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1 @c This is part of the Emacs manual.
2 @c Copyright (C) 1985-1987, 1993-1995, 1997, 2000-2012
3 @c Free Software Foundation, Inc.
4 @c See file emacs.texi for copying conditions.
5 @node Windows, Frames, Buffers, Top
6 @chapter Multiple Windows
7 @cindex windows in Emacs
8 @cindex multiple windows in Emacs
9
10 Emacs can split a frame into two or many windows. Multiple windows
11 can display parts of different buffers, or different parts of one
12 buffer. Multiple frames always imply multiple windows, because each
13 frame has its own set of windows. Each window belongs to one and only
14 one frame.
15
16 @menu
17 * Basic Window:: Introduction to Emacs windows.
18 * Split Window:: New windows are made by splitting existing windows.
19 * Other Window:: Moving to another window or doing something to it.
20 * Pop Up Window:: Finding a file or buffer in another window.
21 * Change Window:: Deleting windows and changing their sizes.
22 * Displaying Buffers:: How Emacs picks a window for displaying a buffer.
23 * Window Convenience:: Convenience functions for window handling.
24 @end menu
25
26 @node Basic Window
27 @section Concepts of Emacs Windows
28
29 Each Emacs window displays one Emacs buffer at any time. A single
30 buffer may appear in more than one window; if it does, any changes in
31 its text are displayed in all the windows where it appears. But these
32 windows can show different parts of the buffer, because each window
33 has its own value of point.
34
35 @cindex selected window
36 At any time, one Emacs window is the @dfn{selected window}; the
37 buffer this window is displaying is the current buffer. On graphical
38 displays, the point is indicated by a solid blinking cursor in the
39 selected window, and by a hollow box in non-selected windows. On
40 text-only terminals, the cursor is drawn only in the selected window.
41 @xref{Cursor Display}.
42
43 Commands to move point affect the value of point for the selected
44 Emacs window only. They do not change the value of point in other
45 Emacs windows, even those showing the same buffer. The same is true
46 for buffer-switching commands such as @kbd{C-x b}; they do not affect
47 other windows at all. However, there are other commands such as
48 @kbd{C-x 4 b} that select a different window and switch buffers in it.
49 Also, all commands that display information in a window, including
50 (for example) @kbd{C-h f} (@code{describe-function}) and @kbd{C-x C-b}
51 (@code{list-buffers}), work by switching buffers in a nonselected
52 window without affecting the selected window.
53
54 When multiple windows show the same buffer, they can have different
55 regions, because they can have different values of point. However,
56 they all have the same value for the mark, because each buffer has
57 only one mark position.
58
59 Each window has its own mode line, which displays the buffer name,
60 modification status and major and minor modes of the buffer that is
61 displayed in the window. The selected window's mode line appears in a
62 different color. @xref{Mode Line}, for details.
63
64 @node Split Window
65 @section Splitting Windows
66
67 @table @kbd
68 @item C-x 2
69 Split the selected window into two windows, one above the other
70 (@code{split-window-below}).
71 @item C-x 3
72 Split the selected window into two windows, positioned side by side
73 (@code{split-window-right}).
74 @item C-Mouse-2
75 In the mode line or scroll bar of a window, split that window.
76 @end table
77
78 @kindex C-x 2
79 @findex split-window-below
80 @kbd{C-x 2} (@code{split-window-below}) splits the selected window
81 into two windows, one above the other. After splitting, the selected
82 window is the upper one, and the newly split-off window is below.
83 Both windows have the same value of point as before, and display the
84 same portion of the buffer (or as close to it as possible). If
85 necessary, the windows are scrolled to keep point on-screen. By
86 default, the two windows each get half the height of the original
87 window. A positive numeric argument specifies how many lines to give
88 to the top window; a negative numeric argument specifies how many
89 lines to give to the bottom window.
90
91 @vindex split-window-keep-point
92 If you change the variable @code{split-window-keep-point} to
93 @code{nil}, @kbd{C-x 2} instead adjusts the portion of the buffer
94 displayed by the two windows, as well as the value of point in each
95 window, in order to keep the text on the screen as close as possible
96 to what it was before; furthermore, if point was in the lower half of
97 the original window, the bottom window is selected instead of the
98 upper one.
99
100 @kindex C-x 3
101 @findex split-window-right
102 @kbd{C-x 3} (@code{split-window-right}) splits the selected window
103 into two side-by-side windows. The left window is the selected one;
104 the right window displays the same portion of the same buffer, and has
105 the same value of point. A positive numeric argument specifies how
106 many columns to give the left window; a negative numeric argument
107 specifies how many columns to give the right window.
108
109 @vindex truncate-partial-width-windows
110 When you split a window with @kbd{C-x 3}, each resulting window
111 occupies less than the full width of the frame. If it becomes too
112 narrow, the buffer may be difficult to read if continuation lines are
113 in use (@pxref{Continuation Lines}). Therefore, Emacs automatically
114 switches to line truncation if the window width becomes narrower than
115 50 columns. This truncation occurs regardless of the value of the
116 variable @code{truncate-lines} (@pxref{Line Truncation}); it is
117 instead controlled by the variable
118 @code{truncate-partial-width-windows}. If the value of this variable
119 is a positive integer (the default is 50), that specifies the minimum
120 width for a partial-width window before automatic line truncation
121 occurs; if the value is @code{nil}, automatic line truncation is
122 disabled; and for any other non-@code{nil} value, Emacs truncates
123 lines in every partial-width window regardless of its width.
124
125 On text terminals, side-by-side windows are separated by a vertical
126 divider which is drawn using the @code{vertical-border} face.
127
128 @kindex C-Mouse-2 @r{(scroll bar)}
129 You can also split a window horizontally or vertically by clicking
130 @kbd{C-Mouse-2} in the mode line or the scroll bar. If you click on
131 the mode line, that puts the vertical divider where you click; if you
132 click in the scroll bar, that puts the new mode-line where you click.
133
134 @node Other Window
135 @section Using Other Windows
136
137 @table @kbd
138 @item C-x o
139 Select another window (@code{other-window}).
140 @item C-M-v
141 Scroll the next window (@code{scroll-other-window}).
142 @item Mouse-1
143 @kbd{Mouse-1}, in the text area of a window, selects the window and
144 moves point to the position clicked. Clicking in the mode line
145 selects the window without moving point in it.
146 @end table
147
148 @kindex C-x o
149 @findex other-window
150 With the keyboard, you can switch windows by typing @kbd{C-x o}
151 (@code{other-window}). That is an @kbd{o}, for ``other,'' not a zero.
152 When there are more than two windows, this command moves through all the
153 windows in a cyclic order, generally top to bottom and left to right.
154 After the rightmost and bottommost window, it goes back to the one at
155 the upper left corner. A numeric argument means to move several steps
156 in the cyclic order of windows. A negative argument moves around the
157 cycle in the opposite order. When the minibuffer is active, the
158 minibuffer is the last window in the cycle; you can switch from the
159 minibuffer window to one of the other windows, and later switch back and
160 finish supplying the minibuffer argument that is requested.
161 @xref{Minibuffer Edit}.
162
163 @kindex C-M-v
164 @findex scroll-other-window
165 The usual scrolling commands (@pxref{Display}) apply to the selected
166 window only, but there is one command to scroll the next window.
167 @kbd{C-M-v} (@code{scroll-other-window}) scrolls the window that
168 @kbd{C-x o} would select. It takes arguments, positive and negative,
169 like @kbd{C-v}. (In the minibuffer, @kbd{C-M-v} scrolls the help
170 window associated with the minibuffer, if any, rather than the next
171 window in the standard cyclic order; @pxref{Minibuffer Edit}.)
172
173 @vindex mouse-autoselect-window
174 If you set @code{mouse-autoselect-window} to a non-@code{nil} value,
175 moving the mouse over a different window selects that window. This
176 feature is off by default.
177
178 @node Pop Up Window
179 @section Displaying in Another Window
180
181 @cindex selecting buffers in other windows
182 @kindex C-x 4
183 @kbd{C-x 4} is a prefix key for a variety of commands that switch to
184 a buffer in a different window---either another existing window, or a
185 new window created by splitting the selected window. @xref{Window
186 Choice}, for how Emacs picks or creates the window to use.
187
188 @table @kbd
189 @findex switch-to-buffer-other-window
190 @item C-x 4 b @var{bufname} @key{RET}
191 Select buffer @var{bufname} in another window
192 (@code{switch-to-buffer-other-window}).
193
194 @findex display-buffer
195 @item C-x 4 C-o @var{bufname} @key{RET}
196 @kindex C-x 4 C-o
197 Display buffer @var{bufname} in some window, without trying to select
198 it (@code{display-buffer}). @xref{Displaying Buffers}, for details
199 about how the window is chosen.
200
201 @findex find-file-other-window
202 @item C-x 4 f @var{filename} @key{RET}
203 Visit file @var{filename} and select its buffer in another window
204 (@code{find-file-other-window}). @xref{Visiting}.
205
206 @findex dired-other-window
207 @item C-x 4 d @var{directory} @key{RET}
208 Select a Dired buffer for directory @var{directory} in another window
209 (@code{dired-other-window}). @xref{Dired}.
210
211 @findex mail-other-window
212 @item C-x 4 m
213 Start composing a mail message, similar to @kbd{C-x m} (@pxref{Sending
214 Mail}), but in another window (@code{mail-other-window}).
215
216 @findex find-tag-other-window
217 @item C-x 4 .
218 Find a tag in the current tags table, similar to @kbd{M-.}
219 (@pxref{Tags}), but in another window (@code{find-tag-other-window}).
220 @item C-x 4 r @var{filename} @key{RET}
221 Visit file @var{filename} read-only, and select its buffer in another
222 window (@code{find-file-read-only-other-window}). @xref{Visiting}.
223 @end table
224
225 @node Change Window
226 @section Deleting and Rearranging Windows
227
228 @table @kbd
229 @item C-x 0
230 Delete the selected window (@code{delete-window}).
231 @item C-x 1
232 Delete all windows in the selected frame except the selected window
233 (@code{delete-other-windows}).
234 @item C-x 4 0
235 Delete the selected window and kill the buffer that was showing in it
236 (@code{kill-buffer-and-window}). The last character in this key
237 sequence is a zero.
238 @item C-x ^
239 Make selected window taller (@code{enlarge-window}).
240 @item C-x @}
241 Make selected window wider (@code{enlarge-window-horizontally}).
242 @item C-x @{
243 Make selected window narrower (@code{shrink-window-horizontally}).
244 @item C-x -
245 Shrink this window if its buffer doesn't need so many lines
246 (@code{shrink-window-if-larger-than-buffer}).
247 @item C-x +
248 Make all windows the same height (@code{balance-windows}).
249 @end table
250
251 @kindex C-x 0
252 @findex delete-window
253 To delete the selected window, type @kbd{C-x 0}
254 (@code{delete-window}). (That is a zero.) Once a window is deleted,
255 the space that it occupied is given to an adjacent window (but not the
256 minibuffer window, even if that is active at the time). Deleting the
257 window has no effect on the buffer it used to display; the buffer
258 continues to exist, and you can still switch to with @kbd{C-x b}.
259
260 @findex kill-buffer-and-window
261 @kindex C-x 4 0
262 @kbd{C-x 4 0} (@code{kill-buffer-and-window}) is a stronger command
263 than @kbd{C-x 0}; it kills the current buffer and then deletes the
264 selected window.
265
266 @kindex C-x 1
267 @findex delete-other-windows
268 @kbd{C-x 1} (@code{delete-other-windows}) deletes all the windows,
269 @emph{except} the selected one; the selected window expands to use the
270 whole frame. (This command cannot be used while the minibuffer window
271 is active; attempting to do so signals an error.)
272
273 @kindex C-x ^
274 @findex enlarge-window
275 @kindex C-x @}
276 @vindex window-min-height
277 The command @kbd{C-x ^} (@code{enlarge-window}) makes the selected
278 window one line taller, taking space from a vertically adjacent window
279 without changing the height of the frame. With a positive numeric
280 argument, this command increases the window height by that many lines;
281 with a negative argument, it reduces the height by that many lines.
282 If there are no vertically adjacent windows (i.e. the window is at the
283 full frame height), that signals an error. The command also signals
284 an error if you attempt to reduce the height of any window below a
285 certain minimum number of lines, specified by the variable
286 @code{window-min-height} (the default is 4).
287
288 @findex enlarge-window-horizontally
289 @findex shrink-window-horizontally
290 @vindex window-min-width
291 Similarly, @kbd{C-x @}} (@code{enlarge-window-horizontally}) makes
292 the selected window wider, and @kbd{C-x @{}
293 (@code{shrink-window-horizontally}) makes it narrower. These commands
294 signal an error if you attempt to reduce the width of any window below
295 a certain minimum number of columns, specified by the variable
296 @code{window-min-width} (the default is 10).
297
298 @kindex C-x -
299 @findex shrink-window-if-larger-than-buffer
300 @kbd{C-x -} (@code{shrink-window-if-larger-than-buffer}) reduces the
301 height of the selected window, if it is taller than necessary to show
302 the whole text of the buffer it is displaying. It gives the extra
303 lines to other windows in the frame.
304
305 @kindex C-x +
306 @findex balance-windows
307 You can also use @kbd{C-x +} (@code{balance-windows}) to even out the
308 heights of all the windows in the selected frame.
309
310 Mouse clicks on the mode line provide another way to change window
311 heights and to delete windows. @xref{Mode Line Mouse}.
312
313 @node Displaying Buffers
314 @section Displaying a Buffer in a Window
315
316 It is a common Emacs operation to display or ``pop up'' some buffer
317 in response to a user command. There are several different ways in
318 which commands do this.
319
320 Many commands, like @kbd{C-x C-f} (@code{find-file}), display the
321 buffer by ``taking over'' the selected window, expecting that the
322 user's attention will be diverted to that buffer. These commands
323 usually work by calling @code{switch-to-buffer} internally
324 (@pxref{Select Buffer}).
325
326 @findex display-buffer
327 Some commands try to display ``intelligently'', trying not to take
328 over the selected window, e.g. by splitting off a new window and
329 displaying the desired buffer there. Such commands, which include the
330 various help commands (@pxref{Help}), work by calling
331 @code{display-buffer} internally. @xref{Window Choice}, for details.
332
333 Other commands do the same as @code{display-buffer}, and
334 additionally select the displaying window so that you can begin
335 editing its buffer. The command @kbd{C-x `} (@code{next-error}) is
336 one example (@pxref{Compilation Mode}). Such commands work by calling
337 the function @code{pop-to-buffer} internally. @xref{Switching
338 Buffers,,Switching to a Buffer in a Window, elisp, The Emacs Lisp
339 Reference Manual}.
340
341 Commands with names ending in @code{-other-window} behave like
342 @code{display-buffer}, except that they never display in the selected
343 window. Several of these commands are bound in the @kbd{C-x 4} prefix
344 key (@pxref{Pop Up Window}).
345
346 Commands with names ending in @code{-other-frame} behave like
347 @code{display-buffer}, except that they (i) never display in the
348 selected window and (ii) prefer to create a new frame to display the
349 desired buffer instead of splitting a window---as though the variable
350 @code{pop-up-frames} is set to @code{t} (@pxref{Window Choice}).
351 Several of these commands are bound in the @kbd{C-x 5} prefix key.
352
353 @menu
354 * Window Choice:: How @code{display-buffer} works.
355 @end menu
356
357 @node Window Choice
358 @subsection How @code{display-buffer} works
359 @findex display-buffer
360
361 The @code{display-buffer} command (as well as commands that call it
362 internally) chooses a window to display by following the steps given
363 below. @xref{Choosing Window,,Choosing a Window for Display, elisp,
364 The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}, for details about how to alter this
365 sequence of steps.
366
367 @itemize
368 @vindex same-window-buffer-names
369 @vindex same-window-regexps
370 @item
371 First, check if the buffer should be displayed in the selected window
372 regardless of other considerations. You can tell Emacs to do this by
373 adding the desired buffer's name to the list
374 @code{same-window-buffer-names}, or adding a matching regular
375 expression to the list @code{same-window-regexps}. By default, these
376 variables are @code{nil}, so this step is skipped.
377
378 @vindex display-buffer-reuse-frames
379 @item
380 Otherwise, if the buffer is already displayed in an existing window,
381 ``reuse'' that window. Normally, only windows on the selected frame
382 are considered, but windows on other frames are also reusable if you
383 change @code{display-buffer-reuse-frames} to @code{t}, or if you
384 change @code{pop-up-frames} (see below) to @code{t}.
385
386 @item
387 Otherwise, if you specified that the buffer should be displayed in a
388 special frame by customizing @code{special-display-buffer-names} or
389 @code{special-display-regexps}, do so. @xref{Choosing Window
390 Options,,, elisp, The Emacs Lisp Reference Manual}.
391
392 @vindex pop-up-frames
393 @item
394 Otherwise, optionally create a new frame and display the buffer there.
395 By default, this step is skipped. To enable it, change the variable
396 @code{pop-up-frames} to a non-@code{nil} value. The special value
397 @code{graphic-only} means to do this only on graphical displays.
398
399 @item
400 Otherwise, try to create a new window by splitting the selected
401 window, and display the buffer in that new window.
402
403 @vindex split-height-threshold
404 @vindex split-width-threshold
405 The split can be either vertical or horizontal, depending on the
406 variables @code{split-height-threshold} and
407 @code{split-width-threshold}. These variables should have integer
408 values. If @code{split-height-threshold} is smaller than the selected
409 window's height, the split puts the new window below. Otherwise, if
410 @code{split-width-threshold} is smaller than the window's width, the
411 split puts the new window on the right. If neither condition holds,
412 Emacs tries to split so that the new window is below---but only if the
413 window was not split before (to avoid excessive splitting).
414
415 @item
416 Otherwise, display the buffer in an existing window on the selected
417 frame.
418
419 @item
420 If all the above methods fail for whatever reason, create a new frame
421 and display the buffer there.
422 @end itemize
423
424 @node Window Convenience
425 @section Convenience Features for Window Handling
426
427 @findex winner-mode
428 @cindex Winner mode
429 @cindex mode, Winner
430 @cindex undoing window configuration changes
431 @cindex window configuration changes, undoing
432 Winner mode is a global minor mode that records the changes in the
433 window configuration (i.e. how the frames are partitioned into
434 windows), so that you can ``undo'' them. You can toggle Winner mode
435 with @kbd{M-x winner-mode}, or by customizing the variable
436 @code{winner-mode}. When the mode is enabled, @kbd{C-c left}
437 (@code{winner-undo}) undoes the last window configuration change. If
438 you change your mind while undoing, you can redo the changes you had
439 undone using @kbd{C-c right} (@code{M-x winner-redo}).
440
441 Follow mode (@kbd{M-x follow-mode}) synchronizes several windows on
442 the same buffer so that they always display adjacent sections of that
443 buffer. @xref{Follow Mode}.
444
445 @cindex Windmove package
446 @cindex directional window selection
447 @findex windmove-right
448 @findex windmove-default-keybindings
449 The Windmove package defines commands for moving directionally
450 between neighboring windows in a frame. @kbd{M-x windmove-right}
451 selects the window immediately to the right of the currently selected
452 one, and similarly for the ``left,'' ``up,'' and ``down''
453 counterparts. @kbd{M-x windmove-default-keybindings} binds these
454 commands to @kbd{S-right} etc.; doing so disables shift selection for
455 those keys (@pxref{Shift Selection}).
456
457 The command @kbd{M-x compare-windows} lets you compare the text
458 shown in different windows. @xref{Comparing Files}.
459
460 @vindex scroll-all-mode
461 @cindex scrolling windows together
462 @cindex Scroll-all mode
463 @cindex mode, Scroll-all
464 Scroll All mode (@kbd{M-x scroll-all-mode}) is a global minor mode
465 that causes scrolling commands and point motion commands to apply to
466 every single window.