Hello, I could not find the command to open a buffer in its own tab -- what is it? (Somewhat like :sbuffer <partial> splits the window and opens the buffer whose name uniquely matches <partial>).
Thanks, --Suresh
Hello, I could not find the command to open a buffer in its own tab -- what is it? (Somewhat like :sbuffer <partial> splits the window and opens the buffer whose name uniquely matches <partial>).
Thanks, --Suresh