let curfile = @%
and added that to:
and it seems to work for me. I'm assuming mvim is lacking something gvim automatically does.
On Friday, June 11, 2021 at 11:47:15 AM UTC-4 rwmit...@gmail.com wrote:
I tried it. I'm using MacVim. I edited the plugin replacing 'gvim' with 'mvim'.It closes the current tab (good), opens a new macvim window (good) that is empty (bad).I'm guessing the purpose of creating a new tmpname is to hold the contents of the current buffer without forcing it to be saved first, except the current buffer isn't getting written?On Thursday, June 10, 2021 at 7:56:56 PM UTC-4 Charles Campbell wrote:L A Walsh wrote:
> If I use split, I can create a separate panel that
> is a view on a file.
>
> How can I undock it?
>
Its not exactly what you're asking for, but I wrote something called
"Detach" which will detach a tab into its own process. ctrl-w T will
move a window into a new tab. The :Detach command will cause the
currently visible tab and all its windows to be brought up in a separate
gvim. Detaching a tab yields two independent instances of vim/gvim: they
do not share variables, vim functions, etc. If you're interested, you
may get it from http://www.drchip.org/astronaut/vim.index.html#DETACH .
Regards,
Chip Campbell
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