marksman
nvim-treesitter
marksman | nvim-treesitter | |
---|---|---|
13 | 300 | |
1,756 | 9,792 | |
- | 3.1% | |
8.1 | 9.9 | |
about 2 months ago | 7 days ago | |
F# | Scheme | |
MIT License | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
marksman
- Helix - Front-End Power
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I was settting up Obsidian when...
Although not as featureful or powerful as Obsidian I personally created a python script to help me manage the notes, and I preview them using my own blog being run locally and for the linking part I use marksman, it takes time and it might not be the best solution for everyone but it works for me.
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Tell HN: Nearly all of Evernote’s remaining staff has been laid off
I have never used this, but for NeoVim it looks like you might be able to use this (or hack on it a bit to make it work with LogSeq a bit better) https://github.com/artempyanykh/marksman
- Marksman: Markdown with code assist and intelligence in your editor
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Note-taking system (Second Brain implementation in neovim)
A hackier way that you can bend to your will and might be more vim-like is using the Marksman LSP with regular old markdown files in vim. You can go-to-definition in markdown links, etc. This is a Helix YouTuber who shows off some of the power of marksman, but all of these concepts translate 1 to 1 with neovim: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8GQKOLh_V5E
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Markdown viewer/editor CLI
Have you seen https://github.com/artempyanykh/marksman which uses LSP?
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Note-taking help. Zettelkasten method
I found https://github.com/jeffmm/vim-roam and https://github.com/artempyanykh/marksman . The first is a plugin where the second is an lsp and I'm sure there are more. Vim-roam codebase looks to be a couple of years old.
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Introducing the Markdown Language Server
Interesting. Have been using https://github.com/artempyanykh/marksman up until now (in neovim, but also runs in vscode apparently).
You might want to check out https://github.com/artempyanykh/marksman. It's a Markdown LSP as well and has been out for a while. In addition to the regular markdown stuff, it also supports [[wiki-style#links]] which is particularly handy for the "personal knowledge base" types of workflows.
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Time to edit my dots again - Introducing the Markdown Language Server
Perhaps you’ve tried the version before https://github.com/artempyanykh/marksman/releases/tag/2022-07-31 which fixed incremental text sync issue in neovim? If you’re still experiencing inconsistencies with a newer version, please do submit an issue to GH - the maintainer is very responsive 😉
nvim-treesitter
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JetBrains' unremovable AI assistant meets irresistible outcry
I suggest looking for blog posts about this, you're gunnuh wanna pick out a plugin manager and stuff. It's kind of like a package manager for neovim. You can install everything manually but usually you manually install a plugin manager and it gives you commands to manage the rest of your plugins.
These two plugins are the bare minimum in my view.
https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter
Treesitter gives you much better syntax highlighting based on a parser for a given language.
https://github.com/neovim/nvim-lspconfig
This plugin helps you connect to a given language LSP quickly with sensible defaults. You more or less pick your language from here and copy paste a snippet, and then install the relevant LSP:
https://github.com/neovim/nvim-lspconfig/blob/master/doc/ser...
For Python you'll want pylsp. For JavaScript it will depend on what frontend framework you're using, I probably can't help you there.
pylsp itself takes some plugins and you'll probably want them. https://github.com/python-lsp/python-lsp-server
Best of luck! Happy hacking.
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Help needed with Treesitter sql injection
It was changed in https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter/commit/78b54eb
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Do I need NeoVIM?
https://github.com/hrsh7th/nvim-cmp This is an autocompletion engine https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter This allows NeoVim to install parsing scripts so NeoVim can do things like code highlighting. https://github.com/williamboman/mason.nvim Not strictly necessary, but allows you to access a repo of LSP, install them, and configure them for without you actively messing about in config files. https://github.com/neovim/nvim-lspconfig Also not strictly necessary, but vastly simplifies LSP setup. https://github.com/williamboman/mason-lspconfig.nvim This lets the above two plugins talk to each other more easily.
- Problem with highlighting when attempting to create own treesitter parser
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neorg problem, all other plugins deactivate when added to init.lua
vim.opt.rtp:prepend(lazypath) require('lazy').setup({ { "nvim-neorg/neorg", build = ":Neorg sync-parsers", opts = { load = { ["core.defaults"] = {}, -- Loads default behaviour ["core.concealer"] = {}, -- Adds pretty icons to your documents ["core.dirman"] = { -- Manages Neorg workspaces config = { workspaces = { notes = "~/notes", }, defaultworkspace = "notes", }, }, }, }, dependencies = { { "nvim-lua/plenary.nvim", }, { -- YOU ALMOST CERTAINLY WANT A MORE ROBUST nvim-treesitter SETUP -- see https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter "nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter", opts = { auto_install = true, highlight = { enable = true, additional_vim_regex_highlighting = false, }, }, config = function(,opts) require('nvim-treesitter.configs').setup(opts) end }, { "folke/tokyonight.nvim", config=function(,) vim.cmd.colorscheme "tokyonight-storm" end,}, }, }, }) require 'plugins' ```
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Getting Treesitter to work for Windows 10
Change the compiler to use 'llvm' and install visual studio build tools command line stuff - at least that is what worked for me without problems. If you are using c++ then I would assume you have visual studio installed already. If you need more info follow the treesitter windows support
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Just come back up out of the rabbit hole - TS unsets syntax variable by design!
After a lot of time spent yesterday I took a fresh look today and then thought to myself - what if this is what TS does by design? A few clicks later and I found this https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter/issues/1327
- What is this color scheme
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nvim-treesitter erroring on Windows 11 Pro
I've followed the official guide for nvim-treesitter support on Windows, but I'm having problems making it work. I keep getting a compilation error for any parser I try to install using TSInstall. If instead I use TSInstallSync I don't get errors but the parser is not correctly installed. My setup uses lazyvim and I installed LLVM using winget to have a C compiler.
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Neovim can't find C compiler
I have read that gcc in windows doesn't always provide the necessary support for treesitter. I have seen ppl prefer clang over gcc in Windows. Please see also Windows support in treesitter's repo. Unfortunately I cannot help further as I don't use Windows for coding, but hope you can deduce something to solve your problem from the above link (if you haven't already read through it).
What are some alternatives?
zk-nvim - Neovim extension for zk
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
obsidian.nvim - Obsidian 🤝 Neovim
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
snipeit-powershell - Snipe IT Asset automation with PowerShell Scripts
vim-polyglot - A solid language pack for Vim.
tree-sitter-markdown - Markdown grammar for tree-sitter
vim-python-pep8-indent - A nicer Python indentation style for vim.
mkdnflow.nvim - Fluent navigation and management of markdown notebooks
packer.nvim - A use-package inspired plugin manager for Neovim. Uses native packages, supports Luarocks dependencies, written in Lua, allows for expressive config
glow.nvim - A markdown preview directly in your neovim.
tree-sitter - An incremental parsing system for programming tools