: Instead of multiple floating windows, Hogan teaches you to split your screen into panes (side-by-side or stacked). This allows you to have your code editor, test runner, and server logs all visible at once, navigated entirely via keyboard shortcuts.
: By default, tmux uses Ctrl-b as its "leader" key. The book suggests remapping this—often to Ctrl-a —to make it more ergonomic and closer to the home row. tmux 2: Productive Mouse-Free Development
Mastering the Home Row: A Guide to "tmux 2: Productive Mouse-Free Development" : Instead of multiple floating windows, Hogan teaches
Hogan’s guide focuses on transforming the terminal into a personalized IDE through several key pillars: The book suggests remapping this—often to Ctrl-a —to
In the fast-paced world of software engineering, productivity isn't just about how fast you type; it’s about how little you "context switch." Every time you reach for your mouse to resize a window or switch between your editor and a terminal, you break your flow. Brian P. Hogan's tmux 2: Productive Mouse-Free Development explores how to reclaim that lost time by mastering , a terminal multiplexer that allows you to manage your entire development environment from the home row . What is tmux?
: A major highlight of the second edition is the seamless navigation between tmux panes and Vim splits. By aligning your keybindings, you can move through your editor and terminal as if they were a single application.