.cfg
kommentary
.cfg | kommentary | |
---|---|---|
2 | 14 | |
5 | 533 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 2.9 | |
5 months ago | 5 months ago | |
Lua | Lua | |
- | MIT License |
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.
.cfg
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Configuring Neovim for maintenance and usability
Internal validation behaviours are a bit complex to be fully described in this article. The full code is found here, though.
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A pragmatic approach to migrating from VSCode to Neovim
It is possible to find related configuration files tracked in my dotfiles repository. Also, I gathered the most helpful resources I found in the Neovim learning path. You will find at that location most of the resources I am going to reference, and also additional ones I could not fit in this article.
kommentary
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A pragmatic approach to migrating from VSCode to Neovim
Indent-blankline to draw indentation guides, nvim-autopairs to automatically complete pairs of brackets and quotes (I didn’t know I couldn’t live without it), nvim-ts-autotag to autocomplete pairs of tags as well, targets.vim to target what is inside or outside the mentioned pairs and vim-surround to manage all those pairs with few keystrokes. Kommentary to comment and uncomment lines of code, nvim-cursorline to help locate where the cursor is and nvim-colorizer because I am cheeky. Vim-abolish is definitely an interesting one. I decided to install it because of its case coercion capabilities, but it can do much more than that.
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Question: Is it a requirement that plugins written in Lua require you to call the setup function?
Here’s an example of a lua plugin with no setup function
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TakeTuesday: Comment.nvim tutorial
The one I use is kommentary.nvim. A) It works, and with embedded code too, but also b) the Lua underneath it is really good. It’s well-commented, tested, and just generally a good resource to learn Lua from (or at least it has been for me.)
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Comment.nvim: new stuff that will make you Rick Roll.
A bit unrelated, but I wrote some tests for kommentary that might inspire you to create a test suite for this plugin too.
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Comment.nvim: Simple and powerful comment plugin for neovim. Supports commentstring, dot repeat, left-right/up-down motions, hooks, and more
Dot repeat https://github.com/b3nj5m1n/kommentary/issues/41
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Comment C/C++ line or block
I'm still using the tpopes plugin, so I don't really know about the Lua versions 😅. But I have heard good things about kommentary
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nerdcommenter seems to better figure out what comment syntax to use than vim-commentary, but i like vim-commentary more at everything else
I've been using b3nj5m1n/kommentary . I's uses are similar to vim-comentary . It has option to use only single line comments . This can be used to avoid /* ... */ . You can try that out .
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Aspiring plugin authors: look at kommentary
b3nj5m1n/kommentary is one that is relatively small, but big enough to be interesting. It is also *insanely* well documented and the overall code quality seems good to me.
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commented.nvim, a commenting plugin that actually works with count.
I need a comment plugin that works in normal mode and virtual mode and accepts count. Neither does kommentary and nvim-comment provide counts, therefore I decided to write one for myself.
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Custom keymap function does not work with `<Plug>` commands
I can import this function and use it with all my custom keybindings. However, it doesn't custom keybindings I want to use for the Kommentary plugin.
What are some alternatives?
edge - Clean & Elegant Color Scheme inspired by Atom One and Material
nvim-comment - A comment toggler for Neovim, written in Lua
octo.nvim - Edit and review GitHub issues and pull requests from the comfort of your favorite editor
vim-commentary - commentary.vim: comment stuff out
nvim-lua-guide - A guide to using Lua in Neovim
Comment.nvim - :brain: :muscle: // Smart and powerful comment plugin for neovim. Supports treesitter, dot repeat, left-right/up-down motions, hooks, and more
nvim-treesitter - Nvim Treesitter configurations and abstraction layer
nvim-ts-context-commentstring - Neovim treesitter plugin for setting the commentstring based on the cursor location in a file.
tree-sitter - An incremental parsing system for programming tools
commented.nvim - Neovim commenting plugin in Lua. Support operator, motions and more than 60 languages! :fire:
tcomment_vim - An extensible & universal comment vim-plugin that also handles embedded filetypes
neovim - Soho vibes for Neovim