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I'm currently using Emacs 24.0.91.1 and every once in a while, the cursor behavior changes when I am in c-mode (with auto-fill-mode enabled).

What I want is for the cursor to stay on the same column when I move one line up/down. However, every once in a while, it jumps to position 0, which I find highly annoying. Any tips on how to disable this?

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    Does this only happen on lines that doesn't contain anything? If so, what happens if you continue to move the cursor? Feb 15, 2013 at 14:35
  • Once I move one line up or down, it jumps to column 0, regardless of content. Closing the buffer and opening the file again solves the issue, if you can call such a thing a solution.
    – hnrk
    Feb 18, 2013 at 7:29
  • I also notice this. Sometimes the column the cursor resets to isn’t column 0. I assume I’m accidentally invoking some command when jamming keys too fast, but I cannot guess at what combination I’m hitting.
    – binki
    Mar 24, 2014 at 17:59

1 Answer 1

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I found myself in this same situation when jamming a lot of keys into my emacs windows without being too careful. However, I noticed that it would keep reverting my cursor to a particular column, not necessarily column 0. Like the OP, I originally resorted to killing and reopening the buffer to clear this behavior. However, after searching, I realized that I must have accidentally typed C-x C-n when trying to rapidly jam some commands, resulting in accidentally invoking set-goal-column.

emacs manual: Moving Point:

C-x C-n

Use the current column of point as the semipermanent goal column for C-n and C-p (set-goal-column). When a semipermanent goal column is in effect, those commands always try to move to this column, or as close as possible to it, after moving vertically. The goal column remains in effect until canceled.

When invoking this command, I get the following output in emacs’s *Messages* buffer:

Goal column 16 (use C-x C-n with an arg to unset it)

To supply C-x C-n with an argument and remove this effect, you may supply the argument using a “numeric prefix argument”. For example, C-0 C-x C-n (supplying a numeric prefix argument of 0) clears the semipermanent goal column.

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