I've recently moved from Eclipse to IntelliJ and one feature I'm missing (or maybe just can't find) is the console scroll lock i.e. stop refocusing on the latest console entry.
Is this possible in IntelliJ? I'm using v9 Ultimate edition.
It depends where your cursor is. Just click on the part you want to be scroll locked.
To unlock the scrollbar, click on the last line (should be blank) of the console.
Just adding to this for google reasons - clicking at the bottom is hard when the console is still scrolling, it's a bit of a race - but control-end (or cmd-end on mac) also did it!
To unlock the scrolling just press "Enter" key inside of console window.
To Unlock the scroll lock on intelliJ 14 (probably earlier as well) on OSX its
fn + cmd + right cursor.
In PyCharm 2017, there is a "Scroll to the end" button in the "Console" tab of the Debug window.
Disabling it stops the auto scroll on output.
Related
The KDE 5 terminal emulator Konsole has a great feature Split View that allows me to make full use of my big monitor. However, I cannot find a way to use keyboard shortcuts, rather than clicking mouse, to switch between the active views (see: The Konsole Handbook). This apparently reduces the work efficiency. Anyone has an idea how to enable this? Thanks a lot in advance.
What works on version 19.08.2 is Ctrl+Shift+Arrow. You can use up, down, left, right as required.
Ctrl+Tab can be used to switch between all views including in other tabs. It is like Alt+Tab of window managers that you can switch between last ones relasing the Ctrl and using this shortcut again.
You can use the shortcut Shift + Tab.
the shortcuts are called Focus (Above|Below|Left|Right) Terminal. by default they are mapped to Ctrl+Shift+Arrows.
to change these shortcuts, go to Settings -> Configure Keyboard Shortcuts -> Search for "focus".
Shift+Right/Shift+Left should work to navigate between the Konsole tabs.
shift + tab worked for me to switch across multiple tabs that are open in an active split-view screen on a Konsole application in CentOS versions > 6.x
How can I exit fullscreen mode in Code::Blocks editor.
I was unable to find keyboard shortcut (using Google and searching in documentation).
I'm running Codeblocks on Ubuntu inside Virtual Box.
Aha! Shift+F11 does not work on some versions of Ubuntu. Use Alt+V to bring up the view menu, use the down arrow to move down to the Full Screen option and press the space bar.
Try shift+F11. It works for me.
Go to search-bar on start menu or run menu(press win key+ r) in Windows 7
Then type "regedit" without quotes, it will open registry editor.
Then click on Console folder, then look for where Program Files_CodeBlocks_cb_console_runner.exe is written.
Then on the right side box you'll see various icon names. > select the one that reads Full Screen > delete it.
Now you console output window will be changed to normal mode.
Run you program etc again to confirm.
Alt+M will do it. I have tested it.
See the screenshot below to see what I mean. Basically, Intellij only highlights the box I draw with the cursor, but leaves the rest of the editor untouched. I have no idea why it happens, and the only way to resolve it for now is to close and reopen the editor. I have observed the same behavior on a Linux box and a MacBook, both when editing Java and PHP files, so I am not sure it's a bug.
The desired behaviour is standard row selection, i.e. highlight all rows which I drag the cursor over.
I think you have enabled 'column selection'.
Option can be toggled via these methods:
Menu Bar -> Edit -> Column selection mode
Document Body -> Right Click -> Column selection mode
Keyboard Shortcut -> ALT + SHIFT + INSERT
The column select mode is enabled, use Alt+Shift+Insert to enable or disable this mode.
Shift-command-8 to toggle it back and forth on OSX.
I'm new to the XCode IDE, Mac and IOS programming. Means that I'll swap a lot between help and editor. However when using Cmd+Tab I'll not swap between help and IDE but between other open apps.
Does anyone know a short cut to switch between IDE and help?
OPT+Cmd+? will bring the help in XCode (the shortcut is mentioned if you go to the help section)
use 1. in combination with CMD+' to scroll through all open projects / windows within XCode.
You can have a look to this page: it refers all XCode shortcuts and gesture.
The default shortcut to open the Organizer is Cmd+Shift+2, which you can edit in the Preferences of Xcode if you want.
There is also a shortcut which will directly bring you to the Documentation tab: Cmd+Alt+?.
Additionally, you can set a shortcut to switch between the windows of the active app in System Preferences → Keyboard → Keyboard Shortcuts. The default is Cmd+< but I prefer Alt+Tab.
Command-Option-Shift-/ (a.k.a. Command-Option-?) will bring up the documentation window.
Also, you can cycle between windows within an application with Command-` (works in any application). You can use that to switch easily between a project window and other open windows, including the documentation window.
Command-Tab cycles between applications, not windows.
Note that the keyboard shortcut for a given menu command will be displayed in the menu along with the command (this is true for any application):
If you are on Mountain Lion (not sure if it works on earlier versions), you can also use the 4 finger scroll (Mission Control shortcut) if you prefer. With the Organizer (help) open, use 4 fingers and swipe upwards to reveal mission control. On top you'll see virtual desktops. Drag and drop your Organizer/help window onto the second desktop. Now you can flick right or left with 4 fingers on your trackpad to switch between code view and help. I know this sounds complicated but once you get used to it, it becomes second nature. But yeah Cmd + ~ is good too.
Is there a possibility to remove all breakpoints in the module (might be using a shortcut) in IntelliJ IDEA IDE? Thanks.
Ctrl+Shift+F8
is using for removing all breakpoints.
Select upper breakpoint -> Ctrl+Shift+End -> Remove
On Mac Os use this:
Cmd + Shift + (Fn) + F8 on Mac OS
To remove all breakpoints in IntelliJ Idea press following sequence of shortcuts:
Ctrl+Shift+F8 (open Breakpoints dialog)
Ctrl+A (select all breakpoint)
Alt+Delete (remove selected breakpoints)
Enter (confirm)
If you press Ctrl+Shift+F8 and your cursor is at code line with breakpoint, instead of Breakpoint dialog you get bubble with properties of a single breakpoint.
To get the Breakpoints dialog press Ctrl+Shift+F8 again.
Tested in IntelliJ Idea 14 Community Edition.
In case of Mac, follow below steps:
cmd+Shift+F8 (open Breakpoints dialog)
cmd+A (select all breakpoint)
cmd+Delete (remove selected breakpoints)
Enter (confirm)
Unlike Alt+Delete in windows, It's cmd+Delete in Mac
As an alternative, instead of removing all breakpoints, you can just mute them. This will help in the case that you want to stop breaking on all of them. They will still exist, so you can toggle this setting again to start breaking on them.
The mute breakpoints button can be found in the Debug view (view can be toggled using View -> Tool Windows -> Debug), in the left-hand side button menu. I attached a screenshot below.
As mentioned in this answer the shortcut works.
But we tend to forget the combination of keys (I do).
There exists another way to access breakpoints window.
Clicking on this button will open breakpoints window.
Here is one of my trick to remove all breakpoints of a page:
Ctrl+A : select all code
Ctrl+X : cut all codes
Ctrl+V : paste all code
this trick removes all breakpoints at one go and it takes less than a second.
On a Mac you need Shift + Comand + F8
press ctrl+shift+f8 and select check box of which you want to remove and then press minus button in left upper corner in android studio 2.2