On 25/09/10 03:20, Jakson A. Aquino wrote:
Hi,

Suppose that I have split a window in two with different files loaded
in each new window. How can I scroll one window to show the end of the
file without leaving the current buffer? Is it possible to that with
setpos()? I have tried the following command, but it didn't work:

:call setpos('.', [2, 122, 1, 0])

The real problem is that I would like to be able to scroll a conque
shell to see length outputs without having to switch to the shell
buffer. Conque shell is here:

      http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=2771

Thanks,

Jakson Aquino


You've got an answer which involves going to the other window and coming back. If you don't want to leave the current window, even temporarily, then AFAIK the only way to scroll another window is with the mouse. Of course, for that you need:
- a Vim which can get mouse events
- a scrollbar in the other window.

A mouse wheel is not enough: turning the mouse's wheel scrolls the current window, even if the mouse pointer is over the other one.

Best regards,
Tony.
--
Bureaucrats cut red tape -- lengthwise.

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