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Scroll Command For Windows And Mac: A Complete Guide



Scroll Reverser is a free Mac app that reverses the direction of scrolling, with independent settings for trackpads and mice. (Including Magic Mouse.) Scroll Reverser was made by Nick Moore, with language translations by community contributors. To get in touch, contact support@pilotmoon.com, or head over to Scroll Reverser Discussions on GitHub. Please also check out my other apps. Scroll Reverser is free of charge and is made available under the Apache Licence 2.0. The source code is available. Translations I am now using the CrowdIn platform for users to contribute translations in their own language. If you would like to add or suggest changes to translations please go to: Pilotmoon Apps project on CrowdIn. If your language does not exist in the project, send me an email so I can add it.




Scroll Command For Windows And Mac



Can you make it reverse swipe gestures too? No, this is not possible. However, swipe direction respects the "Scroll Direction: Natural" setting in System Preferences. Set that to your liking, then use Scroll Reverser to adjust scrolling with respect to that base setting.


I am controlling a machine via remote desktop, and Scroll Reverser is running on both the local and remote machine. Anything I can do to make it work nicely? Run this command at terminal on the remote machine: defaults write com.pilotmoon.scroll-reverser ReverseOnlyRawInput -bool YES then quit and restart Scroll Reverser.


Remove terminal instances by hovering a tab and selecting the Trash Can button, selecting a tab item and pressing Delete, using Terminal: Kill the Active Terminal Instance command, or via the right-click context menu.


Terminal in the editor area, also known as terminal editors, can be created through the Terminal: Create New Terminal in Editor Area and Terminal: Create New Terminal in Editor Area to the Side commands or by dragging a terminal from the terminal view into the editor area.


The content in the terminal is called the buffer, with the section right above the bottom viewport being called "scrollback". The amount of scrollback kept is determined by the terminal.integrated.scrollback setting and defaults to 1000 lines.


There is a Terminal: Select All command, which is bound to Cmd+A on macOS, but does not have a default keybinding on Windows and Linux as it may conflict with shell hotkeys. To use Ctrl+A to select all, add this custom keybinding:


The Terminal: Set Fixed Dimensions command allows changing the number of columns and rows that the terminal and it's backing psuedoterminal uses. This will add scroll bars when necessary, which may lead to an unpleasant UX and is generally not recommended, but it is a common ask on Windows in particular for reading logs or long lines when paging tools aren't available.


Powerzoom offers a quick way to scroll through your document pages. Usingthe grabber hand, you can use zoom in or out and scroll throughyour entire document. This feature is especially useful for longdocuments.


To control whether to greek text and images when youscroll a document, open the Interface section of the Preferencesdialog box, drag the Hand Tool slider to the desired level of performanceversus quality, and then click OK.


With a Terminal command, you can bring App Expose-like functionality to your Dock. It lets you scroll up with two fingers on an app or folder in your Dock to see which windows you have open in that app and then jump to one of the open windows. It doesn't do anything more than what you get with App Expose, but it adds a bit of flexibility by letting you quickly browse your Dock items without first needing to bring each app to the foreground to view its open windows.


According to iMore, this Terminal command works with the trackpad on Mac laptops and with the Magic Mouse and Magic Trackpad on Mac desktops. I found success with it on a MacBook Pro running OS X Yosemite.


The primary way to scroll on a Mac is by using the trackpad. For those coming from a PC background, it may feel like you're constantly going the wrong way up or down the screen because the gesture is reversed when using PC's.


So, to scroll down, you'd move your fingers from the bottom of the trackpad to the top. Try to think of it as if you were dealing with a piece of paper, and were physically pushing it to view the lower half.


None of the scrolling keys work in my CMD window, so GDB effectively consumes and destroys its own output. Switching out of TUI mode allows me to scroll up, but the output that occurred while in TUI mode is not there--the non-TUI window only shows new output generated after switching out of TUI mode. So far log and tail is the only solution I can find.


Note that when the SRC window has focus, the arrow keys will move the source code, but when the CMD window has focus, the arrow keys will select the previous and next commands in the command history. (For the record, the commands to move the SRC window single lines and single pages are +, -, .)


If you use a Logitech mouse on Logi Options app; go to any button control and switch it to "zoom with mouse wheel". you can then use the programmed button as a "modifier" to switch the wheel from scrolling to zooming in preview and safari. This works really well for me so far. In preview it even scrolls to the cursor center!


Sort of same situation here. I found that using Ctrl + Cmd (or Ctrl + Alt) and the wheel (actually, two finger scrolling as I'm using a trackpad) works for zooming in and out in MS Office for the Mac. It seems like somehow adding a key to the combo overrides the usual whole screen zooming typical of the Mac.


I found a solution that works on mac on all chrome like browsers which is an extension called Zoomba you can find it in google extensions store, it enables you to press ctrl+scroll with mouse to zoom in as what exist in Windows and Linux.


Just imagine this. You are working on a spreadsheet normally when all of a sudden you notice that you cannot move from cell to cell - instead of getting to the next cell, the arrow keys scroll the whole worksheet. Don't panic, your Excel is not broken. You have just accidentally turned Scroll Lock on, and this can be easily fixed.


However, when the Scroll Lock is enabled in Excel, arrow keys scroll the worksheet area: one row up and down or one column to the left or right. When the worksheet is scrolled, the current selection (a cell or range) does not change.


If your arrow keys scroll the whole sheet instead of moving to the next cell but the Excel status bar has no indication of Scroll Lock, most likely your status bar was customized not to display the Scroll Lock status. To determine if it's the case, right click the status bar and see if there is a tick mark to the left of Scroll Lock. If a tick mark is not there, simply click the Scroll Lock to have its status appear on the status bar:


Unlike Excel for Windows, Excel for Mac does not show Scroll Lock in the status bar. So, how can you know that Scroll Lock is on? Press any arrow key and watch the address in the name box. If the address does not change and the arrow key scrolls the whole worksheet, it's safe to assume that Scroll Lock is enabled.


My excel workbooks contain many worksheets and there is a need to jump quickly to and from each worksheet.I used to be able to scroll between each worksheet by scrolling with my touchpad, but this has just stopped working. I have to now tap one worksheet at a time or go through the 'left click / right click / see all sheets' process which is time consuming. It is if something has been switched on or off. Any ideas please. With thanks, Ronald


This is amazing. The internet is virtually flooooooded (!!) with this massively pointless advise on how to unlock scroll lock using on-screen keyboard. I am truly amazed at this. How can sooooo many people deliberately choose to answer this wrong??


The problem is that everyone(!) ever googling this problem, has somehow accidentally clicked a keyboard combo that results in Scroll lock. But then why,....oh why...(!?), don't people talk about what the keyboard shortcut IS to toggle scroll lock? I don't want to NOT know how scroll lock is suddenly and accidentally enabled, but know how to go to OSK every time(!) to disable it... :))))))))))


You accidentally clicked this XYZ keyboard combo which is set as shortcut for enabling scroll lock. Please try to avoid the combo in the future, unless deliberate, and whenever it happens by accidnet, use keyboard shortvcut combo ABC to disable it.


So I had to look this up to see if anyone knew why the stupid scroll lock keeps 'magically' turning on in Excel when my HP laptop has no key for it. Found the post above about using "Fn + C" to turn it off, (and technically 'on') and realized that the damn Fn key is next to my ctrl key. I use the keyboard shortcut commands 'ctrl C' and 'ctrl V' all the time to copy/paste in Excel so DUH, it looks like I probably fat fingered the Fn key instead of the ctrl when I went to do a copy and voila, you just magically scroll locked your keyboard.


Went in and clicked the check mark off scroll lock and thought that would do it but it was still locked to my surprise. No scroll lock button on laptop or even on the electronic keyboard. Unreal! Not sure what to do now.


Thank you for this answer. My scroll lock was selected when I right click on the task bar, so I unchecked it and rechecked it again with no success. Using the scroll lock button on the keyboard solved my problem.


Thanks for the solution, and most of know how to scroll off with on screen key board but the question is how and why it is getting on during working in excel.I work on excel every day for a long time and all of sudden it gets on, WTF?It is irritating and Microsoft should answer of fix this bug, it can't happen that it will on automatically without doing anything from user side.


Another simple way to zoom in and out is to use the scroll wheel on your mouse, rolling it forward to get closer to your image and back to move farther away. To activate this feature, press Ctrl+K (Command+K on Mac) to open the Preferences panel, then click the checkbox beside the Zoom with Scroll Wheel option. Alternatively, you can hold down the Alt key (or the Option key on Mac) and scroll your mouse wheel up or down. 2ff7e9595c


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