Yesterday, after looking for a solution to a common problem I experience everyday, namely having many shells scattered throughout many tmux sessions, I stumbled upon this question:
How to merge 4 windows in to 4 evenly spaced panes?
The topic of this question indicates, that it's about tmux sessions. As for a definition of a session in this context, the tmux man page states clearly:
A session is a single collection of pseudo terminals under the management of tmux.
Each session has one or more windows linked to it.
A window occupies the entire screen and may be split into rectangular panes, each of which is a separate pseudo terminal.
Tmux session is an object that resides on a tmux server, and aggregates windows and panes.
From the question contents and it's accepted answer however, it seems that the author is asking about merging tmux windows, not sessions.
The tmux join-pane
command, that the author said he tried to accomplish his task with, has nothing to do with tmux session merging.
The accepted answer to that question gives a simple method of layouting panes throughout the window, which, again, has nothing to do with tmux session merging.
This question is the first link that pops up in Google when researching the above problem.
Whereas the fourth (third on mine, results may vary) link is a link to an issue on GitHub's repository of tmuxomatic, which proposes a feature intended to solve exactly the problem I have to cope with everyday: merge multiple tmux sessions into one.
Frustrated by the turnout of events, I posted an edit to this question, that changed the topic of the question, and improved it here-and-there.
I made a clear comment in that edit, that the original poster confuses a concept of session with a concept of window.
This edit however, was for some reason rejected, on a basis of "deviating from original poster's intent". Which leads me to believe, that the people who reviewed the edit have never actually used tmux, and are also confusing the two concepts.
Who is in the right? Am I missing something? How can I resolve this issue in the future, namely how to prove such edit's correctness, in a face of the complicated nature of information that it could contain?
tmux
a developer tool? I don't see any code, just command lines.