How not to switch past the edge of panes in tmux












3















By default, tmux passes over edge of a pane. For example, suppose there are two panes, pane 1 and pane 2. Suppose you're at pane 1 and you do Ctrl+b, you're at the pane 2. If you again do Ctrl+b, you'll be again at pane 1. How can I disable that feature so, when I'm navigating from the last pane, I don't go anywhere?










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    3















    By default, tmux passes over edge of a pane. For example, suppose there are two panes, pane 1 and pane 2. Suppose you're at pane 1 and you do Ctrl+b, you're at the pane 2. If you again do Ctrl+b, you'll be again at pane 1. How can I disable that feature so, when I'm navigating from the last pane, I don't go anywhere?










    share|improve this question



























      3












      3








      3








      By default, tmux passes over edge of a pane. For example, suppose there are two panes, pane 1 and pane 2. Suppose you're at pane 1 and you do Ctrl+b, you're at the pane 2. If you again do Ctrl+b, you'll be again at pane 1. How can I disable that feature so, when I'm navigating from the last pane, I don't go anywhere?










      share|improve this question
















      By default, tmux passes over edge of a pane. For example, suppose there are two panes, pane 1 and pane 2. Suppose you're at pane 1 and you do Ctrl+b, you're at the pane 2. If you again do Ctrl+b, you'll be again at pane 1. How can I disable that feature so, when I'm navigating from the last pane, I don't go anywhere?







      tmux






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      edited 21 mins ago







      klaus

















      asked Jun 23 '18 at 8:26









      klausklaus

      2199




      2199






















          2 Answers
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          4














          This is a bit of a hack but might be good enough for you. From version 2.3 you can find the x and y co-ordinate of each pane's borders. For example, display -p #{pane_right} for a pane at the right-hand edge of an 80 column terminal would be 79. If you give the command to move right to the next pane, and the new pane's pane_right is, for example, 39, then you have moved left, so you will want to move back to the previous pane with select-pane -l.



          You can run most tmux commands from a shell script, so create the following file mytmux in your PATH and make it executable (chmod +x mytmux):



          #!/bin/bash
          # https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/451473/119298
          restrict(){
          case $1 in
          U) d=-U p=pane_top cmp=-gt ;;
          D) d=-D p=pane_bottom cmp=-lt ;;
          L) d=-L p=pane_left cmp=-gt ;;
          R) d=-R p=pane_right cmp=-lt ;;
          *) exit 1 ;;
          esac
          old=$(tmux display -p "#{$p}")
          tmux select-pane "$d"
          new=$(tmux display -p "#{$p}")
          [ "$new" "$cmp" "$old" ] && tmux select-pane -l
          exit 0
          }
          case $1 in
          -restrict)shift
          restrict "${1?direction}" ;;
          esac


          then setup the following bindings in your ~/.tmux.conf:



          bind-key -r -T prefix Up    run-shell 'mytmux -restrict U'
          bind-key -r -T prefix Down run-shell 'mytmux -restrict D'
          bind-key -r -T prefix Left run-shell 'mytmux -restrict L'
          bind-key -r -T prefix Right run-shell 'mytmux -restrict R'


          You will need to extend this if you want to handle multiple sessions, for example.






          share|improve this answer

































            0














            The PrefixArrow keys are by default bound like



            bind-key -r -T prefix       Up                select-pane -U
            bind-key -r -T prefix Down select-pane -D
            bind-key -r -T prefix Left select-pane -L
            bind-key -r -T prefix Right select-pane -R


            The select-pane function does not have an option that tells it "don't cycle when you've reached the last pane in that direction".



            Looking at the source code that is executed for select-pane, it looks like the cycling left/right and top/bottom is hard-coded in, which means that it's unlikely to be easy to stop it from behaving in this way.






            share|improve this answer























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              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

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              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              4














              This is a bit of a hack but might be good enough for you. From version 2.3 you can find the x and y co-ordinate of each pane's borders. For example, display -p #{pane_right} for a pane at the right-hand edge of an 80 column terminal would be 79. If you give the command to move right to the next pane, and the new pane's pane_right is, for example, 39, then you have moved left, so you will want to move back to the previous pane with select-pane -l.



              You can run most tmux commands from a shell script, so create the following file mytmux in your PATH and make it executable (chmod +x mytmux):



              #!/bin/bash
              # https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/451473/119298
              restrict(){
              case $1 in
              U) d=-U p=pane_top cmp=-gt ;;
              D) d=-D p=pane_bottom cmp=-lt ;;
              L) d=-L p=pane_left cmp=-gt ;;
              R) d=-R p=pane_right cmp=-lt ;;
              *) exit 1 ;;
              esac
              old=$(tmux display -p "#{$p}")
              tmux select-pane "$d"
              new=$(tmux display -p "#{$p}")
              [ "$new" "$cmp" "$old" ] && tmux select-pane -l
              exit 0
              }
              case $1 in
              -restrict)shift
              restrict "${1?direction}" ;;
              esac


              then setup the following bindings in your ~/.tmux.conf:



              bind-key -r -T prefix Up    run-shell 'mytmux -restrict U'
              bind-key -r -T prefix Down run-shell 'mytmux -restrict D'
              bind-key -r -T prefix Left run-shell 'mytmux -restrict L'
              bind-key -r -T prefix Right run-shell 'mytmux -restrict R'


              You will need to extend this if you want to handle multiple sessions, for example.






              share|improve this answer






























                4














                This is a bit of a hack but might be good enough for you. From version 2.3 you can find the x and y co-ordinate of each pane's borders. For example, display -p #{pane_right} for a pane at the right-hand edge of an 80 column terminal would be 79. If you give the command to move right to the next pane, and the new pane's pane_right is, for example, 39, then you have moved left, so you will want to move back to the previous pane with select-pane -l.



                You can run most tmux commands from a shell script, so create the following file mytmux in your PATH and make it executable (chmod +x mytmux):



                #!/bin/bash
                # https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/451473/119298
                restrict(){
                case $1 in
                U) d=-U p=pane_top cmp=-gt ;;
                D) d=-D p=pane_bottom cmp=-lt ;;
                L) d=-L p=pane_left cmp=-gt ;;
                R) d=-R p=pane_right cmp=-lt ;;
                *) exit 1 ;;
                esac
                old=$(tmux display -p "#{$p}")
                tmux select-pane "$d"
                new=$(tmux display -p "#{$p}")
                [ "$new" "$cmp" "$old" ] && tmux select-pane -l
                exit 0
                }
                case $1 in
                -restrict)shift
                restrict "${1?direction}" ;;
                esac


                then setup the following bindings in your ~/.tmux.conf:



                bind-key -r -T prefix Up    run-shell 'mytmux -restrict U'
                bind-key -r -T prefix Down run-shell 'mytmux -restrict D'
                bind-key -r -T prefix Left run-shell 'mytmux -restrict L'
                bind-key -r -T prefix Right run-shell 'mytmux -restrict R'


                You will need to extend this if you want to handle multiple sessions, for example.






                share|improve this answer




























                  4












                  4








                  4







                  This is a bit of a hack but might be good enough for you. From version 2.3 you can find the x and y co-ordinate of each pane's borders. For example, display -p #{pane_right} for a pane at the right-hand edge of an 80 column terminal would be 79. If you give the command to move right to the next pane, and the new pane's pane_right is, for example, 39, then you have moved left, so you will want to move back to the previous pane with select-pane -l.



                  You can run most tmux commands from a shell script, so create the following file mytmux in your PATH and make it executable (chmod +x mytmux):



                  #!/bin/bash
                  # https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/451473/119298
                  restrict(){
                  case $1 in
                  U) d=-U p=pane_top cmp=-gt ;;
                  D) d=-D p=pane_bottom cmp=-lt ;;
                  L) d=-L p=pane_left cmp=-gt ;;
                  R) d=-R p=pane_right cmp=-lt ;;
                  *) exit 1 ;;
                  esac
                  old=$(tmux display -p "#{$p}")
                  tmux select-pane "$d"
                  new=$(tmux display -p "#{$p}")
                  [ "$new" "$cmp" "$old" ] && tmux select-pane -l
                  exit 0
                  }
                  case $1 in
                  -restrict)shift
                  restrict "${1?direction}" ;;
                  esac


                  then setup the following bindings in your ~/.tmux.conf:



                  bind-key -r -T prefix Up    run-shell 'mytmux -restrict U'
                  bind-key -r -T prefix Down run-shell 'mytmux -restrict D'
                  bind-key -r -T prefix Left run-shell 'mytmux -restrict L'
                  bind-key -r -T prefix Right run-shell 'mytmux -restrict R'


                  You will need to extend this if you want to handle multiple sessions, for example.






                  share|improve this answer















                  This is a bit of a hack but might be good enough for you. From version 2.3 you can find the x and y co-ordinate of each pane's borders. For example, display -p #{pane_right} for a pane at the right-hand edge of an 80 column terminal would be 79. If you give the command to move right to the next pane, and the new pane's pane_right is, for example, 39, then you have moved left, so you will want to move back to the previous pane with select-pane -l.



                  You can run most tmux commands from a shell script, so create the following file mytmux in your PATH and make it executable (chmod +x mytmux):



                  #!/bin/bash
                  # https://unix.stackexchange.com/a/451473/119298
                  restrict(){
                  case $1 in
                  U) d=-U p=pane_top cmp=-gt ;;
                  D) d=-D p=pane_bottom cmp=-lt ;;
                  L) d=-L p=pane_left cmp=-gt ;;
                  R) d=-R p=pane_right cmp=-lt ;;
                  *) exit 1 ;;
                  esac
                  old=$(tmux display -p "#{$p}")
                  tmux select-pane "$d"
                  new=$(tmux display -p "#{$p}")
                  [ "$new" "$cmp" "$old" ] && tmux select-pane -l
                  exit 0
                  }
                  case $1 in
                  -restrict)shift
                  restrict "${1?direction}" ;;
                  esac


                  then setup the following bindings in your ~/.tmux.conf:



                  bind-key -r -T prefix Up    run-shell 'mytmux -restrict U'
                  bind-key -r -T prefix Down run-shell 'mytmux -restrict D'
                  bind-key -r -T prefix Left run-shell 'mytmux -restrict L'
                  bind-key -r -T prefix Right run-shell 'mytmux -restrict R'


                  You will need to extend this if you want to handle multiple sessions, for example.







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited Jun 23 '18 at 14:42

























                  answered Jun 23 '18 at 14:23









                  meuhmeuh

                  32.3k12054




                  32.3k12054

























                      0














                      The PrefixArrow keys are by default bound like



                      bind-key -r -T prefix       Up                select-pane -U
                      bind-key -r -T prefix Down select-pane -D
                      bind-key -r -T prefix Left select-pane -L
                      bind-key -r -T prefix Right select-pane -R


                      The select-pane function does not have an option that tells it "don't cycle when you've reached the last pane in that direction".



                      Looking at the source code that is executed for select-pane, it looks like the cycling left/right and top/bottom is hard-coded in, which means that it's unlikely to be easy to stop it from behaving in this way.






                      share|improve this answer




























                        0














                        The PrefixArrow keys are by default bound like



                        bind-key -r -T prefix       Up                select-pane -U
                        bind-key -r -T prefix Down select-pane -D
                        bind-key -r -T prefix Left select-pane -L
                        bind-key -r -T prefix Right select-pane -R


                        The select-pane function does not have an option that tells it "don't cycle when you've reached the last pane in that direction".



                        Looking at the source code that is executed for select-pane, it looks like the cycling left/right and top/bottom is hard-coded in, which means that it's unlikely to be easy to stop it from behaving in this way.






                        share|improve this answer


























                          0












                          0








                          0







                          The PrefixArrow keys are by default bound like



                          bind-key -r -T prefix       Up                select-pane -U
                          bind-key -r -T prefix Down select-pane -D
                          bind-key -r -T prefix Left select-pane -L
                          bind-key -r -T prefix Right select-pane -R


                          The select-pane function does not have an option that tells it "don't cycle when you've reached the last pane in that direction".



                          Looking at the source code that is executed for select-pane, it looks like the cycling left/right and top/bottom is hard-coded in, which means that it's unlikely to be easy to stop it from behaving in this way.






                          share|improve this answer













                          The PrefixArrow keys are by default bound like



                          bind-key -r -T prefix       Up                select-pane -U
                          bind-key -r -T prefix Down select-pane -D
                          bind-key -r -T prefix Left select-pane -L
                          bind-key -r -T prefix Right select-pane -R


                          The select-pane function does not have an option that tells it "don't cycle when you've reached the last pane in that direction".



                          Looking at the source code that is executed for select-pane, it looks like the cycling left/right and top/bottom is hard-coded in, which means that it's unlikely to be easy to stop it from behaving in this way.







                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered Jun 23 '18 at 9:37









                          KusalanandaKusalananda

                          132k17253416




                          132k17253416






























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