hi, It could be extremely useful if we could "jump to cursor"... It happens a lot of times that I scroll away from where I am... during editing... looking for something... and then, I'll have to think where was I? :) Also, even though I remember where I was, I'll have to search with my eye, sometimes over long pages, like 10, to realize where I had just left the text before I scrolled away... In these cases, I'll find myself searching for the cursor :) not an easy one! :) if we could assign a shortcut, life could be even happier! :) - - - I believe that the current location of the cursor is a key thing which the application is aware of -- ever reopening a document, we'll find ourselves where we left off... So, this knowledge which the application has could be utilized :) ANOTHER utilization could be at displaying the current page number... while writing -- well, this is something that's worth identifying --, or when the cursor is in sight, in one of the pages in single page viewing mode, then instead of "pages 22 and 23 of 40", "page 23 of 40" could be displayed... For those who have to keep within a length limit, and keep watching the number of pages, this could be super useful...
If I'm not wrong, a simple right-arrow (one to the right) or left-arrow (one to the left) goes where the cursor is.
Hi Peter I agree with m.a.riosv, and Lupp in https://ask.libreoffice.org/t/command-go-to-cursor/26178 : a simple arrow move will make the view jump back to where you were, which I think is sufficient. The ask.LO link also gives you a macro if you really need to have a shortcut assigned to this action. I think closing as "won't fix" is sensible.