66

I want a file to be opened in a new tab when I enter or double click it. I know there is t shortcut but I always open a file in a new tab and enter is more confortable for me.

7 Answers 7

99

s will open the file currently under the cursor in a new vertically split window. Use t to open in a new tab.

2
  • Nice. This closes NERDTree window. Is there anyway to keep it open.
    – Bakul G
    May 13, 2020 at 20:47
  • 2
    Found that 'T' opens in new tab
    – Bakul G
    May 13, 2020 at 20:48
30

Try adding

let NERDTreeMapOpenInTab='\r'

or

let NERDTreeMapOpenInTab='<ENTER>'

to your .vimrc.

6
  • 24
    This also causes enter on a directory to open in a new tab.
    – alice
    Dec 31, 2011 at 9:17
  • 3
    how to traverse between file tabs in vim ?
    – navyad
    Apr 29, 2014 at 9:16
  • 2
    It doesn't work with gvim x32 with my windows 7 x64. Any idea?
    – kirin
    May 14, 2015 at 2:30
  • There is this NerdTree + tabs plugin: github.com/jistr/vim-nerdtree-tabs could be useful.
    – anh_ng8
    Oct 11, 2016 at 12:02
  • 1
    @alice @oarfish try this: let NERDTreeMapActivateNode='v' - you can use the v key to open/close directory nodes.
    – bvpx
    Dec 13, 2017 at 19:54
12

As described in section NERDTreeCustomOpenArgs of the NerdTree help, you can use this option to control the opening behavior of files and directories. Add the following statement to your .vimrc:

let NERDTreeCustomOpenArgs={'file':{'where': 't'}}

This ensures in this case that only files in a new tab are opened. All other combinations can be found in the help.

0
10

You may want to add https://github.com/Nopik/vim-nerdtree-direnter plugin as well - it fixes the directory opening problem, so enter on directory node will just expand/collapse, not open new tab.

1
2
+25

I use following map to do tab traverse :

nnoremap <C-l> gt
nnoremap <C-h> gT
1
  • Also, would this not conflict the default mapping of moving between split panes? Because I have tried doing exactly this.
    – Aman
    Oct 5, 2020 at 13:07
2

Add this to the plugin. It needs to be added to a file such as: ~/.vim/nerdtree_plugin/mymapping.vim. The exact location will depend on what plugin manager you use for vim. e.g. for Plugged it is ~/.vim/plugged/nerdtree/nerdtree_plugin/mymapping.vim

This code adds a mapping for the enter key to open files in a new tab while just expanding/collapsing directories. For the new tabs it also mirrors the NERDTree so it can be shared between tabs.

call NERDTreeAddKeyMap({
  \ 'key': '<CR>',
  \ 'scope': "Node",
  \ 'callback': 'OpenInNewTab',
  \ 'quickhelpText': 'open node' })


" FUNCTION: s:openInNewTab(target) {{{1
function! OpenInNewTab(node)
  if a:node.path.isDirectory
    call a:node.activate()
  else
    call a:node.activate({'where': 't'})
    call g:NERDTreeCreator.CreateMirror()
    wincmd l
  endif
endfunction
1
  • Will this be overwritten if I need to update the plugin? I assume it will if I delete then reinstall it.
    – user3827326
    Sep 15, 2017 at 14:43
0

For the double-click event specifically, it is (only?) possible by slightly changing the NERDtree source code (posted here):

https://stackoverflow.com/a/31570970/5144840

2
  • 2
    Please, add the relevant information from your link into your answer.
    – Fjodr
    Jul 22, 2015 at 18:42
  • Changing the source code is a very bad idea, especially since NerdTree offers a lot of options for configuration.
    – chrboesch
    Jun 16, 2020 at 7:31

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