[OS X TeX] navigating through the source file

Warren Nagourney wna at u.washington.edu
Fri May 17 23:28:49 CEST 2013


You are absolutely right. I use this way of navigating in the preview page, where the cursor is not actually used, unless one uses synctex. Sorry for not reading your post more carefully.

Warren Nagourney

On May 17, 2013, at 2:23 PM, Nicolae Garleanu <garleanu at haas.berkeley.edu> wrote:

> Thanks, but it does not move the cursor. It moves the page for viewing, but if one wants to type, select, etc., in the new location, one cannot. The cursor is still in the original position. At least on my computers. (Unless there is setting I can change to obtain the desired behavior.)
> Nicolae
> 
> 
> From: Warren Nagourney <wna at u.washington.edu>
> Reply-To: TeX on Mac OS X Mailing List <macosx-tex at email.esm.psu.edu>
> Date: Friday, May 17, 2013 2:14 PM
> To: TeX on Mac OS X Mailing List <macosx-tex at email.esm.psu.edu>
> Subject: Re: [OS X TeX] navigating through the source file
> 
> 
> On May 17, 2013, at 2:10 PM, Nicolae Garleanu <garleanu at haas.berkeley.edu> wrote:
> 
>> Hi,
>> Is there a way to move the cursor one page up (or down) at a time on a small-format keyboard (such as on a MBA)? I tried to combine the arrow keys with any of the `special' keys, but I haven't found it. If there's none, one should be able to bind some key to the command, provided that one knows the command (I don't).
>> A possibly harder one would be: is there a key combination that recanters the source window (vertically) around the cursor (thus, the line with the cursor is now in the middle of the page)?
>> Thank you.
>> Nicolae
>> 
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> 
> Using the "fn" key with the up/down arrows moves the cursor one page. Without the fn key, it moves (jerkily) one lie at a time.
> 
> Warren Nagourney
> 
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