swiper
albert
swiper | albert | |
---|---|---|
36 | 60 | |
2,250 | 7,085 | |
- | 0.5% | |
7.3 | 9.4 | |
6 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | C++ | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
swiper
- Flexible, simple tools for minibuffer completion in Emacs
- org attach multiple files with ivy-call
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An Improved Emacs Search
This is a good improvement. Personally though I left isearch behind. For further search convenience / functionality I highly recommend swiper.
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Best emacs configs for Javascript and/or users who don't like to memorize keybindings?
Next you "only" have to remember (elisp) function names. "Completion UIs" like ivy/counsel, icomplete, helm or vertico/consult, give you a nice auto completion list on M-x (choose the one of them, you like the most). Some of those Completion UIs will display existing keybindings and a short documentation for commands, near the auto complete candidates. So you will start to remember more keybindings without "learning sessions", just because invoking functions via keybindings is much faster (more convenient).
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What packages do the cool kids use these days?
Proposal 4 (group-function). This one is an actual addition, which allows candidate gouping in the style of Helm. Note that it is a pure addition. Completion UIs and completion packages work perfectly fine without it. It wouldn't be difficult to add support to Ivy. I wrote the patch.
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How to Make Emacs Look Cooler with Simple Customization
For the unfamiliar, Swiper is a part of Ivy which lets you search through your buffer with a preview of match candidates: you type some text you're looking for, and up pops a list of matching lines in the minibuffer that you can then use the arrow keys, C-n C-p etc. to scroll through and select the one you want.
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Replacing packages with more "stripped down" packages
When I started using Emacs I was following the setup outlined by System Crafters, which I still think is a really good introduction. But, over the last few months I've started to replace packages with more "minimalist" or "stripped down" packages. I've switched from Ivy and Counsel to Vertico and Consult, and recently I switched from company to corfu for auto-completion.
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macOS DWIM "Open with" command (ok, last one for a while)
Ah, neat. I hadn't considered appending comments for searchability. I'm currently getting searchabiity from M-x dwim-... and ivy completion.
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How do you take book notes?
Great question. I have one big file with a few hundreds book and quotations from them. Problem is with newlines. When I copy text from kindle it doesn't have newlines because it's depends on font size. So every quotation from book is on one line - could be few thousands chars. I use visual-line-mode and there is a big problem with that. Like swiper would just freeze your emacs if you try to search. https://github.com/abo-abo/swiper/issues/925 Anyone have same problem?
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note-taking without org roam.
Then hit C-' (that's apostrophe, left of enter on US keyboards). Preferably with something like [ivy][https://github.com/abo-abo/swiper] set up so you can see what it's trying to autocomplete for you- it should be suggesting all of your org 'notebooks' in the targeted folder, as well as any buffers you have open.
albert
- Wechsel von Windows auf Linux - zu viele Programme Windows-only?
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Ubuntu for a Mac user (SWE)
And, albert https://albertlauncher.github.io/ would be the default spotlight alternative, but in my experience it's not that snappy and doesn't behave exactly as you'd expect. imo the default gnome search function is fine
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Is there an xfce equivalent to KDE's quick launch?
not native but this albert good
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Albert launcher update!
It took quite some time, but after years of overhaul, testing, and patching I'd like to introduce Albert. New features (since 0.18) include an abstract plugin system, custom triggers, an API which got more developer friendly and of course feature rich for both C++ and Python plugins, plugins come with more features, search is even faster, UI is nicer, Qt6, C++20… Give it a try and let me know what you think.
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Produtividade no Linux.
https://albertlauncher.github.io/ > Launcher de app e outras coisas
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Ask HN: Why is on-device search terrible?
https://albertlauncher.github.io/
The demonstrations there confirm searching, and way more than I can do justice here
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Alternatives for Search Light extension
Use Albert or uLauncher
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Albert vs Ulauncher vs Zazu
Is it not they have there github right here? https://github.com/albertlauncher/albert
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If you would change the DE you use , which one would it be?
The only 'extra' i've installed is Albert.
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Announcing Findex v0.6.0
Check out albert. They do it prefectly. https://albertlauncher.github.io/
What are some alternatives?
vertico - :dizzy: vertico.el - VERTical Interactive COmpletion
Ulauncher - Feature rich application Launcher for Linux
fzf.vim - fzf :heart: vim
rofi - Rofi: A window switcher, application launcher and dmenu replacement
helm - Emacs incremental completion and selection narrowing framework
cerebro - 🔵 Cerebro is an open-source launcher to improve your productivity and efficiency
consult - :mag: consult.el - Consulting completing-read
awesome-wm-nice - An Awesome WM module that add MacOS-like window decorations, with seamless titlebars, double click to maximize, and window shade feature
Vim - The official Vim repository
fzf - :cherry_blossom: A command-line fuzzy finder
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
guake - Drop-down terminal for GNOME