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Select another window (other-window
). That is o, not zero.
Scroll the next window (scroll-other-window
).
Find next place where the text in the selected window does not match the text in the next window.
Mouse-1, in a window's mode line, selects that window
but does not move point in it (mouse-select-window
).
To select a different window, click with Mouse-1 on its mode
line. With the keyboard, you can switch windows by typing 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.
@xref{Minibuffer Edit}.
The usual scrolling commands (@pxref{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. @xref{Comparing Files}, for details.
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