On Thu, Jan 14, 2016 at 11:19 PM, Ben Fritz <fritzophrenic@gmail.com> wrote:
> On Thursday, January 14, 2016 at 7:15:02 PM UTC-6, kamaraju kusumanchi wrote:
>>
>> When I code in large C++ projects, I have many tabs open in one gvim
>> window. This window spans across one whole monitor. Now when writing
>> new code to call a function, I want to split two tabs from this window
>> and move them to the second monitor. These tabs typically contain the
>> header file, another C++ file where a function was used before. This
>> way I can look at the API, sample usage and add code in the current
>> window.
>>
>
> Then perhaps, a simple :vsplit or :split command would serve your use-case? Or a :sb or :vert sb if the file is already open?
>
I am aware of :vsplit, :split. They are not sufficient. They split the
file in the current window. I want these to be new windows on the
other monitor as the current window already spans one monitor and I do
not want to change that view.
thanks
raju
--
Kamaraju S Kusumanchi | http://raju.shoutwiki.com/wiki/Blog
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Thursday, January 14, 2016
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