I like to use Eclipse's shortcut Ctrl + O which outlines the current source. Is there an equivalent shortcut in IntelliJ IDEA?
It opens a dialog which allows for quick search of methods and fields in a class.
I haven't used Eclipse for years, so I'm not that familiar with the behaviour you're after - but I believe Ctrl + F12 may do what you want: it is the shortcut for the File structure Popup in the default mapping.
Shortcuts:
- Mac: ⌘+F12
- Windows: Ctrl+F12
- Ubuntu/CentOS: Ctrl+F12
Above works on IntelliJ 14, 15, 2016, 2017 and 2018.
Ctrl + F3 in Idea is the equivalent of Ctrl + O in Eclipse.
The thread is old. Just thought might be useful for someone lookin for the same answer...
Press SHIFT TWO times and you can search anything, both class and method in the whole project.
On MacOSX 10.8.5, CmdF12 did not work for me. I had to use FnCmdF12
For Intellij 13 on ubuntu the shortcut for the Structure window is Alt+7 (Cmd+7 on Mac). You can make the window floating to simulate the Eclipse behavior using the top-right setting icon, also unselect the pinned mode option for Esc to work.
Ctrl + F12 or search "File Structure" in keymap
Ctrl + F12 works for me. I'm using intellij IDEA CE 12 with default keymap.
All these answers are subjective, because they depend on your platform, keymap and IntelliJ version.
I believe the 'Structure' tool is what you're looking for. In Idea 13, View → Tool Windows → Structure will open the view, and along the way, the menu will show you the applicable keyboard shortcut for your setup.
For me, Ctrl + F12 Works really well!
Ctrl+F12 mimics the same functionality.
You can also use this link which gives Eclipse and corresponding IntelliJ IDEA shortcuts.
I think here you can found out the most useful shortcuts for Idea as an Eclipse user... Eclipse "Quick outline" Ctrl+O (Windows) is an equivalent Idea "File Structure" Ctrl+F12!
It is possible to use eclipse keymap in intellij by clicking ALT+ → keymap. Then select eclipse keymap.
Ctrl+F12 works, because it is for file structure popup, which is similar to showing code in Eclipse.
For some Linux kinds, and particularly for XFCE (like Xubuntu, Mint XFCE) a lot of default XWin keyboard layout mappings are not working.
This is because they overlap with assigned Window Manager -> Keyboard shortcuts. For the concrete question Ctrl+F12 is assigned to Workspace 12 which I doubt that many use at all.
The solution is to clear those Window manager assignments in Window Manager -> Keyboard tab. As a temporal workaround you may use IDEA actions via Find action Ctrl+Shift+A
There are other overlapping short keys. References:
The shortcuts are: Ctrl+Shift+N for files Ctrl+N for classes
Ctrl + Alt + L is the one you're looking for.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1945213/what-is-eclipses-ctrlo-show-outline-shortcut-equivalent-in-intellij-idea