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+*scroll.txt* For Vim version 7.3. Last change: 2006 Aug 27
+
+
+ VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar
+
+
+Scrolling *scrolling*
+
+These commands move the contents of the window. If the cursor position is
+moved off of the window, the cursor is moved onto the window (with
+'scrolloff' screen lines around it). A page is the number of lines in the
+window minus two. The mnemonics for these commands may be a bit confusing.
+Remember that the commands refer to moving the window (the part of the buffer
+that you see) upwards or downwards in the buffer. When the window moves
+upwards in the buffer, the text in the window moves downwards on your screen.
+
+See section |03.7| of the user manual for an introduction.
+
+1. Scrolling downwards |scroll-down|
+2. Scrolling upwards |scroll-up|
+3. Scrolling relative to cursor |scroll-cursor|
+4. Scrolling horizontally |scroll-horizontal|
+5. Scrolling synchronously |scroll-binding|
+6. Scrolling with a mouse wheel |scroll-mouse-wheel|
+
+==============================================================================
+1. Scrolling downwards *scroll-down*
+
+The following commands move the edit window (the part of the buffer that you
+see) downwards (this means that more lines downwards in the text buffer can be
+seen):
+
+ *CTRL-E*
+CTRL-E Scroll window [count] lines downwards in the buffer.
+ Mnemonic: Extra lines.
+
+ *CTRL-D*
+CTRL-D Scroll window Downwards in the buffer. The number of
+ lines comes from the 'scroll' option (default: half a
+ screen). If [count] given, first set 'scroll' option
+ to [count]. The cursor is moved the same number of
+ lines down in the file (if possible; when lines wrap
+ and when hitting the end of the file there may be a
+ difference). When the cursor is on the last line of
+ the buffer nothing happens and a beep is produced.
+ See also 'startofline' option.
+ {difference from vi: Vim scrolls 'scroll' screen
+ lines, instead of file lines; makes a difference when
+ lines wrap}
+
+<S-Down> or *<S-Down>* *<kPageDown>*
+<PageDown> or *<PageDown>* *CTRL-F*
+CTRL-F Scroll window [count] pages Forwards (downwards) in
+ the buffer. See also 'startofline' option.
+ When there is only one window the 'window' option
+ might be used.
+
+ *z+*
+z+ Without [count]: Redraw with the line just below the
+ window at the top of the window. Put the cursor in
+ that line, at the first non-blank in the line.
+ With [count]: just like "z<CR>".
+
+==============================================================================
+2. Scrolling upwards *scroll-up*
+
+The following commands move the edit window (the part of the buffer that you
+see) upwards (this means that more lines upwards in the text buffer can be
+seen):
+
+ *CTRL-Y*
+CTRL-Y Scroll window [count] lines upwards in the buffer.
+ Note: When using the MS-Windows key bindings CTRL-Y is
+ remapped to redo.
+
+ *CTRL-U*
+CTRL-U Scroll window Upwards in the buffer. The number of
+ lines comes from the 'scroll' option (default: half a
+ screen). If [count] given, first set the 'scroll'
+ option to [count]. The cursor is moved the same
+ number of lines up in the file (if possible; when
+ lines wrap and when hitting the end of the file there
+ may be a difference). When the cursor is on the first
+ line of the buffer nothing happens and a beep is
+ produced. See also 'startofline' option.
+ {difference from vi: Vim scrolls 'scroll' screen
+ lines, instead of file lines; makes a difference when
+ lines wrap}
+
+<S-Up> or *<S-Up>* *<kPageUp>*
+<PageUp> or *<PageUp>* *CTRL-B*
+CTRL-B Scroll window [count] pages Backwards (upwards) in the
+ buffer. See also 'startofline' option.
+ When there is only one window the 'window' option
+ might be used.
+
+ *z^*
+z^ Without [count]: Redraw with the line just above the
+ window at the bottom of the window. Put the cursor in
+ that line, at the first non-blank in the line.
+ With [count]: First scroll the text to put the [count]
+ line at the bottom of the window, then redraw with the
+ line which is now at the top of the window at the
+ bottom of the window. Put the cursor in that line, at
+ the first non-blank in the line.
+
+==============================================================================
+3. Scrolling relative to cursor *scroll-cursor*
+
+The following commands reposition the edit window (the part of the buffer that
+you see) while keeping the cursor on the same line:
+
+ *z<CR>*
+z<CR> Redraw, line [count] at top of window (default
+ cursor line). Put cursor at first non-blank in the
+ line.
+
+ *zt*
+zt Like "z<CR>", but leave the cursor in the same
+ column. {not in Vi}
+
+ *zN<CR>*
+z{height}<CR> Redraw, make window {height} lines tall. This is
+ useful to make the number of lines small when screen
+ updating is very slow. Cannot make the height more
+ than the physical screen height.
+
+ *z.*
+z. Redraw, line [count] at center of window (default
+ cursor line). Put cursor at first non-blank in the
+ line.
+
+ *zz*
+zz Like "z.", but leave the cursor in the same column.
+ Careful: If caps-lock is on, this command becomes
+ "ZZ": write buffer and exit! {not in Vi}
+
+ *z-*
+z- Redraw, line [count] at bottom of window (default
+ cursor line). Put cursor at first non-blank in the
+ line.
+
+ *zb*
+zb Like "z-", but leave the cursor in the same column.
+ {not in Vi}
+
+==============================================================================
+4. Scrolling horizontally *scroll-horizontal*
+
+For the following four commands the cursor follows the screen. If the
+character that the cursor is on is moved off the screen, the cursor is moved
+to the closest character that is on the screen. The value of 'sidescroll' is
+not used.
+
+z<Right> or *zl* *z<Right>*
+zl Move the view on the text [count] characters to the
+ right, thus scroll the text [count] characters to the
+ left. This only works when 'wrap' is off. {not in
+ Vi}
+
+z<Left> or *zh* *z<Left>*
+zh Move the view on the text [count] characters to the
+ left, thus scroll the text [count] characters to the
+ right. This only works when 'wrap' is off. {not in
+ Vi}
+
+ *zL*
+zL Move the view on the text half a screenwidth to the
+ right, thus scroll the text half a screenwidth to the
+ left. This only works when 'wrap' is off. {not in
+ Vi}
+
+ *zH*
+zH Move the view on the text half a screenwidth to the
+ left, thus scroll the text half a screenwidth to the
+ right. This only works when 'wrap' is off. {not in
+ Vi}
+
+For the following two commands the cursor is not moved in the text, only the
+text scrolls on the screen.
+
+ *zs*
+zs Scroll the text horizontally to position the cursor
+ at the start (left side) of the screen. This only
+ works when 'wrap' is off. {not in Vi}
+
+ *ze*
+ze Scroll the text horizontally to position the cursor
+ at the end (right side) of the screen. This only
+ works when 'wrap' is off. {not in Vi}
+
+==============================================================================
+5. Scrolling synchronously *scroll-binding*
+
+Occasionally, it is desirable to bind two or more windows together such that
+when one window is scrolled, the other windows are also scrolled. In Vim,
+windows can be given this behavior by setting the (window-specific)
+'scrollbind' option. When a window that has 'scrollbind' set is scrolled, all
+other 'scrollbind' windows are scrolled the same amount, if possible. The
+behavior of 'scrollbind' can be modified by the 'scrollopt' option.
+
+When using the scrollbars, the binding only happens when scrolling the window
+with focus (where the cursor is). You can use this to avoid scroll-binding
+for a moment without resetting options.
+
+When a window also has the 'diff' option set, the scroll-binding uses the
+differences between the two buffers to synchronize the position precisely.
+Otherwise the following method is used.
+
+ *scrollbind-relative*
+Each 'scrollbind' window keeps track of its "relative offset," which can be
+thought of as the difference between the current window's vertical scroll
+position and the other window's vertical scroll position. When one of the
+'scrollbind' windows is asked to vertically scroll past the beginning or end
+limit of its text, the window no longer scrolls, but remembers how far past
+the limit it wishes to be. The window keeps this information so that it can
+maintain the same relative offset, regardless of its being asked to scroll
+past its buffer's limits.
+
+However, if a 'scrollbind' window that has a relative offset that is past its
+buffer's limits is given the cursor focus, the other 'scrollbind' windows must
+jump to a location where the current window's relative offset is valid. This
+behavior can be changed by clearing the 'jump' flag from the 'scrollopt'
+option.
+
+ *syncbind* *:syncbind* *:sync*
+:syncbind Force all 'scrollbind' windows to have the same
+ relative offset. I.e., when any of the 'scrollbind'
+ windows is scrolled to the top of its buffer, all of
+ the 'scrollbind' windows will also be at the top of
+ their buffers.
+
+ *scrollbind-quickadj*
+The 'scrollbind' flag is meaningful when using keyboard commands to vertically
+scroll a window, and also meaningful when using the vertical scrollbar of the
+window which has the cursor focus. However, when using the vertical scrollbar
+of a window which doesn't have the cursor focus, 'scrollbind' is ignored.
+This allows quick adjustment of the relative offset of 'scrollbind' windows.
+
+==============================================================================
+6. Scrolling with a mouse wheel *scroll-mouse-wheel*
+
+When your mouse has a scroll wheel, it should work with Vim in the GUI. How
+it works depends on your system. It might also work in an xterm
+|xterm-mouse-wheel|. By default only vertical scroll wheels are supported,
+but some GUIs also support horizontal scroll wheels.
+
+For the Win32 GUI the scroll action is hard coded. It works just like
+dragging the scrollbar of the current window. How many lines are scrolled
+depends on your mouse driver. If the scroll action causes input focus
+problems, see |intellimouse-wheel-problems|.
+
+For the X11 GUIs (Motif, Athena and GTK) scrolling the wheel generates key
+presses <ScrollWheelUp>, <ScrollWheelDown>, <ScrollWheelLeft> and
+<ScrollWheelRight>. For example, if you push the scroll wheel upwards a
+<ScrollWheelUp> key press is generated causing the window to scroll upwards
+(while the text is actually moving downwards). The default action for these
+keys are:
+ <ScrollWheelUp> scroll three lines up *<ScrollWheelUp>*
+ <S-ScrollWheelUp> scroll one page up *<S-ScrollWheelUp>*
+ <C-ScrollWheelUp> scroll one page up *<C-ScrollWheelUp>*
+ <ScrollWheelDown> scroll three lines down *<ScrollWheelDown>*
+ <S-ScrollWheelDown> scroll one page down *<S-ScrollWheelDown>*
+ <C-ScrollWheelDown> scroll one page down *<C-ScrollWheelDown>*
+ <ScrollWheelLeft> scroll six columns left *<ScrollWheelLeft>*
+ <S-ScrollWheelLeft> scroll one page left *<S-ScrollWheelLeft>*
+ <C-ScrollWheelLeft> scroll one page left *<C-ScrollWheelLeft>*
+ <ScrollWheelRight> scroll six columns right *<ScrollWheelRight>*
+ <S-ScrollWheelRight> scroll one page right *<S-ScrollWheelRight>*
+ <C-ScrollWheelRight> scroll one page right *<C-ScrollWheelRight>*
+This should work in all modes, except when editing the command line.
+
+Note that horizontal scrolling only works if 'nowrap' is set. Also, unless
+the "h" flag in 'guioptions' is set, the cursor moves to the longest visible
+line if the cursor line is about to be scrolled off the screen (similarly to
+how the horizontal scrollbar works).
+
+You can modify the default behavior by mapping the keys. For example, to make
+the scroll wheel move one line or half a page in Normal mode: >
+ :map <ScrollWheelUp> <C-Y>
+ :map <S-ScrollWheelUp> <C-U>
+ :map <ScrollWheelDown> <C-E>
+ :map <S-ScrollWheelDown> <C-D>
+You can also use Alt and Ctrl modifiers.
+
+This only works when Vim gets the scroll wheel events, of course. You can
+check if this works with the "xev" program.
+
+When using XFree86, the /etc/XF86Config file should have the correct entry for
+your mouse. For FreeBSD, this entry works for a Logitech scrollmouse: >
+ Protocol "MouseMan"
+ Device "/dev/psm0"
+ ZAxisMapping 4 5
+See the XFree86 documentation for information.
+
+ *<MouseDown>* *<MouseUp>*
+The keys <MouseDown> and <MouseUp> have been deprecated. Use <ScrollWheelUp>
+instead of <MouseDown> and use <ScrollWheelDown> instead of <MouseUp>.
+
+ *xterm-mouse-wheel*
+To use the mouse wheel in a new xterm you only have to make the scroll wheel
+work in your Xserver, as mentioned above.
+
+To use the mouse wheel in an older xterm you must do this:
+1. Make it work in your Xserver, as mentioned above.
+2. Add translations for the xterm, so that the xterm will pass a scroll event
+ to Vim as an escape sequence.
+3. Add mappings in Vim, to interpret the escape sequences as <ScrollWheelDown>
+ or <ScrollWheelUp> keys.
+
+You can do the translations by adding this to your ~.Xdefaults file (or other
+file where your X resources are kept): >
+
+ XTerm*VT100.Translations: #override \n\
+ s<Btn4Down>: string("0x9b") string("[64~") \n\
+ s<Btn5Down>: string("0x9b") string("[65~") \n\
+ <Btn4Down>: string("0x9b") string("[62~") \n\
+ <Btn5Down>: string("0x9b") string("[63~") \n\
+ <Btn4Up>: \n\
+ <Btn5Up>:
+
+Add these mappings to your vimrc file: >
+ :map <M-Esc>[62~ <ScrollWheelUp>
+ :map! <M-Esc>[62~ <ScrollWheelUp>
+ :map <M-Esc>[63~ <ScrollWheelDown>
+ :map! <M-Esc>[63~ <ScrollWheelDown>
+ :map <M-Esc>[64~ <S-ScrollWheelUp>
+ :map! <M-Esc>[64~ <S-ScrollWheelUp>
+ :map <M-Esc>[65~ <S-ScrollWheelDown>
+ :map! <M-Esc>[65~ <S-ScrollWheelDown>
+<
+ vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl: