# Open New Splits To The Current Directory I typically work in one project per tmux session. When I create a given tmux session, the default directory is for that project. All new windows and pane splits will open at that default directory. This generally is the default behavior I want. One caveat: I often open a new window within an existing session that I want anchored to another directory. This could be because I'm working in a monorepo and I need to work from a subdirectory for a specific package or app. Or it could be that I'm temporarily digging into another project and it isn't worth create a whole new session. Regardless of the reason, I run into a bit of friction with tmux's defaults. First I open the new window and `cd` to another project. After some working, I need to open a split pane, maybe to run a project command like a build or dev server. Hitting `prefix-"` (horizontal split) or `prefix-%` (vertical split) opens a pane with the shell defaulting back to the original directory, not the current directory. The trick to fixing this bit of friction is overriding the directory of pane splits. I can do that by adding the following to my `~/.tmux.conf`: ``` # Pane splits should open to the same path as the current pane bind '"' split-window -v -c "#{pane_current_path}" bind % split-window -h -c "#{pane_current_path}" ``` Make sure to run `tmux source-file ~/.tmux.conf` to apply these config changes. The `pane_current_path` is called a "Format" in tmux parlance. It resolves to the absolute path of the current pane's current directory. You can find all the formats in the manpage with this command: `man tmux | less +'/^FORMATS'`. You can also show yourself that this format resolves to what you expect by running `tmux display-message -p '#{pane_current_path}'`.