ReplaceWithSameIndentRegister
leap.nvim
ReplaceWithSameIndentRegister | leap.nvim | |
---|---|---|
1 | 41 | |
9 | 3,947 | |
- | - | |
10.0 | 9.3 | |
over 9 years ago | 14 days ago | |
VimL | Fennel | |
- | 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.
ReplaceWithSameIndentRegister
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What is the coolest, unknown(-ish) plugin that you're using that other people could benefit from?
2 essential plugins for me that I don’t see talked about much anymore are vim-scripts/ReplaceWithRegister and vim-scripts/ReplaceWithSameIndentRegister. The vanilla way to do this is not super difficult, delete into the black hole register, then paste. Or visually select, then paste. And afterwards clean up the formatting if necessary. But I do this hundreds of times a day, the convenience of having a dedicated command for it is massive.
leap.nvim
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Your favourite Neovim plugins?
Also I really like leap.nvim which in my opinion is the best thought out "hop" variation.
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This Week In Neovim #44 — Mon May 29th 2023
Your plugins are great but I haven't tried mini.jump2d. However, compared to hop.nvim I prefer leap.nvim's jumping philosophy because it uses information you already have before starting the jump, and you just have to type one "virtual" character, which in my opinion is a smoother experience.
- Feeling super slow...
- leap.nvim meets vim-illuminate
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Anyone know if there are plans to add leap.nvim behavior to helix?
Here's the repo if you haven't heard about it: https://github.com/ggandor/leap.nvim Otherwise, does anyone know if there are ways to emulate that behavior with existing keybings? And, if all else fails, would you like to see it as a feature request?
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People who migrated from vscode
leap.nvim absolutely turned my movements and navigation experience in neovim upside down.
- What do you use 's' for in normal mode? vanilla? or something like leap?
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I’m a vscode user who wants to migrate to neovim but still can’t get all the features I want, I’m trying out lazyvim, which plug-ins should I use?
I like Leap
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How come NeoVim, with all the "API is first-class" and "extensibility" brags, has such bad documentation on these topics compared to Vim?
Another example. https://github.com/ggandor/leap.nvim Leap provides great paragraphs giving overviews of what it does and why it is designed the way it is, including some compare and contrast with other plugins.
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find-extender.nvim A Plugin that extends the nvim find command
Nice, but you've reinvented the wheel :) https://github.com/goldfeld/vim-seek -> https://github.com/justinmk/vim-sneak -> https://github.com/ggandor/leap.nvim
What are some alternatives?
dirbuf.nvim - A file manager for Neovim which lets you edit your filesystem like you edit text
hop.nvim - Neovim motions on speed!
dial.nvim - enhanced increment/decrement plugin for Neovim.
vim-easymotion - Vim motions on speed!
nvim-bufdel - A Neovim plugin to improve buffer deletion
mini.nvim - Library of 35+ independent Lua modules improving overall Neovim (version 0.7 and higher) experience with minimal effort
vim-search-pulse - Easily locate the cursor after a search
lightspeed.nvim - deprecated in favor of leap.nvim
vim-textobj-variable-segment - A text object to turn foo_bar_baz into foo_baz *and* quuxSpamEggs into quuxEggs *and* shine your shoes
avy - Jump to things in Emacs tree-style
nvim-miniyank - killring-alike plugin for neovim and vim 8 with no default mappings
vim-sneak - The missing motion for Vim :athletic_shoe: