1*scroll.txt* For Vim version 8.2. Last change: 2019 May 13 2 3 4 VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar 5 6 7Scrolling *scrolling* 8 9These commands move the contents of the window. If the cursor position is 10moved off of the window, the cursor is moved onto the window (with 11'scrolloff' screen lines around it). A page is the number of lines in the 12window minus two. The mnemonics for these commands may be a bit confusing. 13Remember that the commands refer to moving the window (the part of the buffer 14that you see) upwards or downwards in the buffer. When the window moves 15upwards in the buffer, the text in the window moves downwards on your screen. 16 17See section |03.7| of the user manual for an introduction. 18 191. Scrolling downwards |scroll-down| 202. Scrolling upwards |scroll-up| 213. Scrolling relative to cursor |scroll-cursor| 224. Scrolling horizontally |scroll-horizontal| 235. Scrolling synchronously |scroll-binding| 246. Scrolling with a mouse wheel |scroll-mouse-wheel| 25 26============================================================================== 271. Scrolling downwards *scroll-down* 28 29The following commands move the edit window (the part of the buffer that you 30see) downwards (this means that more lines downwards in the text buffer can be 31seen): 32 33 *CTRL-E* 34CTRL-E Scroll window [count] lines downwards in the buffer. 35 The text moves upwards on the screen. 36 Mnemonic: Extra lines. 37 38 *CTRL-D* 39CTRL-D Scroll window Downwards in the buffer. The number of 40 lines comes from the 'scroll' option (default: half a 41 screen). If [count] given, first set 'scroll' option 42 to [count]. The cursor is moved the same number of 43 lines down in the file (if possible; when lines wrap 44 and when hitting the end of the file there may be a 45 difference). When the cursor is on the last line of 46 the buffer nothing happens and a beep is produced. 47 See also 'startofline' option. 48 49<S-Down> or *<S-Down>* *<kPageDown>* 50<PageDown> or *<PageDown>* *CTRL-F* 51CTRL-F Scroll window [count] pages Forwards (downwards) in 52 the buffer. See also 'startofline' option. 53 When there is only one window the 'window' option 54 might be used. 55 56 *z+* 57z+ Without [count]: Redraw with the line just below the 58 window at the top of the window. Put the cursor in 59 that line, at the first non-blank in the line. 60 With [count]: just like "z<CR>". 61 62============================================================================== 632. Scrolling upwards *scroll-up* 64 65The following commands move the edit window (the part of the buffer that you 66see) upwards (this means that more lines upwards in the text buffer can be 67seen): 68 69 *CTRL-Y* 70CTRL-Y Scroll window [count] lines upwards in the buffer. 71 The text moves downwards on the screen. 72 Note: When using the MS-Windows key bindings CTRL-Y is 73 remapped to redo. 74 75 *CTRL-U* 76CTRL-U Scroll window Upwards in the buffer. The number of 77 lines comes from the 'scroll' option (default: half a 78 screen). If [count] given, first set the 'scroll' 79 option to [count]. The cursor is moved the same 80 number of lines up in the file (if possible; when 81 lines wrap and when hitting the end of the file there 82 may be a difference). When the cursor is on the first 83 line of the buffer nothing happens and a beep is 84 produced. See also 'startofline' option. 85 86<S-Up> or *<S-Up>* *<kPageUp>* 87<PageUp> or *<PageUp>* *CTRL-B* 88CTRL-B Scroll window [count] pages Backwards (upwards) in the 89 buffer. See also 'startofline' option. 90 When there is only one window the 'window' option 91 might be used. 92 93 *z^* 94z^ Without [count]: Redraw with the line just above the 95 window at the bottom of the window. Put the cursor in 96 that line, at the first non-blank in the line. 97 With [count]: First scroll the text to put the [count] 98 line at the bottom of the window, then redraw with the 99 line which is now at the top of the window at the 100 bottom of the window. Put the cursor in that line, at 101 the first non-blank in the line. 102 103============================================================================== 1043. Scrolling relative to cursor *scroll-cursor* 105 106The following commands reposition the edit window (the part of the buffer that 107you see) while keeping the cursor on the same line. Note that the 'scrolloff' 108option may cause context lines to show above and below the cursor. 109 110 *z<CR>* 111z<CR> Redraw, line [count] at top of window (default 112 cursor line). Put cursor at first non-blank in the 113 line. 114 115 *zt* 116zt Like "z<CR>", but leave the cursor in the same 117 column. 118 119 *zN<CR>* 120z{height}<CR> Redraw, make window {height} lines tall. This is 121 useful to make the number of lines small when screen 122 updating is very slow. Cannot make the height more 123 than the physical screen height. 124 125 *z.* 126z. Redraw, line [count] at center of window (default 127 cursor line). Put cursor at first non-blank in the 128 line. 129 130 *zz* 131zz Like "z.", but leave the cursor in the same column. 132 Careful: If caps-lock is on, this command becomes 133 "ZZ": write buffer and exit! 134 135 *z-* 136z- Redraw, line [count] at bottom of window (default 137 cursor line). Put cursor at first non-blank in the 138 line. 139 140 *zb* 141zb Like "z-", but leave the cursor in the same column. 142 143============================================================================== 1444. Scrolling horizontally *scroll-horizontal* 145 146For the following four commands the cursor follows the screen. If the 147character that the cursor is on is moved off the screen, the cursor is moved 148to the closest character that is on the screen. The value of 'sidescroll' is 149not used. 150 151z<Right> or *zl* *z<Right>* 152zl Move the view on the text [count] characters to the 153 right, thus scroll the text [count] characters to the 154 left. This only works when 'wrap' is off. 155 156z<Left> or *zh* *z<Left>* 157zh Move the view on the text [count] characters to the 158 left, thus scroll the text [count] characters to the 159 right. This only works when 'wrap' is off. 160 161 *zL* 162zL Move the view on the text half a screenwidth to the 163 right, thus scroll the text half a screenwidth to the 164 left. This only works when 'wrap' is off. 165 166 *zH* 167zH Move the view on the text half a screenwidth to the 168 left, thus scroll the text half a screenwidth to the 169 right. This only works when 'wrap' is off. 170 171For the following two commands the cursor is not moved in the text, only the 172text scrolls on the screen. 173 174 *zs* 175zs Scroll the text horizontally to position the cursor 176 at the start (left side) of the screen. This only 177 works when 'wrap' is off. 178 179 *ze* 180ze Scroll the text horizontally to position the cursor 181 at the end (right side) of the screen. This only 182 works when 'wrap' is off. 183 184============================================================================== 1855. Scrolling synchronously *scroll-binding* 186 187Occasionally, it is desirable to bind two or more windows together such that 188when one window is scrolled, the other windows are also scrolled. In Vim, 189windows can be given this behavior by setting the (window-specific) 190'scrollbind' option. When a window that has 'scrollbind' set is scrolled, all 191other 'scrollbind' windows are scrolled the same amount, if possible. The 192behavior of 'scrollbind' can be modified by the 'scrollopt' option. 193 194When using the scrollbars, the binding only happens when scrolling the window 195with focus (where the cursor is). You can use this to avoid scroll-binding 196for a moment without resetting options. 197 198When a window also has the 'diff' option set, the scroll-binding uses the 199differences between the two buffers to synchronize the position precisely. 200Otherwise the following method is used. 201 202 *scrollbind-relative* 203Each 'scrollbind' window keeps track of its "relative offset," which can be 204thought of as the difference between the current window's vertical scroll 205position and the other window's vertical scroll position. When one of the 206'scrollbind' windows is asked to vertically scroll past the beginning or end 207limit of its text, the window no longer scrolls, but remembers how far past 208the limit it wishes to be. The window keeps this information so that it can 209maintain the same relative offset, regardless of its being asked to scroll 210past its buffer's limits. 211 212However, if a 'scrollbind' window that has a relative offset that is past its 213buffer's limits is given the cursor focus, the other 'scrollbind' windows must 214jump to a location where the current window's relative offset is valid. This 215behavior can be changed by clearing the "jump" flag from the 'scrollopt' 216option. 217 218 *syncbind* *:syncbind* *:sync* 219:syncbind Force all 'scrollbind' windows to have the same 220 relative offset. I.e., when any of the 'scrollbind' 221 windows is scrolled to the top of its buffer, all of 222 the 'scrollbind' windows will also be at the top of 223 their buffers. 224 225 *scrollbind-quickadj* 226The 'scrollbind' flag is meaningful when using keyboard commands to vertically 227scroll a window, and also meaningful when using the vertical scrollbar of the 228window which has the cursor focus. However, when using the vertical scrollbar 229of a window which doesn't have the cursor focus, 'scrollbind' is ignored. 230This allows quick adjustment of the relative offset of 'scrollbind' windows. 231 232============================================================================== 2336. Scrolling with a mouse wheel *scroll-mouse-wheel* 234 235When your mouse has a scroll wheel, it should work with Vim in the GUI. How 236it works depends on your system. It might also work in an xterm 237|xterm-mouse-wheel|. By default only vertical scroll wheels are supported, 238but some GUIs also support horizontal scroll wheels. 239 240For the Win32 GUI the scroll action is hard coded. It works just like 241dragging the scrollbar of the current window. How many lines are scrolled 242depends on your mouse driver. If the scroll action causes input focus 243problems, see |intellimouse-wheel-problems|. 244 245For the X11 GUIs (Motif, Athena and GTK) scrolling the wheel generates key 246presses <ScrollWheelUp>, <ScrollWheelDown>, <ScrollWheelLeft> and 247<ScrollWheelRight>. For example, if you push the scroll wheel upwards a 248<ScrollWheelUp> key press is generated causing the window to scroll upwards 249(while the text is actually moving downwards). The default action for these 250keys are: 251 <ScrollWheelUp> scroll three lines up *<ScrollWheelUp>* 252 <S-ScrollWheelUp> scroll one page up *<S-ScrollWheelUp>* 253 <C-ScrollWheelUp> scroll one page up *<C-ScrollWheelUp>* 254 <ScrollWheelDown> scroll three lines down *<ScrollWheelDown>* 255 <S-ScrollWheelDown> scroll one page down *<S-ScrollWheelDown>* 256 <C-ScrollWheelDown> scroll one page down *<C-ScrollWheelDown>* 257 <ScrollWheelLeft> scroll six columns left *<ScrollWheelLeft>* 258 <S-ScrollWheelLeft> scroll one page left *<S-ScrollWheelLeft>* 259 <C-ScrollWheelLeft> scroll one page left *<C-ScrollWheelLeft>* 260 <ScrollWheelRight> scroll six columns right *<ScrollWheelRight>* 261 <S-ScrollWheelRight> scroll one page right *<S-ScrollWheelRight>* 262 <C-ScrollWheelRight> scroll one page right *<C-ScrollWheelRight>* 263This should work in all modes, except when editing the command line. 264 265Note that horizontal scrolling only works if 'nowrap' is set. Also, unless 266the "h" flag in 'guioptions' is set, the cursor moves to the longest visible 267line if the cursor line is about to be scrolled off the screen (similarly to 268how the horizontal scrollbar works). 269 270You can modify the default behavior by mapping the keys. For example, to make 271the scroll wheel move one line or half a page in Normal mode: > 272 :map <ScrollWheelUp> <C-Y> 273 :map <S-ScrollWheelUp> <C-U> 274 :map <ScrollWheelDown> <C-E> 275 :map <S-ScrollWheelDown> <C-D> 276You can also use Alt and Ctrl modifiers. 277 278This only works when Vim gets the scroll wheel events, of course. You can 279check if this works with the "xev" program. 280 281When using XFree86, the /etc/XF86Config file should have the correct entry for 282your mouse. For FreeBSD, this entry works for a Logitech scrollmouse: > 283 Protocol "MouseMan" 284 Device "/dev/psm0" 285 ZAxisMapping 4 5 286See the XFree86 documentation for information. 287 288 *<MouseDown>* *<MouseUp>* 289The keys <MouseDown> and <MouseUp> have been deprecated. Use <ScrollWheelUp> 290instead of <MouseDown> and use <ScrollWheelDown> instead of <MouseUp>. 291 292 *xterm-mouse-wheel* 293To use the mouse wheel in a new xterm you only have to make the scroll wheel 294work in your Xserver, as mentioned above. 295 296To use the mouse wheel in an older xterm you must do this: 2971. Make it work in your Xserver, as mentioned above. 2982. Add translations for the xterm, so that the xterm will pass a scroll event 299 to Vim as an escape sequence. 3003. Add mappings in Vim, to interpret the escape sequences as <ScrollWheelDown> 301 or <ScrollWheelUp> keys. 302 303You can do the translations by adding this to your ~.Xdefaults file (or other 304file where your X resources are kept): > 305 306 XTerm*VT100.Translations: #override \n\ 307 s<Btn4Down>: string("0x9b") string("[64~") \n\ 308 s<Btn5Down>: string("0x9b") string("[65~") \n\ 309 <Btn4Down>: string("0x9b") string("[62~") \n\ 310 <Btn5Down>: string("0x9b") string("[63~") \n\ 311 <Btn4Up>: \n\ 312 <Btn5Up>: 313 314Add these mappings to your vimrc file: > 315 :map <M-Esc>[62~ <ScrollWheelUp> 316 :map! <M-Esc>[62~ <ScrollWheelUp> 317 :map <M-Esc>[63~ <ScrollWheelDown> 318 :map! <M-Esc>[63~ <ScrollWheelDown> 319 :map <M-Esc>[64~ <S-ScrollWheelUp> 320 :map! <M-Esc>[64~ <S-ScrollWheelUp> 321 :map <M-Esc>[65~ <S-ScrollWheelDown> 322 :map! <M-Esc>[65~ <S-ScrollWheelDown> 323< 324 vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl: 325