# Navigating in the Editor

- [Navigating in the editor](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/navigating-in-the-editor.md)
- [Working with the PDF viewer](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/working-with-the-pdf-viewer.md)
- [PDF viewer options and navigation](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/working-with-the-pdf-viewer/pdf-viewer-options-and-navigation.md)
- [Editor & PDF layout and sizing](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/working-with-the-pdf-viewer/editor-and-pdf-layout-and-sizing.md): You can adjust the placement and size of the components within the Overleaf editor window.
- [Moving between the editor and PDF](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/working-with-the-pdf-viewer/moving-between-the-editor-and-pdf.md): Using Overleaf's jump-to-location features
- [Selecting and managing files](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/selecting-and-managing-files.md): The file outline helps you navigate within a selected LaTeX file using the file's headings.
- [Searching within a project](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/searching-within-a-project.md)
- [Editor display font](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/editor-display-font.md)
- [Generated files](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/generated-files.md): Most of the time, generated files are only used by the LaTeX compiler and other tools, but in some cases they need to be accessed directly.
- [Keyboard shortcuts](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/keyboard-shortcuts.md)
- [Vim and Emacs keybinding](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/vim-and-emacs-keybinding.md): Overleaf provides emulations that support some Vim and Emacs editing features.
- [Providing custom Vim key bindings](https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor/vim-and-emacs-keybinding/providing-custom-vim-key-bindings.md)


---

# Agent Instructions: Querying This Documentation

If you need additional information that is not directly available in this page, you can query the documentation dynamically by asking a question.

Perform an HTTP GET request on the current page URL with the `ask` query parameter:

```
GET https://docs.overleaf.com/navigating-in-the-editor.md?ask=<question>
```

The question should be specific, self-contained, and written in natural language.
The response will contain a direct answer to the question and relevant excerpts and sources from the documentation.

Use this mechanism when the answer is not explicitly present in the current page, you need clarification or additional context, or you want to retrieve related documentation sections.
