In the last Vim-related post, we discussed mark motion, and today, we’re going to cover another type of navigation: jump motion.

The main benefit of jump motion is its speed; it allows us to quickly traverse through the current file open or previously visited files.

Let’s briefly cover some of the most familiar ones.

File Jumps

File jumps will navigate you to a location within the current file, regardless if that location is seen or not seen within the window.

gg

Will take you to the top of the file.

G

Will take you to the bottom of the file.

Sentences and Paragraphs

(

Move a sentence backwards, can take a prefix argument. 5( - Navigates you 5 sentences backwards.



)

e Move a sentence forward, can take a prefix argument.

10) - Navigates you 10 sentences forwards.

{

Move a paragraph backward, can take a prefix argument. 5{ - Navigates you 5 paragraphs backwards.



}

Move a paragraph forward, can take a prefix argument. 5} - Navigates you 5 paragraphs forwards.



/

Allows you to search forwards for a desired pattern within the file. /fishsticks - Searches for all occurences of fishsticks ahead of your current cursor.



?

Allows you to search backwards for a desired pattern within the file. ?catdog - Searches for all occurences of catdog behind your current cursor.



n

Repeats the last / or ? search.

N

Repeats the last / or ? search in the opposite direction.

Window Jumps

Window jumps allow you to move within the current scope of the window or viewport.

H

Jumps your cursor to the highest line of the window.

M

Jumps your cursor to the middle line of the window.

L

Jumps your cursor to the lowest line of the window.

System Wide Jumps

System jumps are special; they have the ability to take us to any previously visited file, regardless if those files are or are not within the same directory.

This is where jump motion really shines!

Give these next commands a try:

CTRL-O

Jump to our previous position.

CTRL-I

Jump to our next postion.

By pressing these commands repeatedly, you’ll see that you are traversing through your recently visited files.

Jump list

Our recent jumps are stored on our jump list. We can view all the jumps through Vim’s command-line mode. There are three ways to open up the jump list.

:jumps

:jump

:ju

Opens up the jump list

Above is an example of a jump list. There are four columns: jump, line, col and file/text. The numbers underneath the jump column are used to prefix our jump command, CTRL-O and CTRL-I. We are also given the position of our cursor from the line and column columns. Lastly, the file/text column, gives us either the file path or, if the jump is located in our currently opened file, the line of text.

Using our example jump list, if we want to jump to the 4 th jump, located within ~/dir2/file.md , we’d prefix our previous jump command with the number 4, i.e. 4CTRL-O.

Next if we want to get back to our previous position, the line This is another sentence! we can cycle back to it with a couple of CTRL-Is. Cool!

I find that jump motion complements mark motion really well. By setting multiple marks in the current file, and flying to different files with jumps, my workflow has greatly improved.

Hope you give jump motion a try!

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