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I usually use cscope to browse my code. Whenever I hit C ] the current buffer I am reading changes and the file containing the definition is shown.

Suppose I have already a tab in vim with that file already open: is there anyway to jump from my current location directly to that file that is already open?

I don't need to split but just jump to a file already open in a buffer.

2 Answers 2

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You could come close to what you want with a combination of options:

" use the quickfix list/window for all cscope queries
set cscopequickfix=s-,g-,c-,d-,i-,t-,e-

" quickfix commands jump to the target buffer where it is displayed
set switchbuf=useopen,usetab

and a remapping:

" override the default <C-]> behaviour
nnoremap <C-]> :cs f g <C-R><C-w><CR>
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  • What are the advantages of this mapping over `set cscopetag'? Apr 24, 2014 at 15:37
  • @PeterRincker, cscopetag was my first idea but it doesn't have the expected behavior here. If it's only me, then set cscopetag is obviously a cleaner approach.
    – romainl
    Apr 24, 2014 at 15:51
  • I am not going to lie, 'cscopetag' has really let me down here. I just tried it and it doesn't obey 'switchbuf' option (7.4 patches 1-52). Is this a bug? or feature? Apr 24, 2014 at 16:12
  • @PeterRincker, 7.4.131 here. I'm fairly confident I experienced the same misbehavior in earlier 7.3 releases both on Linux and on Mac OS X: :cstag works as expected but <C-]> doesn't. Hence the seemingly superfluous mapping.
    – romainl
    Apr 24, 2014 at 16:54
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For normal tags, there's the <C-W>] mapping and :stag command that splits the window before the tag jump.

For cscope, there's :cstag, but no :scstag, so you'd have to do separate commands, e.g.:

:split | cstag ...

You probably can modify / add the C ] mapping that you have in this way.

Ideally, this would consider the 'switchbuf' setting, and re-use an existing window showing that target buffer instead of doing a split. Unfortunately, Vim current doesn't behave this way, and implementing this yourself is difficult, mostly because you somehow have to get the target file before the jump to check the buffer availability via bufwinnr().

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  • Thanks but I don't really need to split. I was looking just to jump to a file already open in VIM. Apr 24, 2014 at 14:11
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    Well, I was thinking of the 'switchbuf' feature; added an explanation. Apr 24, 2014 at 14:40

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