I'm working with Source Insight, and I want ctrl+A to select everything on the page. Reasonable enough, I think. So I make sure the command exists where I think it does -
yep, there it is. So I go to the key shortcuts, but I can't find the Select All function there.
What am I missing, here?
Here it is in Navigation: Select All
Related
I use Access 2010 and create shortcut menu for right-click on reports. Each time I exit the application and re-open my file, the right-click does not work, and en error message popups.
I could not find an explanation and solution anywhere about this. May there be someone who may know the reason and a suggest a possible solution?
BR, Çağlar Durgun
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/office/vba/access/concepts/miscellaneous/create-a-shortcut-menu-for-a-form-form-control-or-report
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/office/vba/api/office.commandbars.add
Below is the format
CommandBars.Add (Name, Position, MenuBar, Temporary)
I've now realised that the example I've copied from learn.microsoft.com (the link in the question) had Temporary = True..!
Sorry for this, issue is now resolved! :)
I have the following keymap.cson file to config my Atom editor:
'body':
'ctrl-shift-cmd-left': 'window:focus-pane-on-left'
Only when I run this command, the current text is selected. Which without the alt key held, would make sense as a highlighting command.
However, is I bind a key command which I think most likely doesn't have a competing action, say alt-cmd-;, it seems to be registered into the list of key commands in Settings/Keybindings, yet again no window focus is happening.
Edit:
I now realize that pane and not window may be the relevant term for what I want. Still, searching the Key Bindings for pane focus switching didn't yield anything obvious. Surely, there must be a simple way to select through files in the Project area while editing.
Although this answer doesn't match the title of the question, based on your edit I think that tree-view:toggle-focus is what you're looking for.
Please try using Ctrl + 0.
And, if you use Nuclide (related to React), please try disabling it to check the difference.
I know this is a simplistic question; but I've been using IntelliJ for months now, and can't find this simple feature.
Any idea? Thank you.
Idiot me. CMD-F4 or, as mentioned before, CTRL-F4.
Thank you all. I'll just bury myself now :)
hmm you can't because there is no default key binding for that, at least on OSX, however you can go here and define one:
The standard tip if you don't know how to do something in Idea is "Find Action..." (ctrl+shift+A in Windows) then type what you want to do, in this case close.
You will get a lot of different "close" actions and simply "Close" (ctrl+F4 in Windows) will be one of them.
You can also set a custom key combination in the settings menu
Click on File > Settings and select Keymap from the menu on the left, then scroll down to the Other section and set your preferred key combination for Close Active Editor:
When you double-click on Close Active Editor, a menu pops up allowing you to set a key combination, a mouse gesture, or even an abbreviation for the action. If the shortcut is already set somewhere else (as in my case with Ctrl-W) you'll get a notification and won't be able to set the shortcut until you remove the other one.
As with Matt Ball, I don't use IntelliJ but may also be CTRL+F4...
For MAC user, Cmd-W will close the active tab (file).
On Mac, you might like to use CMD + W, as this is the conventional shortcut for closing things e.g. Tabs in Chrome.
But by default this is usually associated with highlighting the current cursor block, so instead I use CTRL + W, rather than re-assigning.
e.g. (bottom right)
Also works for other IntelliJ IDEs, like WebStorm, etc.
IDEA->File->Setting->Search for "Close Active Editor".
Click on 'Add Keyboard Shortcut' -> Change it to "Ctrl+W". (Overwrite).
BOOM! you are universal now!
I'm on version 2020.4 and this has changed to Ctrl+4
I use ctags with my Vim and I rely heavily on C-] and C-T to tag back and froth between various functions in my project.
But if the function is in a different file, I'd like Vim to automatically open it in a new tab instead of the current tab. If I pop my tag stack using the C-T, I'd like it go back to the original tab where I pressed by C-] instead of changing the file in the current tab. I don't like to have the same file opened in multiple tabs in Vim. This is the normal behavior for most IDEs and I am wondering if there is a way to do this in Vim?
nmap <C-Enter> <C-w><C-]><C-w>T
Does this help ? You could probably figure out something similar for the way back.
Well, we need to decide what would be the wanted behaviour. We can go back to the original tab (not sure how, still investigating) but then the above given mapping is gonna open a new tab next time. So you'll end up with a lot of tabs after a while.
Or we can do <C-w>C, which will close the opened tab and take us back to the original one. I, personally, prefer this way of working (that way I don't lose my position in the file)
I go to the function I want, make my corrections there then return to the original file from which I started.
Let me know, what would you like (this didn't fit in comments so I put the answer here).
This might point you in the right direction:
http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/Open_every_buffer_in_its_own_tabpage
So, this is a feature I would like to see as well.
I'm not sure if it's possible.
What I usually do is
:tabnew
:tag somepartsoffunction*
and press tab to use globbing to easily find tag.
Sure, it's not an ideal solution, but it works most of the time.
Unfortunately, with VIM tabbing isn't totally integrated since it's a new feature since 7.0. Most people I know that use VIM weren't even aware of tabs until I told them, so with that, I have a feeling there is no way to do it right now.
(I would love to be proven wrong)
In netbeans, if I select some text and press Tab, it works correctly and the text is indented to the right side as expected.
But if I then try to backspace behind the text, it only removes one space at a time. Very annoying.
Is there any way to change this setting, so backspacing behind a tabbed line causes the whole tab to be removed and not just 1 space?
I don't use Netbeans (anymore), but usually the shortcut for this is Shift+Tab.
Its worth mentioning that ALT+SHIFT+UP/DOWN/LEFT/RIGHT will indent left or right and also allow you to move the line(s) up or down. Its a pretty handy feature.
Alt-Shift-F (Formatting code) also can be helpful.
Select code block which needs re-indentation and do Alt-Shift-F.