A Vim plugin for labeling and manipulating tabs, visually styled after Powerline.
- User-definable tab labels.
- Default labels based on tab numbers.
- Tab number and window count in each tab.
- Commands to shift tabs left/right, move tabs, and jump to the last active tab.
- Powerline-inspired styling and glyphs.
Install via pathogen.vim:
cd ~/.vim/bundle
git clone https://github.com/fweep/vim-tabber.git
Add this to your .vimrc:
set tabline=%!tabber#TabLine()
If using GUI mode (e.g. MacVim), you also need:
set guioptions-=e
This will use a traditional terminal Vim tabline rather than real GUI widget tabs.
Tab labels default to pathshorten()
on the active buffer name. If the
buffer has no name, "[No Name]" is displayed. You can override the
default label for a tab and set your own. The tab will use your label
until you clear it or close the tab.
To set a label for the current tab:
:TabberLabel My Tab Name
To remove the label from the current tab:
:TabberClear
You can also set/remove labels on other tabs by prefixing the command with the tab number:
:4TabberLabel New Name For Tab Four
:4TabberClear
To create a new tab with a label:
:TabberNew Refactoring Controller
You can supply an optional count prefix to TabberNew, to specify where
the new tab should be opened. This behavior is the same as Vim's
:tabnew
. See :help tabnew
.
:TabberNew New Tab After Current Tab
:0TabberNew New First Tab
:2TabberNew New Third Tab
:999TabberNew New Last Tab
To move to the last active tab:
:TabberSelectLastActive
Shift current tab left/right:
:TabberShiftLeft
:TabberShiftRight
Move active tab to a new location:
:TabberMove <target tab number>
This is identical to :tabmove
.
Move tab 2 to tab 4:
:2TabberMove 3
Note that the tab is placed after the target tab, to follow the
:tabmove
convention. You can still use :tabmove
as well.
To swap tab 1 and tab 3:
:1TabberSwap 3
:3TabberSwap 1
If tab 1 is the current tab:
:3TabberSwap
:TabberSwap 3
With ,ts
mapped to :TabberSwap<CR>
:
3,ts
You can predefine label names that will be used when a matching tab number opens:
let g:tabber_predefined_labels = { 1: 'Models', 2: 'Views', 3: 'Controllers' }
If Vim opens with one tab, it will be labeled "Models". When you open a second tab, it will be named "Controllers". When you open a fourth tab, it will use the normal naming rules.
If the tabs are re-arranged (e.g. by inserting a tab before a labeled one), the label will stay with the tab it was originally assigned to.
If a default label is no longer in use—either because you renamed it, or because the tab was closed—the next tab to open in that slot will be assigned the default label.
You can set a default label for tabs created with :TabberNew
:
set g:tabber_default_user_label = 'Scratch'
You can set a default label for new tabs that are created without a label:
set g:tabber_default_unknown_label = 'Temp'
This will apply to tabs created by :tabnew
, by other plugins, etc. It
will apply to labels created by :TabberNew
if
g:tabber_default_user_label
is not set.
Predefined labels always take precedence over these options.
Prompt for a label if :TabberNew
or :TabberLabel
is called with no
arguments, and no defaults apply:
let g:tabber_prompt_for_new_label = 1
Wrap tabs when shifting:
let g:tabber_wrap_when_shifting = 1
Control what's shown in unlabeled tabs. If the current directory is
~jim
and ~/.vim/bundle/vim-tabber/README.md
is loaded in the active
window for the tab:
let g:tabber_filename_style = 'pathshorten' " .v/b/v/README.md
let g:tabber_filename_style = 'full' " /home/jim/.vim/bundle/vim-tabber/README.md
let g:tabber_filename_style = 'relative' " .vim/bundle/vim-tabber/README.md
let g:tabber_filename_style = 'filename' " README.md
Use different divider styles:
let g:tabber_divider_style = 'compatible'
let g:tabber_divider_style = 'unicode'
let g:tabber_divider_style = 'fancy'
Bind Ctrl-t to open a new tab at the end of the tab list with the label "Scratch":
nnoremap <C-t> :999TabberNew Scratch<CR>
Bind Ctrl-e to switch to the last active tab:
nnoremap <C-e> :TabberSelectLastActive<CR>
Tested with Vim and MacVim versions 7.3 and 7.4 in terminal mode, and
MacVim GUI mode with set guioptions-=e
. GUI mode with UI widget tabs
(the default) does not work, as it does not invoke the tabline
mechanism.
Tab labels are lost when saving/restoring sessions. If you have configured default labels, they will be applied.
These mappings mask the Vim default Ctrl-t for navigating the tag stack, and possibly conflict with other bindings you may have, but should show what can be done with the plugin. The maps allow me to move tabs around with a count prefix without leaving normal mode.
In ~/.vimrc
:
if filereadable('.vimrc-project')
source .vimrc-project
endif
set tabline=%!tabber#TabLine()
let g:tabber_wrap_when_shifting = 1
nnoremap <silent> <C-t> :999TabberNew<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader><Leader> :TabberSelectLastActive<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>tn :TabberNew<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>tm :TabberMove<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>tc :tabclose<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>tl :TabberShiftLeft<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>tr :TabberShiftRight<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>ts :TabberSwap<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>1 :tabnext 1<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>2 :tabnext 2<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>3 :tabnext 3<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>4 :tabnext 4<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>5 :tabnext 5<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>6 :tabnext 6<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>7 :tabnext 7<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>8 :tabnext 8<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Leader>9 :tabnext 9<CR>
In .vimrc-project
in a Rails app root directory:
let g:tabber_predefined_labels = { 1: 'Controllers', 2: 'Views', 3: 'Models' }
Right now, Tabber totally replaces your tabline. I'd like to figure out a way to plug this in to the regular tabline, so users can more easily configure it. The built-in tabline is already pretty configurable.
It'd be great if Tabber were as configurable as Powerline. I'm thinking about making Powerline a requirement, and leveraging all of its functions, including themes, etc. Since Lokaltog is in the middle of a Powerline rewrite, I'll wait and see what comes of that. He might include tabline support.
This could be split up into two plugins: one for styling and one for the tab manipulation utilities.
Thanks to Kim Silkebækken for writing the excellent Powerline plugin! Some of Tabber's code was copied from or modeled after Powerline, to match color schemes and symbols. Thanks also to Tim Pope and others for providing great code from which to learn Vimscript.
Copyright (C) 2012 Jim Stewart
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.