See Daniel Becks helpful answer for background information. I wish it has support for multiple tabs (like iTerm2) but still a great app to. macOS (OS X) does NOT support the concept of a default terminal. Now I connect to my favorite hosts and change directory with one click. If neither of the above shakes anything out you can always try opening a ticket with Iterm2 on their Gitlab page or ask this question in their support forums. To provide a pragmatic summary of the existing answers. Idea #4 - open a ticket with iterm2 upstream Same thing happens to me (same macOS ad SourceTree versions), also, open in terminal is no longer opening a new terminal window when the Terminal is already. Open a new tab in the same directory Asked 12 years, 5 months ago Modified 2 years, 3 months ago Viewed 33k times 47 Say you are in /very/cool/and/deeply/nested/folder. a new window even when the "new window" option is selected within the application. Konsole and gnome-terminal do that: opening a new tab puts you in the same directory. I haven't been able to substantiate this but I wonder if Iterm2 was utilizing this property of the Dock in previous versions and then dropped it? When this option is set in the Dock to "Always" applications such as Finder and TextEdit will open new documents within a tab vs. You can also create panes with the keyboard shortcuts: Basically, with it, in Terminal, I can type one command to open a new. They're accessible when you right click on a tab and then split it: feature request: split pane in the same directory. They're mentioned here in the iterm2 documentation. Actually, before I get carried away with revising how the titles are constructed, the original bug of 'not opening tabs in same dir' could be fixed pretty simply: just add a chpwdfunctions hook for escaped print -Pn 'e7 1:qa' output like /etc/bashrc does, and leave the rest of the title-setting logic as is. Panes show up when you either vertically or horizontally split a tab. Here's an example where I've setup 3 panes with tabs underneath them. Upon further researching this I can only conclude that what you're referring to as "windows" in your example are in fact panes. If you select the Window sub-tab (red #2 below) there's a check box that sounds like what you're looking for. If you go into iterm2's preferences under the Profiles tab (red #1 below) is another group of tabs. Tried to disable it for iTerm2 but it doesn't seem to have worked. Has a lot of rough edges so it got disabled. That was a bug which was out for a version or two a year ago when He asked his question there: Open windows as "tab groups". The OP followed my suggestion in idea #4 and followed up on the iterm2's forums on Google Group.
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