awesome-lua
paq-nvim
awesome-lua | paq-nvim | |
---|---|---|
11 | 28 | |
3,757 | 632 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 7.5 | |
26 days ago | 3 months ago | |
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.
awesome-lua
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Gearing up for Lua
If you're familiar with awesome-lists, you'll be happy to know that an awesome-lua repository does in fact exist. This list contains more interesting stuff about the language, along with going deeper into certain niches that I'm not even going to start to touch.
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What's your opinion on Lua programming language?
Lua has a lot going for it. Its memory footprint is nicely small, its practical expressiveness is quite high (though not as high as Python's or Perl's), luajit's runtime performance is very good for such a highly-expressive language, and it has a great set of libraries integrating with a lot of commonly-used services.
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Advice to Aimless, Excited Programmers (2010)
I believe there is a way to accomplish this without seeking input from people on Reddit or message boards for new domains to contribute to.
There are lists on Github that curate libraries native to a particular programming language. For example, there is a list for Lua (https://github.com/LewisJEllis/awesome-lua) and another for Python (https://github.com/vinta/awesome-python). Explore these lists to identify areas that may require assistance. Some of these lists have not been updated for years, so it is worthwhile to conduct additional research on the domain before undertaking a project.
I have personally completed a project using this approach, although I did have some background knowledge in that domain.
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Where do I go after learning lua?
This was a list I got in my mind without googling... for more inspiration and see what others are doing take a look at awesome Lua: https://github.com/LewisJEllis/awesome-lua
- Library support situation?
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there seems to be an alarmingly small amount of support for lua compared with other programming languages
Check out awesome-love2d on github, there's tons of libraries for all sorts of stuff including UI. Also check out awesome-lua.
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Any good Lua Modules out there ?
So I’m 100% not the person to ask but usually the “awesome” lists on GitHub are a good place to start. Here is the awesome-lua repo for example.
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Beginneer's guide to using Luarocks on neovim plugins
Disclaimer: i'm still new to this world as well, i went through this for making use of luacheck, a linter tool for Lua, but the possibilities are just endless, you can take a peek at some awesome-lua repo on GitHub to find out the amazing tools that you can implement to your projects
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Lua Limitations
Look at all the awesome stuff you can do with Lua.
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OOP in Love2d
https://github.com/LewisJEllis/awesome-lua#object-oriented-programming
paq-nvim
- [Neovim] Gestionnaire de packages basé à Lua
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Is Packer still maintained?
If you want a dead simple package mamage that only puts packages in opt and start, you can use paq.nvim
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Introducing LazyVim!
Is there anyone here who can share some feedback on how much lazy.nvim has been better than what you were using previously? If my context helps, I'm using paq-nvim, previously was using packer.
- Neovim - Workflow para Java, C# e JS/TypeScript (Atualização com Neovim 0.8 e LSP)
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Cannot update plugins
This was a problem when I was using paq as my manager, now I have the same problem with packer. It never happened when I wanted to install new plugins, only on updating. With packer I have a workaround: after it fails to sync it allows to re-run all failed jobs, and each times about a half of failed jobs fail again, others update successfully, so I can iteratively sync everything, but that's a terrible waste of time;
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Help with plug
Options: - packloadall command family and maybe git submodules - minpac which is a thin utility around the above - vim-plug - old but still popular for it does the job - packer.nvim is a popular choice for lua configs, never got to using it myself - paq-nvim is another often mentioned lua solution - dozens of other solutions
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which plugin manager are you using?
that sounds like paq, but slow?
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New to Rust. How to setup Nvim as IDE?
On my Neovim setup, I simply have the following plugins. I use paq as a plugin manager:
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Neovim: Plugins to get started
paq.nvim
What are some alternatives?
middleclass - Object-orientation for Lua
packer.nvim - A use-package inspired plugin manager for Neovim. Uses native packages, supports Luarocks dependencies, written in Lua, allows for expressive config
luarocks - LuaRocks is the package manager for the Lua programming language.
vim-plug - :hibiscus: Minimalist Vim Plugin Manager
awesome-love2d - A curated list of amazingly awesome LĂ–VE libraries, resources and shiny things.
awesome-neovim - Collections of awesome neovim plugins.
luv - Bare libuv bindings for lua
targets.vim - Vim plugin that provides additional text objects
classic - Tiny class module for Lua
nvim-compe - Auto completion Lua plugin for nvim
blog - gamedev blog
lazy.nvim - đź’¤ A modern plugin manager for Neovim