There is not a few ways to accomplish the movement.
The most appropriate motion command is
]M
which is short and to the point: It moves the cursor to the end of the next
method in a Java-like source code.
There are also three satellite motions that together with ]M
give
possibility to jump to next or previous starts and ends of methods, see :help
]m
and below. Therefore, in addition to ]M
, in this situation one can
issue
]m%
The rest of the answer contains discussion of some tricks that should be used
only if the aforementioned motion commands for some reason have failed to
solve the problem in your case.
Another simple idea to take advantage of is to jump over the argument list,
find the next opening curly brace and move to its closing counterpart,
%l%
or
f{%
or even
/%
Enter%
A similar idea to move the cursor to the very beginning of the method's body
and than jump to the next unmatched closing curly brace leads to the following
command,
j]}
Note, though, that three of the last four commands work only if the function
header is a single line. If that is not the case, they need modifications.
Under some assumptions on the code formatting, it is also possible to achieve
the same result using plain-text-oriented movements. If the opening curly
brace is the last character on the method header line, one can use
$%
or
g_%
if that brace is the last non-blank character.
In conclusion, stick to the ]M
movement as far as it works for you (it
should, in the vast majority of cases), fall back upon tricks based on
combinations of other text motion commands, otherwise.
ublic static ... { ... } p
?