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When I scroll in Emacs using mouse wheel, it scrolls 5 lines at a time, which, I think, is way too much - where do I set a new value?

Also, when I scroll in Emacs with a mouse (either wheel or scrollbar), the cursor jumps to stay inside the visible screen area - is there a way to override that behavior, making it staying on the line it was on, even when it goes out of screen? In other words, I don't want the position where newly typed symbols appear changed by the scrolling.

Any alternative suggestion on how I could peek into some remote section of code and then quickly return to the former position is also welcome.

7 Answers 7

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You can control the amount in variable mouse-wheel-scroll-amount (in mwheel.el).

EDIT: E.g. Add (setq mouse-wheel-scroll-amount '(1 ((shift) . 1) ((control) . nil))) to your .emacs for 1 line at a time.

I also have (setq mouse-wheel-progressive-speed nil) in my .emacs which I think is nicer behaviour.

6
  • 1
    Added (setq mouse-wheel-scroll-amount '(1)) into my .emacs, it works. And I like (setq mouse-wheel-progressive-speed nil) as well.
    – Headcrab
    Jan 15, 2009 at 7:20
  • Headcrab, is this the answer you were looking for? If so, please accept it.
    – Geoff
    Feb 8, 2012 at 20:29
  • Geoff, it's kind of a 3-in-1 question, with each answer addressing a different "1" of the "3", so I can't choose one particular answer.
    – Headcrab
    Feb 18, 2012 at 6:03
  • Here's a link to the documentation if anyone doesn't want to look for it: gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/…
    – userABC123
    Jan 26, 2016 at 21:51
  • 2
    You can use a higher number after shift for fast scrolling when the shift key is pressed.
    – xuhdev
    Apr 11, 2016 at 1:20
8

Here is my setup:

(setq mouse-wheel-scroll-amount '(0.07))
(setq mouse-wheel-progressive-speed nil)
(setq ring-bell-function 'ignore)
6

I use breadcrumb to leave a trail around a buffer or all buffers.

Drop the breadcrumb, go look at whatever you want/need, then jump back to the breadcrumb. Here's what I have things set to, FWIW:

(global-set-key [(f6)] 'bc-set)
(global-set-key [(shift f6)] 'bc-list)
(global-set-key [(control f6)] 'bc-previous)
(global-set-key [(meta f6)] 'bc-next)
(global-set-key [(shift control f6)] 'bc-local-previous)
(global-set-key [(shift meta f6)] 'bc-local-next)

Hope that helps.

2

It's impossible to have 'point' to exist somewhere outside of the current view; all the point movement commands move the display as well. I think that's a fundamental assumption that emacs makes.

I think what you want in your last point - to peek to a remote section and return - can be accomplished with registers:

This saves your position in register A:

C-x r A

And this restores the position from register A:

C-x r j A

If you do this a lot I'd advise binding those to things slightly less verbose :)

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  • Tried those, it said "C-x r A is undefined".
    – Headcrab
    Jan 20, 2009 at 6:32
  • C-x r SPC A where A is the name of the register (i.e. any single character). In cases like this, you can use C-x r C-h to see all bindings beginning with the prefix C-x r.
    – phils
    Nov 2, 2011 at 20:17
2

You can use some bookmark solution or the register, but also the build-in mark and the mark-ring -

(default binding) 

C-Space to set mark (push a mark in mark ring)
C-u C-Space to pop a mark off the ring; repeat this a few more time should 
            get you where you like to be

or if you don't have highlight region on or you don't mind seeing the highlighting,

C-x C-x (exchange-point-and-mark) switch between you current point and your previous mark.
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Any alternative suggestion on how I could peek into some remote section of code and then quickly return to the former position is also welcome.

Ch 3 of Bob Glickstein's "Writing GNU Emacs Extensions" builds an unscroll-function (to return to a specified location in a scroll-command stack) as an programming example.

The code appears on-line, but there is a reported conflict with the ECB, if you use that.

0

Use easy-come-easy-go autonamed bookmarks -- Bookmark+. Just hit a key to create or delete -- as easy as setting the mark. They can be persistent or temporary. They can be automatically highlighted, if you like (the fringe or the line).

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