From superpowers-lab
Controls interactive CLI tools (vim, git rebase -i, Python REPL) programmatically using tmux detached sessions, send-keys, and capture-pane for real-time input/output.
npx claudepluginhub obra/superpowers-marketplace --plugin superpowers-labThis skill uses the workspace's default tool permissions.
Interactive CLI tools (vim, interactive git rebase, REPLs, etc.) cannot be controlled through standard bash because they require a real terminal. tmux provides detached sessions that can be controlled programmatically via `send-keys` and `capture-pane`.
Remotely controls tmux sessions for interactive CLIs by sending keystrokes and capturing pane output. Use for Python REPLs and parallel coding agents.
Manages tmux sessions, windows, and panes for terminal multiplexing, persistent remote workflows surviving SSH disconnects, and shell scripting automation. Useful for remote servers and long-running jobs.
Manages tmux sessions to run long-running background processes like dev servers/tests, send commands remotely, capture output, and control windows/panes.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Interactive CLI tools (vim, interactive git rebase, REPLs, etc.) cannot be controlled through standard bash because they require a real terminal. tmux provides detached sessions that can be controlled programmatically via send-keys and capture-pane.
Use tmux when:
git rebase -i, git add -p)Don't use for:
| Task | Command |
|---|---|
| Start session | tmux new-session -d -s <name> <command> |
| Send input | tmux send-keys -t <name> 'text' Enter |
| Capture output | tmux capture-pane -t <name> -p |
| Stop session | tmux kill-session -t <name> |
| List sessions | tmux list-sessions |
# This hangs because vim expects interactive terminal
bash -c "vim file.txt"
# Create detached tmux session
tmux new-session -d -s edit_session vim file.txt
# Send commands (Enter, Escape are tmux key names)
tmux send-keys -t edit_session 'i' 'Hello World' Escape ':wq' Enter
# Capture what's on screen
tmux capture-pane -t edit_session -p
# Clean up
tmux kill-session -t edit_session
send-keys (can send special keys like Enter, Escape)capture-pane -p to see current screen stateCommon tmux key names:
Enter - Return/newlineEscape - ESC keyC-c - Ctrl+CC-x - Ctrl+XUp, Down, Left, Right - Arrow keysSpace - Space barBSpace - BackspaceSpecify working directory when creating session:
tmux new-session -d -s git_session -c /path/to/repo git rebase -i HEAD~3
For easier use, see /home/jesse/git/interactive-command/tmux-wrapper.sh:
# Start session
/path/to/tmux-wrapper.sh start <session-name> <command> [args...]
# Send input
/path/to/tmux-wrapper.sh send <session-name> 'text' Enter
# Capture current state
/path/to/tmux-wrapper.sh capture <session-name>
# Stop
/path/to/tmux-wrapper.sh stop <session-name>
tmux new-session -d -s python python3 -i
tmux send-keys -t python 'import math' Enter
tmux send-keys -t python 'print(math.pi)' Enter
tmux capture-pane -t python -p # See output
tmux kill-session -t python
tmux new-session -d -s vim vim /tmp/file.txt
sleep 0.3 # Wait for vim to start
tmux send-keys -t vim 'i' 'New content' Escape ':wq' Enter
# File is now saved
tmux new-session -d -s rebase -c /repo/path git rebase -i HEAD~3
sleep 0.5
tmux capture-pane -t rebase -p # See rebase editor
# Send commands to modify rebase instructions
tmux send-keys -t rebase 'Down' 'Home' 'squash' Escape
tmux send-keys -t rebase ':wq' Enter
Problem: Capturing immediately after new-session shows blank screen
Fix: Add brief sleep (100-500ms) before first capture
tmux new-session -d -s sess command
sleep 0.3 # Let command initialize
tmux capture-pane -t sess -p
Problem: Commands typed but not executed
Fix: Explicitly send Enter
tmux send-keys -t sess 'print("hello")' Enter # Note: Enter is separate argument
Problem: tmux send-keys -t sess '\n' doesn't work
Fix: Use tmux key names: Enter, not \n
tmux send-keys -t sess 'text' Enter # ✓
tmux send-keys -t sess 'text\n' # ✗
Problem: Orphaned tmux sessions accumulate
Fix: Always kill sessions when done
tmux kill-session -t session_name
# Or check for existing: tmux has-session -t name 2>/dev/null