293

I have split my windows horizontally. Now how can I return to normal mode, i.e. no split window just one window without cancelling all of my open windows. I have 5 and do not want to "quit", just want to get out of split window.

1
  • 7
    Any chance you could accept eckes's answer? It's much more helpful than the currently-accepted one... Apr 2, 2014 at 17:20

11 Answers 11

387

Press Control+w, then hit q to close each window at a time.

Update: Also consider eckes answer which may be more useful to you, involving :on (read below) if you don't want to do it one window at a time.

11
  • 9
    I agree but the OP didn't pick eckes answer, and I can't change it myself.
    – Warren P
    Feb 25, 2013 at 18:09
  • 4
    I am pretty sure that this is the correct answer. This did it for me and if you look at op's question, he did not want to close his other open windows, just the recently split one.
    – Zak
    Jul 8, 2014 at 22:34
  • 1
    Does not help if the shown buffer contains unsaved changes. It says I should override with ! but I don't know how. As a newbie I'm lost now.
    – musiKk
    Aug 6, 2015 at 17:48
  • 2
    so save it. You don't need this answer if you don't know how to save. It is possible you don't even have PERMISSION to save.
    – Warren P
    Aug 7, 2015 at 20:03
  • 3
    If the buffer contains unsaved changes, you can quit from it with :q! . Meaning, "I want to quit this one! Really!"
    – Mike S
    Oct 7, 2015 at 20:07
319

To close all splits, I usually place the cursor in the window that shall be the on-ly visible one and then do :on which makes the current window the on-ly visible window. Nice mnemonic to remember.


Edit: :help :on showed me that these commands are the same:

  • :on
  • :only
  • CTRL-w CTRL-o
  • And yes, also CTRL-W o has the same effect (as Nathan answered).

Each of these four closes all windows except the active one.

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  • 8
    +1 If the other window contains any unintended changes, :on will respond with E445: Other window contains changes and will not close the other window. For example, I usually create a new window, and read into it a file that I'd like to yank from. In this case, Vim considers the other window to have unwritten changes. In such a case, use :on! to force a close.
    – Sabuncu
    Jun 16, 2013 at 19:44
70

to close all windows but the current one use:

CTRL+w, o

That is, first CTRL+w and then o.

2
40

Two alternatives for closing the current window are ZZ and ZQ, which will, respectively, save and not save changes to the displayed buffer.

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  • 12
    This is surely the "vim way", crtl+w o seems so emacs. Nov 7, 2014 at 8:04
  • 1
    I dislike Z because I'm German. (Spoiler: Keyboard layout if you frequently switch between DE/EN setting)
    – Tino
    Apr 9, 2020 at 12:53
17

From :help opening-window (search for "Closing a window" - /Closing a window)

  • :q[uit] close the current window and buffer. If it is the last window it will also exit vim
  • :bd[elete] unload the current buffer and close the current window
  • :qa[all] or :quita[ll] will close all buffers and windows and exit vim (:qa! to force without saving changes)
  • :clo[se] close the current window but keep the buffer open. If there is only one window this command fails
  • :hid[e] hide the buffer in the current window (Read more at :help hidden)
  • :on[ly] close all other windows but leave all buffers open
8

The command :hide will hide the currently focused window. I think this is the functionality you are looking for.

In order to navigate between windows type Ctrl+w followed by a navigation key (h,j,k,l, or arrow keys)

For more information run :help window and :help hide in vim.

1
  • This is great. Chrome (with the ssh plugin) traps <C-W> as "close tab" effectively disabling all vim's <c-w> window commands. Having an alternative is useful.
    – rein
    May 13, 2013 at 22:01
7

I found that ctrl + w to the window you want to close, then just do :q. This works for me.

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  • This is a duplicate answer really, duplicate of something that's been sitting there for 3+ years.
    – Warren P
    Sep 26, 2016 at 12:58
  • @WarrenP does not look like a dup. I did not find any other answer which mentions ^W^W:q as a possible solution so get rid of a split. Note that ^W to the window you want to close apparently implies multiple uses of ^W^W to switch to the window you want to close ..
    – Tino
    Apr 9, 2020 at 12:41
  • My bad. The other is ^W then o
    – Warren P
    Apr 17, 2020 at 23:16
2

Just like the others said before the way to do this is to press ctrl+w and then o. This will "maximize" the current window, while closing the others. If you'd like to be able to "unmaximize" it, there's a plugin called ZoomWin for that. Otherwise you'd have to recreate the window setup from scratch.

2

I understand you intention well, I use buffers exclusively too, and occasionally do split if needed.

below is excerpt of my .vimrc

" disable macro, since not used in 90+% use cases
map q <Nop>
" q,  close/hide current window, or quit vim if no other window
nnoremap q :if winnr('$') > 1 \|hide\|else\|silent! exec 'q'\|endif<CR>
" qo, close all other window    -- 'o' stands for 'only'
nnoremap qo :only<CR>
set hidden
set timeout
set timeoutlen=200   " let vim wait less for your typing!

Which fits my workflow quite well

If q was pressed

  • hide current window if multiple window open, else try to quit vim.

if qo was pressed,

  • close all other window, no effect if only one window.

Of course, you can wrap that messy part into a function, eg

func! Hide_cur_window_or_quit_vim()
    if winnr('$') > 1
        hide
    else
        silent! exec 'q'
    endif
endfunc
nnoremap q :call Hide_cur_window_or_quit_vim()<CR>

Sidenote: I remap q, since I do not use macro for editing, instead use :s, :g, :v, and external text processing command if needed, eg, :'{,'}!awk 'some_programm', or use :norm! normal-command-here.

1

Provide the window number to close a specific window without leaving the current one:

:[N]close
:close[N]
:[N]quit
:quit[N]
Ctrl-W[N]c

The window number can be displayed in the status line by the following settings:

:set statusline+=%{tabpagewinnr(tabpagenr())}
0

Okay I just detached and reattach to the screen session and I am back to normal screen I wanted

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  • This does not leave vim's split window mode, this just leaves screen's split pane mode - which can be easily mistaken, so perhaps others do, too. BTW I find this screen feature annoying, hence I now default to tmux which allows a reattach with all splits intact.
    – Tino
    Apr 9, 2020 at 12:48

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