this post was submitted on 21 Jun 2023
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[โ€“] jnovinger 1 points 2 years ago (4 children)

Still getting used to this. I'm having a hard time opening side-by-side terminals.

I think my next step is to reduce my config down to just this and make sure nothing is interfering. But if anybody already figured this out, I'm all ears.

[โ€“] dmh 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

Iโ€™m having a hard time opening side-by-side terminals

Side-by-side how? the way I imagine this is starting with a single window with a regular buffer, then opening two toggleterm terminals in splits to end up like this:

If that's what you mean, all you need is to pass unique terminal ids as you call ToggleTerm.

  • :ToggleTerm 1<CR>
  • :ToggleTerm 2<CR>

You could then map that to whatever keys you want, like <c-1> and <c-2>:

vim.keymap.set('n', '<c-1>', ':ToggleTerm 1<CR>')
vim.keymap.set('n', '<c-2>', ':ToggleTerm 2<CR>')

I have a similar setup: https://github.com/davidmh/dot-files/blob/3b0e79919f231db1f3628f6fde06e9f78f347b87/nvim/fnl/own/plugin/toggle-term.fnl

  • ctrl + 1-5 for dedicated split terms
  • alt + 1-5 for dedicated tab terms
  • ctrl + t as a wildcard split term, that's my go to
  • alt + t to attach or start a tmux session in a tab
[โ€“] jnovinger 2 points 2 years ago

๐Ÿคฆโ€โ™‚๏ธ

Thank you

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