In Visual Studio, if I Go-To-Definition on e.g. a class by Ctrl+Click or F12, the class is opened in a new tab but the tab is not part of the open tabs (not sure if that is the correct wording). The tab heading is to the right. The tab heading has a little button "Keep Tab Open Ctrl+Alt+Home".
If I make no edits in the opened tab and navigate back using Ctrl-Minus, the new tab is closed.
What do I need to do to always have Go-To-Definition windows open and never close e.g. when navigate away?
Here some pictures #hellip;
This is the start situation:
This is the actual situation after Ctrl+Click on Class1:
This is what I expect:
Tools -> Options -> Environment -> Tabs And Windows
Uncheck "Allow new files to be opened in the preview tab"
You may need to restart Visual Studio for the setting to take effect.
Click on the enlightened square in the opened tab. It will show the pin. Click on the pin so that it will always remain there.
If I have multiple panes in the Matlab's IDE, Shift-Ctrl-M causes the one with the focus to become the only visibe pane, taking up the entire IDE window. Pressing Shift-Ctrl-M again brings back all the other panes that were present, and the pane with the focus becomes just one pane among many again.
Is there such a shortcut key in the Spyder IDE?
There is a GUI button to do this, but I wonder if there is also a shortcut key.
(Spyder maintainer here) The shortcut for that in Spyder is Ctrl+Shift+Alt+M
Note: You can browse and modify all our available shortcuts by going to the menu
Tools > Preferences > Keyboard shortcuts
For as long as I can remember I had a search box near the top of the Assembly Explorer - this afternoon it's gone, and all attempts at restoring it have failed.
Is this a bug or did I somehow closed it? Can I bring it back?
Late answer. You clicked the "Toggle auto-hide of search bar" beside the search box. To get it back type any character when the focus is on the Assembly Explorer window. The click the Pin to keep it visible.
I had the same problem, but I did not find a way to simply bring back the search box.
Instead I reset all settings to default which made the search box appear again:
Go to Tools -> Options
On the bottom left click 'Manage…'
On the top right, click 'Reset All Settings'
Sorry for the confusing title but I can't get my head around to find the right words for this scenario:
We have an iOS app that has a top-left menu button. If you tap it, a side menu opens and most of the screen (incl. the menu button) are slid to the right.
for Calabash I need to track the ID of the view that is slid to the right. Any tap on the whole slid-to-right view area will close the menu. The menu icon itself seems to have no other function than being a visual help and its accessibility ID cannot be found by Calabash while the menu is open.
Does anyone know how iOS handles this kind of navigation? To sum it up:
We have an initial view open with a menu button.
If button is tapped, menu slides in from left and current view is moved to right (mostly out of the screen).
You can now tap any of the remaining visible area of the initial view and the menu will close again (the menu button seems to receive no touch during this).
I need to figure out to what assign an accessibility ID to so that Calabash can 'imitate' a tap on the slid-out, initial view to close the menu.
Have you tried using the Accessibility Inspector in the Developer Tools of Xcode? This might help you in seeing whether or not you can interact with the slid-out menu.
Also if you haven't tried using the calabash command tree - I'd give that a go as well. For that open the menu you're trying to interact with use the command calabash-ios console > console_attach > tree.
You will be able to see the whole view hierarchy here, you can even run tree before and after the menu pops out to see if it makes a difference.
In Eclipse, I can type Ctrl+M or click the maximize icon in the editor pane to make the editor pane take up the entire Eclipse window, and then again to restore the pane back to its previous size exposing the other panes.
Is it possible to perform the equivalent in IntelliJ IDEA?
To clarify, I'm asking about hiding all other tool panes to show only the editor pane. I'm not asking how to go to distraction-free mode, because this is mode is completely "full screen", hiding all toolbars, window decorations, etc.
The closest thing would be to hide all tool windows by invoking the Hide All Tool Windows action. The shortcut for that is Ctrl + Shift + F12 (Default keymap).
This will hide all tool windows, effectively maximizing the editor window (though not full screen). The IntelliJ menu bar, toolbar, breadcrumb and tab bar will still be visible.
I'm using IntelliJ 11.1.2 on Kubuntu 12.04 LTS with the Default keymap.
14.0.3 on MacOS X
It's Cmd + Shift + F12 in IntelliJ IDEA 14.0.3 on MacOS X.
UPDATE on 2015-03-24:
IntelliJ IDEA 14.1 now has support for Distraction Free Mode. You can invoke it by clicking View > Enter Distraction Free Mode. In this mode, IntelliJ hides everything but the menu. For more details, follow their video detailing the new feature: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVwE8MFgYig.
If you want to maximize a pane , select that pane (by clicking inside or on its title bar) and then use the shortcut "Ctrl+Shift+Quotes"
You can double click anywhere on the tab title bar of the editor pane.
All answers work for only hiding other tools. If you have more than one editor pane and you want to maximize only one editor pane (hide all tolls and hide all other editor panes), it is not possible right now.
PyCharm version: 2018.2.7
I use Ctrl-Shift-F12("Hide All Windows") toggle between maximum and normal modes of the editor.
Using IntelliJ 14.1.5
If you want to maximize the editor window AND full-screen the app, you can create a macro with the following two commands:
Toggle Full Screen Mode
Hide All Tool Windows
And then assign a hotkey to the macro. Here's how I did this:
File > Settings > Keymap
Use the search bar to search for the two commands above. Assign obscure hotkeys to those.
Edit > Macros > Start macro recording
Hit the two obscure hotkeys you just assigned: this should max the editor and full-screen the app
Stop recording. Name the macro
Open File > Settings > Keymap again. Find the Macros section, find your macro, assign a nice hotkey to it.
I just assigned ^M(ctrl+M) to Main menu | Window | Active Tool Window | Hide All Tool Windows under preferences(by clicking cmd,). This worked for me exactly like eclipse.
something similar can be achieved by opening your tab in a new window.
The default hotkey for that is shift+f4.
the editor tab remains in the main app window as well, and the new window appears on top of the main app window.
This has already been answered, but since when I google "android studio maximize tab" this is the first answer I see, I'm going to add my two cents.
I hate the keyboard shortcuts since, at any given time, I have 1 hand on my keyboard and 1 hand on my mouse. Having to let go of my mouse to hit a 3-key combination to maximize the current tab is not a shortcut. What I was looking for was an Eclipse-style behavior: double-click the tab to maximize. Here's how to do that:
In Android Studio, under Preferences, go to Keymap->Main Menu->Window->Active Tool Window. Right-click the "Maximize tool window" mapping and select "Add mouse shortcut."
For "Click Count" pick "Double Click" and then double-click on the "Click Pad" mouse icon.
Click OK out of the menus and you should now be able to double-click on any tab and it will be maximized. Double-clicking again will minimize it.
Coming from Eclipse to IntelliJ, this was one of the most frustrating aspects I've had to deal with.
full screen plugin is availble for IntelliJ Idea...
https://github.com/jfim/ideafullscreen
If you need to use the same shortcut like Eclipse Ctrl+M, to minimize/maximize the active editor window,
You can follow the below steps:
Open (File > Settings...) or click ( Ctrl+Alt+s )
Select Keymap
Search for "Hide All Tool Windows"
Change the default shortcut to Ctrl+M
Then you will be able to use the same shortcut as Eclipse.
This is quite an old question and the distraction free mode wasn't exactly what I wanted. This is because it does not hide other editor windows. With 2021.1 EAP this issue has been resolved and maximising the editor hides all other editors but the active one.
For people using IdeaVim trying to emulate the <leader> z behavior of tmux, you can use the following mapping:
map <leader>zz <Action>(MaximizeEditorInSplit)
I searched for something like ctrl+b zin tmux. For me, the similar task solved by key combination shift+f4. It opens your tab in the separated window (which can be closed as usual, alt+f4). My PyCharm version:
PyCharm 2019.2 (Professional Edition)
Build #PY-192.5728.105, built on July 23, 2019
Runtime version: 11.0.3+12-b304.10 amd64
VM: OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM by JetBrains s.r.o
Windows 10 10.0
GC: ParNew, ConcurrentMarkSweep
Memory: 725M
Cores: 8
Registry:
Non-Bundled Plugins: