Then type the line number. It will automatically find it for you and if it requires scrolling to get to - it will snap your view to the line number level.
Rather than Control+G, if you're used to using CMD+P or CMD+T, you can just type :
Also useful:
CMD+R go to function in current file
CMD+Shift+R find function in any file (CMD+, "binary_file_patterns" ignore node_modules)
CMD+Option+Down jump to function definition in another file (from cursor word)
CMD+D / CMD+U jump & accumulate next word occurrence & populate search query / (undo). from cursor becomes an exact match (case and word boundary) vs from selection is a partial match (ignore case and word boundary). D and U also work in less bash / zshell pager to scroll down / up half pages
CMD+G / CMD+Shift+G jump or "go" to next / previous search query (CMD+D amazing with this)
CMD+{ / CMD+} focuses left / right tab (same in terminals, browser, kapeli dash, etc.)
CMD+[ / CMD+] shift line left / right (chrome forward / backward nav, devtools changes panel)
CMD+Control+Up / CMD+Control+Down shift line up / down
CMD+K->(some number) fold to indentation
CMD+K->J unfold all
CMD+Option+[ / CMD+Option+] fold / unfold current line's children
As pointed out by @maxTuzz, I use Ubuntu 16.06 and Sublime regularly,
this Ctrl+P then Pressing : and Starting typing the Line Number you want to Navigate.
Or
Directly we can type Ctrl+G Starting typing the Line Number you want to Navigate.
base is to press Ctrl + P and a then type : and then write the line that you want to go , BUT there is a shortcut for this :
Just hit Ctrl + G , and it does the same steps for you!