

Select the pane on the left of the currently selected pane. Select the pane below the currently selected pane. Select the pane above the currently selected pane. Swap the currently selected pane with the next one in the index. Swap the currently selected pane with the previous one in the index. Select the next pane in the currently selected window. Put the currently selected pane to a different window. Show the pane index for the currently visible screen.Ĭreate a new vertically split pane in the current window.Ĭreate a new horizontally split pane in the current window. Search for windows that contain a specific text string. Open a prompt to interactively select the window to switch to. Open a prompt to directly switch to a specific index number. Go to the window with the corresponding index number. Go back to the previously selected window. Go to the previous window in the session.Ĭhange the index number of the current window. Move the current client to the next session.īriefly display information about the currently selected window.

Move the current client to the previous session. Open a prompt to select which session to detach. Send the leader key through the terminal.ĭetach the current session from the active terminal.

Shortcutĭisplay all the system messages for the current session. This cheatsheet aims to teach you the basics of how to use tmux’s arcane bindings. Therefore, you will likely still want to know how the default tmux system works. While it is possible to remap the tmux keybinding in your system, you may not be able to load a custom configuration into every system you might work with. Although tmux offers many benefits, one key difficulty new users run into with tmux is its unusual and unintuitive keybinding syntax.
