## Using the jumplist To help with quick navigation, Helix maintains a list of "jumps" called the jumplist. Whenever you make a significant movement (see next section), Helix stores your selections from before the move as a jump. A jump serves as a kind of checkpoint, allowing you to jump to a separate location, make edits, and return to where you were with your previous selections. This way, the jumplist tracks both your previous location and your selections. You can manually save a jump by using `Ctrl-s`. To jump backward in the jumplist, use `Ctrl-o`; to go forward, use `Ctrl-i`. To view and select from the full jumplist, use `Space-j` to open the jumplist picker. ### What makes a jump The following is a non-exhaustive list of which actions add a jump to the jumplist: - Switching buffers - Using the buffer picker, going to the next/previous buffer - Going to the last accessed/modified file - Making a new file (`:new FILE`) - Opening a file (`:open FILE`) - Includes `:log-open`, `:config-open`, `:config-open-workspace`, `:tutor` - Navigating by pickers, global search, or the file explorer - `goto_file` (`gf`) - Big in-file movements - `select_regex` (`s`) - `split_regex` (`S`) - `search` (`/`) - `keep_selections` and `remove_selections` (`K` and ``) - `goto_file_start` (`gg`) - `goto_file_end` - `goto_last_line` (`ge`) - `:goto 123` / `:123` / `123G` - `goto_definition` (`gd`) - `goto_declaration` (`gD`) - `goto_type_definition` (`gy`) - `goto_reference` (`gr`) - Other - `Ctrl-s` manually creates a jump - Trying to close a modified buffer can switch you to that buffer and create a jump - The debugger can create jumps as you jump stack frames