I am a C++ dev. I am now able to follow up symbols or files using LSP,/projectile/ivy/transient aso… but inside one file, I have difficulties going quickly up function by function, or by if/for statement. Do you know a convenient way to do this ? I am interested in any navigation tips as well ! Thanks for your help !
You can go to the next/previous function with C-M-a and C-M-e. With evil mode it’s ] m and [ m. You can use imenu. You can make keybindings to scroll forwards/backwards several lines at a time.
That one is great !!! What if I want to navigate through statements of the same type ? Like if instructions?
I’m not sure what that means, but
forward-sexp,backward-sexp, andbackward-up-listare good for navigating across and within balanced expressions.I don’t know any good way to do that.
See my reply above. You can use either
thing-cmd.elorfind-where.elfor that. You just need to define “statements of a given type” as a THING or define a predicate that is true for them. Or if their text has some property (even justfacefrom font-locking) thenisearch-prop.elwill help.Feels like this would be something cool to add to a treesitter mode.
Meanwhile I just C-s if
Using treesitter you can have text objects that are if statements or functions or whatever. From there it is just a key binding away
consult-line
And I’m using outline-minor-mode
(setq-local outline-regexp " *//\\(-+\\)")(outline-minor-mode 1)Now every comment starting with // followed by one or more - like
//- Function this//-- Function that//--- Some important codeis treated like a heading by outline. So, you can use all the outline functions for navigating and folding.
Also you can use consult-outline (if installed) to jump quickly to a heading.
To make it even more convenient I recommend the packages bicycle and logos.
consult-line
And I’m using outline-minor-mode
(setq-local outline-regexp " *//\\(-+\\)")(outline-minor-mode 1)Now every comment starting with // followed by one or more - like
//- Function this//-- Function that//--- Some important codeis treated like a heading by outline. So, you can use all the outline functions for navigating and folding.
Also you can use consult-outline (if installed) to jump quickly to a heading.
To make it even more convenient I recommend the packages bicycle and logos.
I think the “hide-show” package is invaluable in navigating large files. You can see all functions collapsed in a file. Or, within a function, you can see all blocks of code
{}collapsed.Ivy with Swiper is the best way to navigate large files or groups of files IMO.
I use it a lot yes. But some times you just want to look up or down along functions or statements. Scrolling is painful…
Ah yes. Do you use
C-M-aandC-M-e?They jump to the beginning or end of a function and can make scrolling much less painful. I know Evil mode has something similar.
I usually do screenwriting, and fountain-mode uses
M-nandM-pto jump between dialogue. I love that and feel likeC-M-aandC-M-eare really the closest comparisons to that I know of for code.
Using treesitter you can have text objects that are if statements or functions or whatever. From there it is just a key binding away
forward-sexp
C-s
Here are some ways to move around. The first two are in vanilla Emacs. (There are
previousfunctions corresponding to thenextfunctions mentioned.)-
C-M-eandC-M-a: Move to next “defun” (function definition). -
Imenu, if you know the name of the thing (e.g. a definition) you`re looking for. (Various libraries let you complete/filter and cycle among candidates.)
-
next-visible-thing. Moves to end of next THING. First nonconsecutive use prompts for THING type. Or usenext-visible-thingto define such a command for a specific kind of THING (so no prompt needed for the kind).Requires library
thing-cmds.el, which requireshide-comnt.el.Predefined THINGS (library
thingatpt+.elneeded for some):sexp, button, char, char-same-line, color, comment, decimal-number, defun, email, filename, hex-number, line, list, list-contents, non-nil-symbol-name, number, overlay, page, paragraph, region-or-word, sentence, string, string-contents, symbol, symbol-name, unquoted-list, url, whitespace, whitespace-&-newlines, word
“Visible” means invisible text is skipped. Option
ignore-comments-flagcontrols whether to also ignore text in comments. -
Command
fw-to-next-thing. Moves to the start of the next THING (unlikenext-visible-thing, which moves to its end).Requires libraries
find-where.elandthingatpt+.elneeded for some).Library
find-where.ellets you get something at a position where an arbitrary predicate is true (not just a position at the start of a text THING), or move to such a position.E.g., function
fw-next-thingreturns the next THING and its position, and commandfw-to-next-thinggoes there.E.g., this defines a command to move to the beginning of the next sexp:
(defun to-next-sexp (n) "Go to next start of a sexp." (interactive "p") (fw-to-next-thing 'sexp nil n))Likewise, for
fw-next-whereandfw-to-next-where, which look for the next place and some data where some predicate is satisfied.See the Commentary in
find-where.el. -
Commands in library
isearch-prop.elto search within the text of certain things.E.g.,
isearchp-imenu-non-interactive-functionsearches only within (or only outside of) definitions of functions that are not commands.isearch-property-forwardsearches only within text that has (or doesn’t have) a given text or overlay property.isearchp-zones-forwardsearches only within (or only outside) the text of a given set of zones (i.e., within a noncontiguous region). -
The old library
hideif.ellets you hide text that’s withinifdefs.
https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/download/thing-cmds.el
https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/download/hide-comnt.el
https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/download/find-where.el
Awesome compilation!! I already start using C-M e/a already mentioned in this post. It’s simple and effective. I need to finish reading everything to get a way to move inside one function.
-
avyis good for quickly jumping between what’s visible. Occur is brilliant, it might also be worth mentioning consult and embark.inside one file, I have difficulties going quickly up function by function
helm-occur
Just start typing and it will show you occurrences in a file; you can use C-n/C-p (or whatever you bind it to), and it will move the point in the buffer and show you the occurrence so you can see the surrounding text. If you C-g the point is left where you were, and if you just press enter your point will be placed at the occurence.
inside one file, I have difficulties going quickly up function by function
helm-occur
Just start typing and it will show you occurrences in a file; you can use C-n/C-p (or whatever you bind it to), and it will move the point in the buffer and show you the occurrence so you can see the surrounding text. If you C-g the point is left where you were, and if you just press enter your point will be placed at the occurence.
https://github.com/abo-abo/avy#avy-goto-char-timer is excellent for jumping to any text you can see on screen.
isearch and occur are excellent for jumping to specified text anywhere in the buffer.
imenu and xref-find-* are excellent for jumping to specific definitions in the buffer.
For functions, use
M-x imenuorconsult-imenufor flattened results. Forif/forstatements, justisearch. If you’re an evil user, mark the point (mxmeans the point is stored inx) then jump back ('x).I like imenu-list a lot for showing the classes, methods, functions, etc in the file in a side buffer.

