Go to the previous, next section.
Emacs can split a frame into two or many windows. Multiple windows can display parts of different buffers, or different parts of one buffer. Multiple frames always imply multiple windows, because each window belongs to one and only one frame.
When multiple windows are being displayed, each window has an Emacs buffer designated for display in it. The same buffer may appear in more than one window; if it does, any changes in its text are displayed in all the windows where it appears. But the windows showing the same buffer can show different parts of it, because each window has its own value of point.
At any time, one of the windows is the selected window; the buffer this window is displaying is the current buffer. The terminal's cursor shows the location of point in this window. Each other window has a location of point as well, but since the terminal has only one cursor there is no way to show where those locations are. When you make multiple frames, each frame has a cursor which appears in the frame's selected window.
Commands to move point affect the value of point for the selected Emacs
window only. They do not change the value of point in any other Emacs
window, even one showing the same buffer. The same is true for commands
such as C-x b to change the selected buffer in the selected window;
they do not affect other windows at all. However, there are other commands
such as C-x 4 b that select a different window and switch buffers in
it. Also, all commands that display information in a window, including
(for example) C-h f (describe-function
) and C-x C-b
(list-buffers
), work by switching buffers in a nonselected window
without affecting the selected window.
When multiple windows show the same buffer, they can have different regions, because they can have different values of point. This means that in Transient Mark mode, each window highlights a different part of the buffer. The part that is highlighted in the selected window is the region that editing commands use.
Each window has its own mode line, which displays the buffer name, modification status and major and minor modes of the buffer that is displayed in the window. See section The Mode Line, for full details on the mode line.
@break
split-window-vertically
).
split-window-horizontally
).
The command C-x 2 (split-window-vertically
) breaks the
selected window into two windows, one above the other. Both windows start
out displaying the same buffer, with the same value of point. By default
the two windows each get half the height of the window that was split; a
numeric argument specifies how many lines to give to the top window.
C-x 3 (split-window-horizontally
) breaks the selected
window into two side-by-side windows. A numeric argument specifies
how many columns to give the one on the left. A line of vertical bars
separates the two windows. Windows that are not the full width of the
screen have mode lines, but they are truncated; also, they do not
always appear in inverse video, because the Emacs display routines
have not been taught how to display a region of inverse video that is
only part of a line on the screen.
When a window is less than the full width, text lines too long to fit are
frequent. Continuing all those lines might be confusing. The variable
truncate-partial-width-windows
can be set non-nil
to force
truncation in all windows less than the full width of the screen,
independent of the buffer being displayed and its value for
truncate-lines
. See section Continuation Lines.
Horizontal scrolling is often used in side-by-side windows. See section Controlling the Display.
If split-window-keep-point
is non-nil, C-x 2 tries to
avoid shifting any text on the screen by putting point in whichever
window happens to contain the screen line the cursor is already on. The
default is that split-window-keep-point
is non-nil on slow
terminals.
other-window
). That is o, not zero.
scroll-other-window
).
To select a different window, use C-x o (other-window
).
That is an o, for `other', not a zero. When there are more than two
windows, this command moves through all the windows in a cyclic order,
generally top to bottom and left to right. After the rightmost and
bottommost window, it goes back to the one at the upper left corner. A
numeric argument means to move several steps in the cyclic order of
windows. A negative argument moves around the cycle in the opposite order.
When the minibuffer is active, the minibuffer is the last window in the
cycle; you can switch from the minibuffer window to one of the other
windows, and later switch back and finish supplying the minibuffer argument
that is requested. See section Editing in the Minibuffer.
The usual scrolling commands (see section Controlling the Display) apply to the selected
window only, but there is one command to scroll the next window.
C-M-v (scroll-other-window
) scrolls the window that
C-x o would select. It takes arguments, positive and negative,
like C-v. (In the minibuffer, C-M-v scrolls the window
that contains the minibuffer help display, if any, rather than the
next window in the standard cyclic order.)
The command M-x compare-windows
lets you compare two files or
buffers visible in two windows, by moving through them to the next
mismatch. See section Comparing Files.
C-x 4 is a prefix key for commands that select another window (splitting the window if there is only one) and select a buffer in that window. Different C-x 4 commands have different ways of finding the buffer to select.
switch-to-buffer-other-window
.
display-buffer
.
find-file-other-window
. See section Visiting Files.
dired-other-window
. See section Dired, the Directory Editor.
mail-other-window
; its same-window analogue is C-x m
(see section Sending Mail).
find-tag-other-window
, the multiple-window variant of M-.
(see section Tag Tables).
find-file-read-only-other-window
.
See section Visiting Files.
delete-window
). That is a zero.
delete-other-windows
).
enlarge-window
).
enlarge-window-horizontally
).
To delete a window, type C-x 0 (delete-window
). (That is
a zero.) The space occupied by the deleted window is given to an
adjacent window (but not the minibuffer window, even if that is active
at the time). Once a window is deleted, its attributes are forgotten;
only restoring a window configuration can bring it back. Deleting the
window has no effect on the buffer it used to display; the buffer
continues to exist, and you can select it in any window with C-x
b.
C-x 1 (delete-other-windows
) is more powerful than
C-x 0; it deletes all the windows except the selected one (and the
minibuffer); the selected window expands to use the whole frame except
for the echo area.
To readjust the division of space among vertically adjacent windows,
use C-x ^ (enlarge-window
). It makes the currently
selected window get one line bigger, or as many lines as is specified
with a numeric argument. With a negative argument, it makes the
selected window smaller. C-x }
(enlarge-window-horizontally
) makes the selected window wider by
the specified number of columns. The extra screen space given to a
window comes from one of its neighbors, if that is possible. If this
makes any window too small, it is deleted and its space is given to an
adjacent window. The minimum size is specified by the variables
window-min-height
and window-min-width
.
Go to the previous, next section.