Richard Heck wrote: > On 07/07/2010 11:21 AM, Paul Rubin wrote: >> Bruce Pourciau<bruce.h.pourciau<at> lawrence.edu> writes: >> >> >>> It would speed up my navigating, especially when I'm going back and >>> forth in a long document, if I could return to the previous cursor >>> position with a key combination. Is this possible? >>> >>> >> On Windows and Linux, ctrl+alt+# (where # is a single digit 1 through 9) >> places >> a bookmark and ctrl-# (same digit) returns to it. The Navigate> >> Bookmarks menu >> lets you place up to five bookmarks, but digits 6 through 9 work (but not >> 0). >> You can clear the bookmarks on the same submenu. >> >> > There's also the "navigate back" feature, under Navigate>Bookmarks, which, > if I remember right, is implemented as bookmark 0. But I can't remember > when it becomes active.
is sets position to the paragraph you are editing (or jumping from). so it gets back only if you didn't start to write something on the newly scrolled position. the shortcut is "ctrl+<" pavel