Is there a plugin or script to open ctags entries in a new tab? I'd like to put my cursor over a function, press ctrl+] and have the entry open in another tab. I'd also like if I visually select an entry, for ctrl+] to still work and open in a new vim tab.
4 Answers
You can
C-wC-]C-wT
To achieve that effect
Then you can also map that:
:nnoremap <silent><Leader><C-]> <C-w><C-]><C-w>T
Edit: also, depending on what you actually want, don't forget you can open tags in preview (:ptag
) with e.g. C-w}. Just mentioning it in case...
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1sadly, if the tag operation halts for any reason, this doesn't work. For example, if there are multiple tags and I have to pick between them. Any solution? Jun 7, 2011 at 7:32
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@uɐɾɹɐʇ ןnɐd: that will depend on your definition of
<C-w><C-]>
- with me it appears to always jump to the tag with highest prio without asking (as documented). Perhaps you have interfering mappings, see:verbose map <C-w>
,:verbose imap <C-w>
etc– seheJun 7, 2011 at 9:24 -
It breaks when the tag jump fails for some reason or another. Maybe there are multiple files I have to choose from, or the file is open in another buffer. Any ideas how to deal with that? Jul 10, 2011 at 7:34
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@uɐɾɹɐʇ ןnɐd: what I said in my previous comment... docs; Did you try mapping ex commands, instead of
normal mode
commands? You could use:stag!
instead, or even:silent! stag!
. Tip: Sneak in ex commands in ainsert mode
mapping using<C-o>
– seheJul 10, 2011 at 23:08 -
1Boom! The
set switchbuf=useopen/usetab
did the trick! You're my favorite, this is gamechanging Feb 8, 2019 at 0:49
Here are two pretty ad-hoc mappings (in case your tags are generated by ctags
):
nnoremap <C-]> :tabnew %<CR>g<C-]>
vnoremap <C-]> <Esc>:tabnew %<CR>gvg<C-]>
First we open current buffer in a new tab; then we try to jump to a tag under cursor (g<C-]>
, which is equal to :tjump
, jumps to the tag directly if there's only one match, or provides a list of matches if there are many).
Pros:
Cons:
- if you exit from list of matches without choosing any of them, the newly created tab will remain open
- the same happens if there are no matches at all
P.S. Could you provide a use case for visual mode mapping?
P.P.S. If you generate tags with cscope (which is better than ctags
) and use its vim mappings, replace the above mappings with the following ones:
nnoremap <C-]> :tabnew %<CR><C-]>
vnoremap <C-]> <Esc>tabnew %<CR>gv<C-]>
-
For visual mode mapping, our codebase has some classes in them named
foo:bar:baz
but my ctags breaks on:
since I don't want to selectfoo::bar
as one entity. So I usually go into visual mode overfoo:bar:baz
to jump to it. Jul 30, 2011 at 5:08 -
I see. So have these mappings helped? The commands used in them are pretty general, so hopefully they work everywhere without conflicts.– dorsergAug 2, 2011 at 12:23
In case somebody is still looking for a solution. On this solution when no tag is found no more blank tab will be left.
function! w:GoToTag(tagWord)
let l:tagfile = &tags
:tabe
execute 'set tags=' . l:tagfile
execute ':silent tjump ' . a:tagWord
let l:tagFilename = expand('%:t')
if l:tagFilename == ''
:tabclose
:tabprevious
endif
endfunction
You can set up a keyboard shortcut, 'g' followed by CONTROL-], in ~/.vimrc as follows:
nmap g<C-]> :execute 'tab tag '.expand('<cword>')<CR>
nmap means 'when in normal mode'
g<C-j> is the shortcut, 'g' followed by CTRL-]
execute is a means of executing a command passed as a string
tab tag means "open a new tab and run 'ta'"
expand is used to expansion of a vim item
<cword> means a word the same as used for '*'. See also <cWORD>
You can test "tab ta" via :tab tag functionname
<C-\>
to toggle NERDTree. You can totally map<C-\>
:)