What is the keyboard shortcut navigate back to the last cursor position in Visual Studio?
8 Answers
It Will not work for red color (-) key. For me it only works for blue color combination.
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1It in fact doesn't work with numpad 'minus' because it's another key indeed, although the characters be the same– MoesioAug 27, 2014 at 14:52
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According to Visual C# 2008 Keybinding Reference Poster it is Ctrl + -. The name of the specific keybinding is View.NavigateBackward.
PS: While researching I also found that Ctrl + . is the same as Shift + Alt + F10. Nice!
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@LosManos, no it’s
Ctrl
+Shift
+-
akaCtrl
,Shift
and-
pressed at the same time. Sep 6, 2016 at 16:12 -
@Ozkan The binding for 'next cursor position' is ctrl-+ or (as I just learned after a typo) ctrl-shift--– LosManosSep 7, 2016 at 6:06
ctrl
+ -
(dash) navigates backward.
ctrl
+ shift
+ -
(dash) navigates forward.
These settings can be found under Environment -> Keyboard:
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1Note that the default keyboard settings for the multiple installations i've done overs various versions have always been
ctrl
+.
andctrl
+shift
+.
. The former (navigate backward) is unaccessible for many nonqwerty keyboards, since you need to pressshift
to make VS realise that the key you're trying to send is the one with the.
symbol on it (it's on the 2nd level). So, my answer is that there's is no default shortcut and you need to define it yourself. Apr 8, 2020 at 15:46
For Changing the setting in Visual Studio 2019:
- Search for view.navigate
- CHOOSE "Text Editor" from the "Use new shortcut in:" drop down menu
- Select your shortcut
Global doesn't catch for this.
For new VS Code(1.28.2)
Back: Ctrl+Alt+- (dash)
Forward: Ctrl+Shift+- (dash)
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4Note that VS != VS Code. former is the IDE, other is an open source editor with plugins.– ratijasMar 11, 2020 at 20:30
The most generic answers is: there is no working default and you need to define your own keyboard shortcuts for View.NavigateBackward and View.NavigateForward.
Why? For most keyboards, the default shortcut is a broken, unusuable combination because VS badly handles the shift and altGr modifiers. MS did not pay attention to portability and internationalisation so much when they redeveloped VS after version 6, and this is still true today. This bug has been there for way more than a decade, nearly two decades. At this rate, it will never be fixed. And yes, I have filled a bug report, and I'm certainly not the only one.
However, their "VSCode" product line does have better keyboard handling as it doesn't depend on the shift or altGr modifiers to identify the key. For example, when you are in text writing mode and press the key that has the dash symbol, without using shift nor altGr, let's say it writes something else, like number 6. To VSCode when it comes to shortcut handling, that's still the dash key for its purpose. As long as a key has the symbol written on it, whether this is painted as the 1st, 2nd or 3rd level doesn't matter, it just that key.
Of course, it's never a good thing to make the default shortcuts use non-alphanumeric symbols, that's always confusing, whether it works or not. The good mature text editors have known that for a long time and should be taken as examples of things done right. In some ways, VS learned a few good things from emacs with shortcuts that are a sequence of two letters, but ultimately screwed up on other parts with the choice of non-alphanumeric bindings, combined with a broken low-level keyboard handling.
On the top menu bar, right click and it'll give you an option -> 'command center'. See the arrow after you select it.