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Split the selected window into two windows, one above the
other (split-window-below).
Split the selected window into two windows, positioned
side by side (split-window-right).
In the mode line of a window, split that window.
C-x 2 (split-window-below) splits the
selected window into two windows, one above the other. After
splitting, the selected window is the upper one, and the newly
split-off window is below. Both windows have the same value of
point as before, and display the same portion of the buffer (or
as close to it as possible). If necessary, the windows are
scrolled to keep point on-screen. By default, the two windows
each get half the height of the original window. A positive
numeric argument specifies how many lines to give to the top
window; a negative numeric argument specifies how many lines to
give to the bottom window.
If you change the variable
split-window-keep-point to nil,
C-x 2 instead adjusts the portion of the buffer
displayed by the two windows, as well as the value of point in
each window, in order to keep the text on the screen as close as
possible to what it was before; furthermore, if point was in the
lower half of the original window, the bottom window is selected
instead of the upper one.
C-x 3 (split-window-right) splits the
selected window into two side-by-side windows. The left window is
the selected one; the right window displays the same portion of
the same buffer, and has the same value of point. A positive
numeric argument specifies how many columns to give the left
window; a negative numeric argument specifies how many columns to
give the right window.
When you split a window with C-x 3, each resulting
window occupies less than the full width of the frame. If it
becomes too narrow, the buffer may be difficult to read if
continuation lines are in use (see Continuation
Lines). Therefore, Emacs automatically switches to line
truncation if the window width becomes narrower than 50 columns.
This truncation occurs regardless of the value of the variable
truncate-lines (see Line Truncation); it
is instead controlled by the variable
truncate-partial-width-windows. If the value of this
variable is a positive integer (the default is 50), that
specifies the minimum total width for a partial-width window
before automatic line truncation occurs; if the value is
nil, automatic line truncation is disabled; and for
any other non-nil value, Emacs truncates lines in
every partial-width window regardless of its width. The total
width of a window is in column units as reported by
window-total-width (see
Window Sizes in The Emacs Lisp Reference
Manual), it includes the fringes, the continuation and
truncation glyphs, the margins, and the scroll bar.
On text terminals, side-by-side windows are separated by a
vertical divider which is drawn using the
vertical-border face.
If you click C-mouse-2 in the mode line of a window, that splits the window, putting a vertical divider where you click. Depending on how Emacs is compiled, you can also split a window by clicking C-mouse-2 in the scroll bar, which puts a horizontal divider where you click (this feature does not work when Emacs uses GTK+ scroll bars).
By default, when you split a window, Emacs gives each of the
resulting windows dimensions that are an integral multiple of the
default font size of the frame. That might subdivide the screen
estate unevenly between the resulting windows. If you set the
variable window-resize-pixelwise to a
non-nil value, Emacs will give each window the same
number of pixels (give or take one pixel if the initial dimension
was an odd number of pixels). Note that when a frame’s
pixel size is not a multiple of the frame’s character size,
at least one window may get resized pixelwise even if this option
is nil.
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