Hi! The normal `scroll-up-command' and `scroll-down-command' (typically bound to C-v and M-v) can scroll a page at a time, there is no need for a Follow mode-specific command for that, as the normal Follow mode machinery can reposition the other windows. (The only difference is that when using C-v the original window is still selected, whereas with the new follow-scroll-up command the windows where the original point ends up is selected.) I admit it didn't occur to me that there might be use cases other than my > own. What I think we need here is a customisable option. How about > `follow-scroll-single-page-flag'? The cleanest default for it would > probably be nil, since that better observes the abstraction that the > collection of all visible windows should be regarded as a single page. > A cleaner solution would be to define two sets of functions, e.g. follow-scroll-up-one-page. Many users might want to use both kind of scrolling (I use both C-v and C-c . C-v several time every day, depending on how I would like to scroll the display). With two sets of functions it's easier to do this. (Also, it's easier to write documentation for a function designed to do one thing.) -- Anders