Comment by quanwinn

4 hours ago

I'm so married to my existing tmux workflows and layout that I'm not sure whether I'd ever feel open to trying out something like this. At the same time, orchestrating multiple agents with native tmux and git worktree does feel cumbersome.

I am in the same boat. It's the unix philosophy. tmux does its job well enough and it is already scriptable. I don't think I was sticking to the same layout for a long time because different projects tend to require different layouts. But that's the fun part of streamlining down your automation. I haven't felt the need to explore other options yet because I haven't felt the limitation of tmux yet.

if you want you can file an issue with your current workflow? happy to see if we can do a PR to support this natively in tmux-ide

What tools do you use on tmux to achieve your workflow ? Do you do just prompting or do you code too ?

  • tmux by itself lets you create any number of sessions, windows and panes. You can arrange them for anything you want to do.

    Having a pane dedicated to some LLM prompt split side by side with your code editor doesn't require additional tools, it's just a tmux hotkey to split a pane.

    There's also plugins like tmux resurrect that lets you save and restore everything, including across reboots. I've been using this set up for like 6-7 years, here's a video from ~5 years ago but it still applies today https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sMbuGf2g7gc&t=315s. I like this approach because you can use tmux normally, there's no layout config file you need to define.

    It lets me switch between projects in 2 seconds and everything I need is immediately available.