bufexplorer
vim-projectionist
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bufexplorer | vim-projectionist | |
---|---|---|
8 | 25 | |
502 | 1,032 | |
- | - | |
2.3 | 4.6 | |
12 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Vim Script | Vim Script | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" 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.
bufexplorer
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Simple Buffer Management (outline)
I have those two installed, but I hardly use it. I still use good old one like https://github.com/jlanzarotta/bufexplorer.
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Buffer switchers like VSCode
To open new buffers I usually use telescope. But to switch quickly between files I'm currently working on, I use Ctrl+6 (mapped to tab) or BufExplorer https://github.com/jlanzarotta/bufexplorer (mapped to Ctrl+tab). With BufExplorer you can also close opened buffers easily.
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What's the best way to move through buffers?
In addition to all those ways Vim offers by default, there is a plugin that could be interesting for you: https://github.com/jlanzarotta/bufexplorer When the buffer explorer opens, you see a list and can navigate with hjkl. An Enter will open this buffer.
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Trying a IDE like on Vim after a week to setup Emacs (kind of fail).
execute pathogen#infect() syntax on set number set incsearch filetype plugin indent on "" System """"" Ale let g:ale_sign_column_always = 1 let g:ale_sign_error = '>>' let g:ale_sign_warning = '--' " Set this. Airline will handle the rest. let g:airline#extensions#ale#enabled = 1 let g:ale_echo_msg_error_str = 'E' let g:ale_echo_msg_warning_str = 'W' let g:ale_echo_msg_format = '[%linter%] %s [%severity%]' """" Tagbar nmap :TagbarToggle """" AutoComplete " It needs https://github.com/prabirshrestha/asyncomplete-lsp.vim inoremap pumvisible() ? "\" : "\" inoremap pumvisible() ? "\" : "\" inoremap pumvisible() ? asyncomplete#close_popup() : "\" "" Force refresh imap (asyncomplete_force_refresh) " allow modifying the completeopt variable, or it will " be overridden all the time let g:asyncomplete_auto_completeopt = 0 set completeopt=menuone,noinsert,noselect,preview autocmd! CompleteDone * if pumvisible() == 0 | pclose | endif """" Syntastic " https://github.com/vim-syntastic/syntastic "set statusline+=%#warningmsg# "set statusline+=%{SyntasticStatuslineFlag()} "set statusline+=%* "let g:syntastic_always_populate_loc_list = 1 "let g:syntastic_auto_loc_list = 1 "let g:syntastic_check_on_open = 1 "let g:syntastic_check_on_wq = 0 """" LSP if executable('clangd') au User lsp_setup call lsp#register_server({ \ 'name': 'clangd', \ 'cmd': {server_info->['clangd', '-background-index']}, \ 'whitelist': ['c', 'cpp', 'objc', 'objcpp'], \ }) endif function! s:on_lsp_buffer_enabled() abort setlocal omnifunc=lsp#complete setlocal signcolumn=yes if exists('+tagfunc') | setlocal tagfunc=lsp#tagfunc | endif nmap gd (lsp-definition) nmap gs (lsp-document-symbol-search) nmap gS (lsp-workspace-symbol-search) nmap gr (lsp-references) nmap gi (lsp-implementation) nmap gt (lsp-type-definition) nmap rn (lsp-rename) nmap [g (lsp-previous-diagnostic) nmap ]g (lsp-next-diagnostic) nmap K (lsp-hover) inoremap lsp#scroll(+4) inoremap lsp#scroll(-4) let g:lsp_format_sync_timeout = 1000 autocmd! BufWritePre *.rs,*.go call execute('LspDocumentFormatSync') " refer to doc to add more commands endfunction augroup lsp_install au! " call s:on_lsp_buffer_enabled only for languages that has the server registered. autocmd User lsp_buffer_enabled call s:on_lsp_buffer_enabled() augroup END "" Folding set foldmethod=expr \ foldexpr=lsp#ui#vim#folding#foldexpr() \ foldtext=lsp#ui#vim#folding#foldtext() """" Nerdtree " https://github.com/preservim/nerdtree nnoremap n :NERDTreeFocus nnoremap :NERDTree nnoremap :NERDTreeToggle nnoremap :NERDTreeFind " Start NERDTree and put the cursor back in the other window. autocmd VimEnter * NERDTree | wincmd p " Close the tab if NERDTree is the only window remaining in it. autocmd BufEnter * if winnr('$') == 1 && exists('b:NERDTree') && b:NERDTree.isTabTree() | quit | endif " If another buffer tries to replace NERDTree, put it in the other window, and bring back NERDTree. autocmd BufEnter * if bufname('#') =~ 'NERD_tree_\d\+' && bufname('%') !~ 'NERD_tree_\d\+' && winnr('$') > 1 | \ let buf=bufnr() | buffer# | execute "normal! \w" | execute 'buffer'.buf | endif " Design let g:NERDTreeDirArrowExpandable = '▸' let g:NERDTreeDirArrowCollapsible = '▾' """" NerdCommenter " Create default mappings let g:NERDCreateDefaultMappings = 1 " Add spaces after comment delimiters by default let g:NERDSpaceDelims = 1 " Use compact syntax for prettified multi-line comments let g:NERDCompactSexyComs = 1 " Align line-wise comment delimiters flush left instead of following code indentation let g:NERDDefaultAlign = 'left' " Set a language to use its alternate delimiters by default let g:NERDAltDelims_java = 1 " Add your own custom formats or override the defaults let g:NERDCustomDelimiters = { 'c': { 'left': '/**','right': '*/' } } " Allow commenting and inverting empty lines (useful when commenting a region) let g:NERDCommentEmptyLines = 1 " Enable trimming of trailing whitespace when uncommenting let g:NERDTrimTrailingWhitespace = 1 " Enable NERDCommenterToggle to check all selected lines is commented or not let g:NERDToggleCheckAllLines = 1 """" IndentLine "let g:indentLine_setColors = 0 "let g:indentLine_defaultGroup = 'SpecialKey' " Vim let g:indentLine_color_term = 239 " GVim let g:indentLine_color_gui = '#A4E57E' " none X terminal let g:indentLine_color_tty_light = 7 " (default: 4) let g:indentLine_color_dark = 1 " (default: 2) " Background (Vim, GVim) let g:indentLine_bgcolor_term = 202 let g:indentLine_bgcolor_gui = '#FF5F00' let g:indentLine_char_list = ['|', '¦', '┆', '┊'] """" bufexplorer " https://github.com/jlanzarotta/bufexplorer
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File tree browser faster than NERDTree
I've been using BufExplorer for several years now. It's basically :ls with convenient navigation.
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FZF Buffer Delete
I love FZF but to switch and manage buffers I still use BufExplorer. We can easily wipe or delete buffers, it keeps track of the buffers opened in each tab (this way it's easy to have tabs for different aspects of the project I'm working on), etc.
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Converting from an IDE, biggest issue is navigating between files efficiently
I've been using BufExplorer for over a decade haven't really seen anything worth switching to so far...
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Do not get the benefit of tabs
tabs for me are very useful, I use tabs with every file that I know I have to change, when I want to change the buffer I use https://github.com/jlanzarotta/bufexplorer if the buffer is opened in another tab also the plugin change the tab
vim-projectionist
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What plugins do you use to manage work across multiple files?
Tim Pope's projectionist for navigating to files of a particular category or to related files from the current one: https://github.com/tpope/vim-projectionist.
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A few words on Ruby's type annotations state
> For myself, I'm fine with the typing being in a separate .rbs file
We type[0] by having one separate .rbs file per .rb file. Works really well with an editor's vertical splits: type outline on one side, code on the other. That, or use something like vim-projectionist[1].
[0]: (WIP: there's a huge codebase to type, but we're progressively getting there) https://github.com/DataDog/dd-trace-rb/tree/master/sig
[1]: https://github.com/tpope/vim-projectionist
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What's the coolest thing you've done with Neovim?
One of the originals I guess must be tim pope's https://github.com/tpope/vim-projectionist
- Could use some advice for managing projects in a way that fits my mental model and codebase. Monolithic codebase with project files spread around different working directories. Or just help me change my mental model.
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Project & File navigation
use https://github.com/tpope/vim-projectionist - define the relationships between files (example: app/*js are 'source' files and test/*js are 'test' files). Projectionist sets up `:A` to jump to the 'alternate' file (jump between a 'source' file and its 'test' for instance), and `:Esource` and `:Etest` commands to find/navigate by the kind of file. This is very powerful IMO - for projects with good structure I can quickly jump between related test/source/model/blah files very quickly using these commands. For projects without good structure I rethink or get the team to talk about how we might improve the project organization (ie, lack of structure is a code smell!)
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New Plugin: telescope-alternate
I love Tpope’s https://github.com/tpope/vim-projectionist but this one seems like a great replacement 😎
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JVM language users- how do you write your test files?
Tim Pope's excellent Projectionist plug-in has an alternate file feature, which makes it very easy to switch between test and implementation files.
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other.nvim - open alternative files for the current buffer.
The plugin is inspired by vim-projectionist and https://github.com/vim-scripts/a.vim
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vim-projectionist isn't autoloading in Vim
This feels like a bug, since the plugin doesn't behave as expected when following the installation section verbatim. I filed a bug here: https://github.com/tpope/vim-projectionist/issues/168
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Auto-open unit test file
You need https://github.com/tpope/vim-projectionist. Gotta have a file structure for unit tests though.
What are some alternatives?
nvim-tree.lua - A file explorer tree for neovim written in lua
jumpwire.nvim - Jump easily between related files.
vim-ctrlspace - Vim Space Controller
denite.nvim - :dragon: Dark powered asynchronous unite all interfaces for Neovim/Vim8
coc-explorer - 📁 Explorer for coc.nvim
autojump - A cd command that learns - easily navigate directories from the command line
barbar.nvim - The neovim tabline plugin.
vim-rails - rails.vim: Ruby on Rails power tools
minibufexpl.vim - Elegant buffer explorer - takes very little screen space
fzf.vim - fzf :heart: vim
vim-buftabline - Forget Vim tabs – now you can have buffer tabs
vim-grepper - :space_invader: Helps you win at grep.