atom-languageclient
typescript-language-server
atom-languageclient | typescript-language-server | |
---|---|---|
3 | 53 | |
390 | 1,699 | |
- | 2.1% | |
0.0 | 8.7 | |
over 1 year ago | 7 days ago | |
TypeScript | TypeScript | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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atom-languageclient
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Which IDE/editor do you use?
Not a stupid question at all! It is just a code editor. They do have an IDE for compiling ( https://ide.atom.io ) but I haven’t used it so I’m not sure about it’s capabilities.
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How do I setup Atom for C++ programming on Linux
Gotcha! Although it’s no longer maintained, I’ve had no issues with the Atom IDE package. It contains a lot of the same features that you’d expect like code completion, code linting to check for errors before you compile, and the ability to build and run from the Atom editor.
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Improve your IDE
Atom: plugin
typescript-language-server
- Helix - Front-End Power
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What is JSDoc and why you may not need typescript for your next project?
Besides the features TypeScript itself proposed, the most important thing it brought to the community was the ability to create cool features around this compiler that enhance the developer experience and productivity. Tools like tsserver, pretty ts errors, and many others are actively improving the ecosystem for both JavaScript and TypeScript writers.
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A guide on Neovim's LSP client
Sometimes a language server can support multiple filetypes. An example of this is tsserver, the language server for javascript and typescript. In this case a filetype plugin can still work but there is an easier way to go about it.
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Suspense your federated component with caution
in this way the ts server can detect and parse the component from the microfronent, thanks to monorepos!
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Let's write an Emacs treesitter major mode
That was interesting, thanks for pointing it out
I was tremendously sad to see that the Typescript Language Server wasn't owned by Microsoft <https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/impleme...>, since if there was any sanity in the world a spec bump would travel with a reference implementation showing how they envision such a thing being used
But, I found that the Typescript Language Server that they did list does indeed have a semantic-tokens module in it, although it's much shorter than I would have expected from reading that section in the spec: https://github.com/typescript-language-server/typescript-lan...
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How do I select which LSP is currently running?
I would like to use svelte language server when working on +page.server.ts files and not the typescript language server.
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Formatting on save not working
[[language]] name = "python" roots = ["pyproject.toml"] formatter = { command = "black", args = ["--quiet", "-"] } language-server = { command = "pyright-langserver", args = ["--stdio"] } config = {} auto-format = true [[language]] name = "rust" auto-format = true # [[language]] # name = "typescript" # auto-format = true # formatter = { command = "prettier", args = ["--parser", "typescript"]} # # pass format options according to https://github.com/typescript-language-server/typescript-language-server#workspacedidchangeconfiguration omitting the "[language].format." prefix. # config = { format = { "semicolons" = "insert", "insertSpaceBeforeFunctionParenthesis" = true } } [[language]] name = "tsx" formatter = { command = 'prettier', args = ["--parser", "typescript"] } auto-format = true [[language]] name = "javascript" auto-format = true formatter = { command = 'npx', args = ["prettier", "--config", ".prettierrc", "--parser", "javascript"] } # formatter = { command = "prettier", args = ["--parser", "javascript"]} [[language]] name = "css" formatter = { command = 'prettier', args = ["--parser", "css"] } [[language]] name = "markdown" # https://github.com/executablebooks/mdformat formatter = { command = "mdformat", args = ["-"] } [[language]] name = "json" formatter = { command = "prettier", args = ["--parser", "json"] } [[language]] name = "toml" auto-format = true # https://github.com/bd82/toml-tools/tree/master/packages/prettier-plugin-toml formatter = { command = "prettier", args = ["--parser", "toml"] } [[language]] name = "yaml" indent = { tab-width = 2, unit = " " } formatter = { command = "prettier", args = ["--parser", "yaml"] } [[language]] name = "astro" scope = "source.astro" injection-regex = "astro" file-types = ["astro"] roots = ["package.json", "astro.config.mjs"] language-server = { command = "astro-ls", args = ["--stdio"] } config = { "typescript" = { serverPath = "/Users/matteostara/.nvm/versions/node/v18.16.0/bin/typescript-language-server" }, "environment" = "node" }
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Struggling with javascript completion with LSP
Depending on the language server version, you may be running into https://github.com/typescript-language-server/typescript-language-server/issues/631. I temporarily fixed it for me by simply sticking with an old enough server build, though judging by the latest typescript-language-server commits a very recent build from master should also work
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There's another typescript LSP that wraps the official VSCode typescript extension and has almost the same features - vtsls
Before, I was using typescript-language-server as it is LSP compliant but it was slow and lacks the features of what VSCode's implementation has, like extracting functions, constants, types into interfaces or alias and single imports. Auto-completion was also not very predictive as sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't. For instance, I was having trouble getting it to auto-complete common attributes like className or href in JSX projects. It could be that I may be doing something wrong but didn't find any solution on how to get it properly working.
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What could cause my LSP to be so slow and sluggish? Takes anywhere from 1 to 8 seconds to show auto-completion results and hide/ unhide errors.
Then this is highly likely issue of typescript-language-server. You might consider opening an issue for it.
What are some alternatives?
elm-language-server - Language server implementation for Elm
deno - A modern runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript.
vim-language-server - VImScript language server, LSP for vim script
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
typed-json-rpc - Simple, statically typed and ergonomic way to do async communications (events, workers, http requests) with json-rpc
null-ls.nvim - Use Neovim as a language server to inject LSP diagnostics, code actions, and more via Lua.
jupyterlab-lsp - Coding assistance for JupyterLab (code navigation + hover suggestions + linters + autocompletion + rename) using Language Server Protocol
nvim-lsp-ts-utils - Utilities to improve the TypeScript development experience for Neovim's built-in LSP client.
lsp-mode - Emacs client/library for the Language Server Protocol
nvim-lspinstall - Provides the missing :LspInstall for nvim-lspconfig
nvim-treesitter - Nvim Treesitter configurations and abstraction layer
TypeScript - IO wrapper around TypeScript language services, allowing for easy consumption by editor plugins