athame
helix-vim
athame | helix-vim | |
---|---|---|
9 | 27 | |
1,619 | 859 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 2.0 | |
6 months ago | 3 months ago | |
C | ||
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | - |
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.
athame
-
The Shell vs the Web
What does ngs do regarding text input... using readline like bash does? Or your own implementation? https://github.com/ardagnir/athame sounds so good for my vim-washed computerbrain. I imagine you don't want to embed NeoVim in your interactive shell (or do you????), but I'm wishing of that being provided in my next era dreamed-of shell <3
-
Rust-shell: what features you would you like to see in a shell ?
vi-mode... perhaps https://github.com/ardagnir/athame ?? perhaps embedding neovim??? but at least the basic modal editing that readline provides.
-
New to modal editing, can't decide whether I should learn Neovim or Helix
https://github.com/ardagnir/athame is an interesting looking project, I'd love to have that kind of vimability but am far too maxed out with configuring my tooling so I settle for whatever vi plugin came with oh-my-zsh.
-
Thoughts on using vim mode in your shell
None of these are major criticisms. But I'm wondering if others have also experienced them. I'm also wondering if anybody has found something better than your shell's native vim mode. For example, athame, which sounds great but has gotten very dusty in recent years.
- VI MODE in zsh: How to make cursor start at end of line when scrolling through history?
-
ciw does not work in bash after `set -o vi`
Oh, I misunderstood "commandline editor". To compensate, can I offer this: https://github.com/ardagnir/athame
-
neovim embedded in shell?
Athame does this with Vim. I've made a couple of attempts at doing the same thing with Neovim but never made it to the point where it became actually usable (there's a number of issues to overcome, e.g. bash statically linking readline so you can't LD_PREALOAD your own readline replacement, neovim not being very happy with single-line UIs...).
-
Is there a script or mod that will change the behavior of my os and software to be more vim like
Athame patches readline to be vim-y, but that's usually unnecessary since most shells support vi keybindings. This might be better, since it is truly a vim session (and not emulation), but I haven't used it so idk.
-
Vim-like terminal emulator
You can test too https://github.com/ardagnir/athame
helix-vim
-
Notes on Text Editing
I tried to re-learn from Vim to Helix but failed. No sure if this is a muscle memory problem or perhaps article is right about cons Kakoune-like approach for me. Even adapting with something https://github.com/LGUG2Z/helix-vim did not work. So if you like Helix it probably a good thing that you did not learn the vim at the time.
- Helix-Vim (Readme.md)
- Ask HN: Should you add a LICENSE to example configuration repos?
- Keymap and configuration questions
-
Even more hindsight on Vim, Helix and Kakoune
Not that they're inherently worse, just different - I'm perfectly happy with vim motions and relearning to type is pretty low on my list of priorities. Luckily there is a compatibility hack, not perfect but it's close enough: https://github.com/LGUG2Z/helix-vim
- What editor are you using for Rust?
-
Helix: Release 23.03 Highlights
I want to like Helix, I really, really want to. It's lean, fast, polished, purely console based so it fits my workflows perfectly... but the almost-like-vim-but-not-really key bindings are a deal breaker. I just can't make the switch.
If Helix were completely different in this regard, like Emacs is, I could handle--and I know because I use both vim and Emacs regularly pretty fluently. But Helix is way too close to the vim keybindings to discern it from a memory muscle perspective. I use vim keybindings everywhere else (zsh, all readline-based apps via a setting in ~/.inputrc, VSCode), so getting used to slight differences in just one editor is extremely hard because I can't just drop all other apps.
I recently tried this: https://github.com/LGUG2Z/helix-vim which attempts to provide vim mappings to Helix. It's funny how the description in the page describes my progression almost 100%. And while it makes things slightly better, it's still not accurate enough to make this a non-issue.
-
Helix editor 23.03 released!
https://github.com/LGUG2Z/helix-vim somebody on the internet has you covered
- How to config default VIM keys?
-
The extensible vi layer for Emacs
There is this configuration: https://github.com/LGUG2Z/helix-vim
This switches most keybinds to be vi-like.
What are some alternatives?
zsh-vim-mode - Friendly bindings for ZSH's vi mode
helix - A post-modern modal text editor.
shc - Shell script compiler
zsh-vi-mode - 💻 A better and friendly vi(vim) mode plugin for ZSH.
zinit - Flexible and fast Zsh plugin manager with clean fpath, reports, completion management, Turbo, annexes, services, packages.
meow - Yet another modal editing on Emacs / 猫态编辑
microrl-remaster - Micro Read Line library for small and embedded devices [REMASTER]
LunarVim - 🌙 LunarVim is an IDE layer for Neovim. Completely free and community driven.
growlight - notcurses block device manager / system installation tool
emfy - A dark and sleek Emacs setup for general purpose editing and programming
dance - Make your cursors dance with Kakoune-like modal editing in VS Code.