the previous buffer in the current tab. I use this after dragging a new file into my Gvim

:sbp |wincmd p| wincmd T

You can map it like that to Ctrl-Backspace

:nnoremap <C-BS> :sbp<bar>wincmd p<bar>wincmd T<CR>

it performs especially well with

:set switchbuf=usetab
1

I have been using this which gives you two functions which can be bound to a pair of hotkeys or commands, and which works quite intuitively. I am pretty sure it offers behavior even more friendly than e.g. Ctrl-W_T.

For example, when multiple windows are open in multiple tabs, using this function allows you to specifically move the current window to the next or previous tab, and if you move something to before the first tab or to after the last tab, then it turns into a whole new tab.

This means if you have 2 tabs, each having a single window, then moving the first tab's window to the right will combine it with the second tab to result in one single tab with two windows. I don't know how convoluted this operation is to achieve using traditional commands.

What this means is that a single pair of move commands allows for both shifting windows around the tabs, splitting windows out into tabs (by pushing a window out to the end) and joining separate tabs into windows inside of a single tab, pretty much everything you could possibly want, short of positional arrangement (which is a separate topic and which the built in Ctrl-W+Shift-HJKL commands work fine for).

4
  • Very elegant. Moved windows maintain history. Tabs are created if there’s none at the requested end. Thanks for sharing. Feb 10 at 15:41
  • 1
    I'll note that 9 years later I transitioned to a lua config and tried to port this vimscript into neovim lua code, but I failed. Never got it even close to working properly. So i gave up and shoved these into the VimL execution string that I already have (and is still pretty big) and I got this feature back again. It sucked not having it working right for a while.
    – Steven Lu
    Nov 20 at 6:11
  • My Neovim just inherited the large init.vim I had before with vanilla Vim, including this. I am guessing it could be faster if I go all lua with lazy loading but it works in meantime… Nov 22 at 6:37
  • yeah and if you ever make a robust lua port of this functionality, i'd love to know about it, the lua api isnt great in this area of window manipulation.
    – Steven Lu
    Dec 3 at 0:40

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.