On 26/04/16 19:21, Amir Teymuri wrote:
when i want to search for a word a do Ctrl+f and the GUI pops up. How can i then search for the next/last matching words in the file without clicking with mouse on the Previous Next buttons of the GUI object? I would like to do the search only with keyboard.
Press Alt-N after you’ve typed your search query. At least, that works for me (on Linux).
By default Find Next is bound to `<primary>g`. Menu->help->Keyboard Shortcuts shows a list of current keybindings.
On 27 April 2016 at 04:25, James Brierley jmb8710@gmail.com wrote:
On 26/04/16 19:21, Amir Teymuri wrote:
when i want to search for a word a do Ctrl+f and the GUI pops up. How can i then search for the next/last matching words in the file without clicking with mouse on the Previous Next buttons of the GUI object? I would like to do the search only with keyboard.
Press Alt-N after you’ve typed your search query. At least, that works for me (on Linux).
--
- True patriots are the people willing
* to save their country from itself.
* VOTE TO REMAIN ON 2016-06-27.
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On 2016-04-26 05:05 PM, Lex Trotman wrote:
By default Find Next is bound to `<primary>g`. Menu->help->Keyboard Shortcuts shows a list of current keybindings.
Unfortunately that won't work as-is since the normal editor keybindings aren't triggered when the Search dialog has focus, which it gets when opened with Ctrl+F and keeps event after the Search dialog is activated to find a match with the Enter key. To use it, you'd have to re-focus the main window with Alt+Tab or whatever the environment uses for switching between top-level windows.
For "Find Next" from the Search dialog, you could just keep hitting Enter and it will find the next matches, for "Find Previous", you could use Shift+Enter and it will do the same but backwards (same bindings as the toolbar find entry).
The mnemonics, as James mentioned, are also usable and will trigger the actual _Next and _Previous GUI buttons inside the dialog. The search dialogs have mnemonic key bindings for most selectable GUI elements. I believe some environments don't show the mnemonic bindings by default, but pressing the Alt key should reveal them.
Cheers, Matthew Brush
On 27 April 2016 at 04:25, James Brierley jmb8710@gmail.com wrote:
On 26/04/16 19:21, Amir Teymuri wrote:
when i want to search for a word a do Ctrl+f and the GUI pops up. How can i then search for the next/last matching words in the file without clicking with mouse on the Previous Next buttons of the GUI object? I would like to do the search only with keyboard.
Press Alt-N after you’ve typed your search query. At least, that works for me (on Linux).
--
- True patriots are the people willing
* to save their country from itself.
* VOTE TO REMAIN ON 2016-06-27.
Users mailing list Users@lists.geany.org https://lists.geany.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users
Users mailing list Users@lists.geany.org https://lists.geany.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users
On 27 April 2016 at 10:22, Matthew Brush mbrush@codebrainz.ca wrote:
On 2016-04-26 05:05 PM, Lex Trotman wrote:
By default Find Next is bound to `<primary>g`. Menu->help->Keyboard Shortcuts shows a list of current keybindings.
Unfortunately that won't work as-is since the normal editor keybindings aren't triggered when the Search dialog has focus, which it gets when opened with Ctrl+F and keeps event after the Search dialog is activated to find a match with the Enter key. To use it, you'd have to re-focus the main window with Alt+Tab or whatever the environment uses for switching between top-level windows.
Correct, I interpreted "keyboard only" as meaning without the dialog open.
The other nice thing is that <ctrl>g works for searches initiated from the toolbar as well. In fact I have re-bound <ctrl>f to toolbar search and almost never use the find dialog. This provides a reasonable emulation of modern search as it happens in browsers and other tools.
For "Find Next" from the Search dialog, you could just keep hitting Enter and it will find the next matches, for "Find Previous", you could use Shift+Enter and it will do the same but backwards (same bindings as the toolbar find entry).
The mnemonics, as James mentioned, are also usable and will trigger the actual _Next and _Previous GUI buttons inside the dialog. The search dialogs have mnemonic key bindings for most selectable GUI elements. I believe some environments don't show the mnemonic bindings by default, but pressing the Alt key should reveal them.
Cheers, Matthew Brush
On 27 April 2016 at 04:25, James Brierley jmb8710@gmail.com wrote:
On 26/04/16 19:21, Amir Teymuri wrote:
when i want to search for a word a do Ctrl+f and the GUI pops up. How can i then search for the next/last matching words in the file without clicking with mouse on the Previous Next buttons of the GUI object? I would like to do the search only with keyboard.
Press Alt-N after you’ve typed your search query. At least, that works for me (on Linux).
--
- True patriots are the people willing
* to save their country from itself.
* VOTE TO REMAIN ON 2016-06-27.
Users mailing list Users@lists.geany.org https://lists.geany.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users
Users mailing list Users@lists.geany.org https://lists.geany.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users
Users mailing list Users@lists.geany.org https://lists.geany.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/users
On Wed, Apr 27, 2016 at 2:22 AM, Matthew Brush mbrush@codebrainz.ca wrote:
On 2016-04-26 05:05 PM, Lex Trotman wrote:
By default Find Next is bound to `<primary>g`. Menu->help->Keyboard Shortcuts shows a list of current keybindings.
Unfortunately that won't work as-is since the normal editor keybindings aren't triggered when the Search dialog has focus, which it gets when opened with Ctrl+F and keeps event after the Search dialog is activated to find a match with the Enter key. To use it, you'd have to re-focus the main window with Alt+Tab or whatever the environment uses for switching between top-level windows.
I always have General->Miscellaneous->"Hide the Find dialog" on in which case you can just
1. Ctr+F 2. type what you want to search for 3. hit enter - the dialog disappears automatically 4. use keybindings for going to next/previous
Cheers,
Jiri