DataGrip 2024.2 Help

Navigation

You can quickly navigate through code in the editor using different actions and popups.

You can start with watching a video tutorial to check what navigation options are available in DataGrip.

Navigate with the caret

  • To navigate backwards, press Ctrl+Alt+Left. To navigate forward, press Ctrl+Alt+Right.

  • To navigate to the last edited location, press Ctrl+Shift+Backspace.

  • To find the current caret location in the editor, press Up and Down arrow keys.

  • To highlight a word at the caret you are trying to locate, select Edit | Find | Next Occurrence of the Word at Caret from the main menu. If you are using Windows, you can also press Ctrl+F3.

  • To see on what element the caret is currently positioned, press Alt+Q.

  • To move caret between matching code block braces, press Ctrl+Shift+M.

Move the caret

You can use different actions to move the caret through code. You can also configure where the caret should stop when moved by words and on line breaks.

  • To move the caret to the next word or the previous word, press Ctrl+Right or Ctrl+Left.

    By default, DataGrip moves the caret to the end of the current word.

    When you move the caret to the previous word, the caret is placed at the beginning of the current word. You can configure the position of the caret when you use these actions.

    In the Settings dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S) , go to Editor | General. In the Caret Movement section, use the When moving by words and Upon line break options to configure the caret's behavior.

  • To move the caret forward to the next paragraph or backward to the previous one, press Ctrl+Shift+A and search for the Move Caret Forward a Paragraph or Move Caret Backward a Paragraph action.

    You can also select a text and then move the caret forward or backward to a paragraph. Press Ctrl+Shift+A and search for the Move Caret Forward a Paragraph with Selection or Move Caret Backward a Paragraph with Selection action.

    If you need, you can assign shortcuts to these actions. For more information, refer to Configure keyboard shortcuts.

Find recent locations

You can also check your recently viewed or changed code using the Recent Locations popup.

  • To open the Recent Locations popup, press Ctrl+Shift+E. The list starts with the latest visited location at the top and contains code snippets.

    Recent Locations popup
  • While in the popup, use the same shortcut or select the Show changed only checkbox to see only the locations with changed code.

    Recent Locations popup: Show changed only
  • To search for a code snippet, in the Recent Locations popup, start typing your search query. You can search by the code text, filename, or breadcrumbs.

    Search recent locations
  • To delete a location entry from the search results, press either Delete or Backspace.

    Keep in mind that the deleted location is also removed from the list of entries that you access with the Ctrl+Alt+Left shortcut.

Use bookmarks for navigation

  • To create an anonymous bookmark, place the caret at the needed code line and press F11.

  • To create a bookmark with mnemonics, place the caret at the needed code line, press Ctrl+F11 and select a number or a letter for the mnemonics.

  • To open the Bookmarks dialog, press Shift+F11. You can use this dialog to manage bookmarks, for example, delete, sort bookmarks, or supply them with a brief description.

  • To navigate to an existing bookmark with letter mnemonics, press Shift+F11 and then press a letter you need. DataGrip returns you to the editor and to the corresponding bookmark.

  • To navigate to an existing bookmark with number mnemonics, press Ctrl and the bookmark's number.

You can check how to toggle between bookmarks with mnemonics, in the settings (Ctrl+Alt+S), on the Keymap page under the Other node.

See recent changes

You can use the Recent Changes list to see a list of files that were changed either locally or externally in your project. If necessary, you can revert those changes.

  1. In the main menu, go to View | Recent Changes Alt+Shift+C.

    the Recent Changes popup
  2. In the Recent Changes tab of the Local History tool window, select a change.

    The IDE shows you a list of files modified with this change in the panel below.

  3. Press Enter or double-click the file to open the diff viewer where you can check what was changed and revert those changes if necessary.

You can navigate to the initial declaration of a symbol and symbol's type from its usage.

You can automatically locate a file in the Files tool window.

  1. If the file is opened in the editor, press Alt+F1 to open the Select In popup.

  2. In the popup, select Files View and press Enter. DataGrip locates your target in the Files tool window.

Select In popup

Open files with one click and quickly locate files in the Files tool window

You can use the Open Files with Single Click (previously called Autoscroll to Source) and Always Select Opened Files (previously called Autoscroll from Source) actions to locate your file in the Files tool window.

  1. In the Files tool window, right-click the Files toolbar and from the context menu, select Behavior.

  2. Enable Always Select Opened File. After that DataGrip will track the file that is currently opened in the active editor tab and locate it in the Files tool window automatically.

    Context menu
  3. You can also select the Open Files with Single Click option. In this case, when you click a file in the Files view, DataGrip will automatically open it in the editor.

  • To jump to the next or previous found issue in your code, press F2 or Shift+F2 respectively. Alternatively, go to Navigate | Next / Previous Highlighted Error in the main menu.

    DataGrip places the caret immediately before the code issue.

  • Configure the way DataGrip navigates between code issues: it can either jump between all code issues or skip minor issues and only navigate between detected errors. Right-click the code analysis marker in the scroll bar area and choose one of the available navigation modes from the context menu:

    • To have DataGrip skip warnings, infos, and other minor issues, choose Go to high priority problems only.

    • To have DataGrip jump between all detected code issues, choose Go to next problem.

Locate a code element with the Structure view popup

You can use the structure view popup to locate a code element in the file you are working on.

  1. To open the structure view popup, press Ctrl+F12.

  2. In the popup, locate an item you need. You can start typing a name of the element for DataGrip to narrow down the search. Press Enter to return to the editor and the corresponding element.

    Structure popup

Use the Lens mode

The lens mode lets you preview your code without actually scrolling to it. The mode is available in the editor by default when you hover over the scrollbar. It is especially useful when you hover over a warning or an error message.

  • To disable the lens mode, right-click the code analysis marker located on the right side of the editor and in the context menu clear the Show code lens on the scrollbar hover checkbox.

  • As an alternative, in the Settings dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S) , go to Editor | General | Appearance and clear the Show code lens on the scrollbar hover checkbox.

Use breadcrumbs for navigation

You can navigate through the source code with breadcrumbs that show names of views, aliases, fields, tables, and other objects in the currently opened file. By default, breadcrumbs are enabled and displayed at the bottom of the editor.

  • To change the location of breadcrumbs, right-click a breadcrumb, in the context menu select Breadcrumbs and the location preference.

  • To edit the breadcrumbs settings, in the Settings dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S) , go to Editor | General | Breadcrumbs.

Editor breadcrumbs

Use the Navigation bar as a handy tool to find your way across the project.

  1. Press Alt+Home to activate the Navigation bar.

  2. Use the arrow keys or the mouse pointer to locate the desired file.

  3. Double-click the selected file, or press Enter to open it in the editor.

Find a line or a column

  1. In the editor, press Ctrl+G.

  2. In the Go to Line/Column dialog, specify a line or column number, or both, separating them with : and click OK.

    Go to Line:Column dialog
  3. If you don't want to see the line numbers in the editor, in the Settings dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S) , go to Editor | General | Appearance and clear the Show line numbers checkbox.

Find a file path

  1. In the editor, press Ctrl+Alt+F12 or in the context menu, select Open in | Finder.

  2. In the Reveal in Finder popup, select a file or a directory to open in the path finder and press Enter.

Find recent files

You can search for the recent and recently edited files with the Recent Files popup.

  • To open the Recent Files popup with the list of recent files, press Ctrl+E.

  • To see only the recently edited files, press Ctrl+E again or select the Show changed only checkbox.

  • To search for items in the popup, use the Speed Search functionality. Just start typing a search query, and the Search for field appears. DataGrip displays the results based on your search query, the list shrinks as you type.

Recent Locations popup

Go from a reference to an object in the Database Explorer

  • To go to the definition of a column, table or any other object, select the object name in your code and press Alt+Shift+B.

Open a DDL definition of an object

In DataGrip, you can open and edit the source code of a database object directly in the editor. The source code can be opened from the editor or Database Explorer.

  • In the editor, click an object and select Go To | Declaration or Usages. Alternatively, press Ctrl+B.

  • In the Database Explorer, do one of the following:

    1. Click the DDL button on the toolbar.

    2. Click an object and select Navigation | Go to DDL.

    3. Press Ctrl+B.

Switch between files using the switcher

  • With the switcher, you can switch between open files, consoles, and tool windows.

    To open the Switcher window, press Ctrl+Tab. Do not release the Ctrl key. Use arrow keys to move in the Switcher window. When you release the Ctrl key, the selected item becomes active, and the switcher closes.

    the Switcher
Last modified: 09 August 2024