WebbThe Scroll Lock key was meant to lock all scrolling techniques, and is a vestige of the original IBM PC keyboard. In the original design, Scroll Lock was intended to modify the behavior of the arrow keys. When the Scroll Lock mode was on, the arrow keys would scroll the contents of a text window instead of moving the cursor. Webbctrl+shift+g (see Shell integration) The scroll actions only take effect when the terminal is in the main screen. When the alternate screen is active (for example when using a full …
keyboard shortcuts - Copying the GNU screen scrollback buffer to …
WebbAlt +. Show / hide all buttons associated with the status window. New windows will always have their buttons displayed even if the hide option is on. You can use Alt + F1 to … Webb7 jan. 2024 · Bash: clearing the scrollback. So, clearing the screen in Terminal may be the most trivial thing to do - you type clear or use the keyboard shortcut Ctrl-L. And then of course you can/will setup some alias to make it easier. But, I wanted to do a better setup, to also clear the scrollback. Basically when you type clear, it'll only push it out ... rishard matthews sleeper
intellisense 模式 windows-msvc-x64 与编译器路径不兼容。
Webb23 apr. 2024 · 3. cmd.exe is a shell and not a terminal. Many terminals actually have their own way to scroll the console window without passing the shortcut key to the shell so you can easily scroll any shells running in it including cmd. The default terminal in Windows is conhost.exe and it's scrolling feature can be accessed via Alt + Space, E, L then Up ... Webbkitty.conf#. kitty is highly customizable, everything from keyboard shortcuts, to rendering frames-per-second. See below for an overview of all customization possibilities. You can open the config file within kitty by pressing ctrl+shift+f2 (⌘+, on macOS). A kitty.conf with commented default configurations and descriptions will be created if the file does not … Webb10 apr. 2024 · Specifically, when Visual Studio Code's integrated terminal is cleared (which includes the scrollback buffer) via a keyboard shortcut (rather than using a command submitted from inside the terminal), PowerShell / PSReadLine is unaware of that fact, and subsequent keyboard input appears on the original line, i.e. wherever the cursor … rishard dixon