That is one model of the buffer contents, but I doubt its the primary model Geany users have.

Geany is fundamentally a programmers editor, and so a "line" is a section of the buffer up to the next line-end sequence, since that is the definition of "line" used in most programming languages. And most programming languages do not have a concept of "paragraph". At times a line may be displayed on more than one display line for convenience (ie wrapped), but going to "end of line" is still going to the next line-end sequence in the buffer, and this is convenient since it is a common point to insert a new programming language statement (on a new line). With this model of the contents "end" is both consistent and convenient in going to the next line end in the buffer, wrapping or not.

The use-case you are describing is more suitable for textual content, where the concept of "paragraph" exists, although most textual markup languages assume a blank line as paragraph termination, not a single line end. But this is not the primary use-case for Geany. And since the wrap point is variable depending on content and display width, the likelyhood of a wrap point being exactly where you want to go is fairly low, so it should not usurp the single key "end" command from the primary use-case.


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