cheatsheet.nvim
mini.nvim
cheatsheet.nvim | mini.nvim | |
---|---|---|
8 | 146 | |
634 | 3,899 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.6 | |
3 months ago | 3 days ago | |
Lua | 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.
cheatsheet.nvim
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wf.nvim: a new which-key plugin for Neovim.
I tried to use which-key but just found it quite confusing how to set it up and to provide me with customised information. I opted for something much simpler Cheatsheet plugin, which is just a reference list.
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How many are new to vim?
If you plan on using neovim, these plugins are extremely helpful for commands you use less often: https://github.com/folke/which-key.nvim https://github.com/sudormrfbin/cheatsheet.nvim
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How to bring up cheatsheet for commands that don't go into which-key?
this plugin allows you to display your custom command list in a floating window by typing ?
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What's the one plugin you'd love to see?
The show keybinding thing already exists. I believe :Telescope keymaps also does that? Check this one out https://github.com/sudormrfbin/cheatsheet.nvim, you can define your own list and stuff
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Show HN: Vim Reference Guide
Neat stuff! Nowadays, I mostly use Cheatsheet[1] to quickly look up things I want to do, but resources like this are always nice for learning new stuff you didn't know about.
One piece of feedback is that I would include "+p and "+yy in the copy and paste section. I feel like that's the first place where people will go to look for "How to copy and paste using clipboard".
[1] https://github.com/sudormrfbin/cheatsheet.nvim
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what are the most underrated plugins in your view?
Cheatsheet: for those of us who dont remember or dont know that vim command we need right now.
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What is the recommend way to store complex substitutes for reusage?
You could use the Cheatsheet plugin. I use it to easily access the keybinding list of my most used plugins, but you can store anything in it.
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cheatsheet.nvim: A cheatsheet plugin with a telescope interface
cheatsheet.nvim is a neovim plugin that you can use to display a cheatsheet from within neovim, optionally using Telescope (falling back to showing them in a floating window).
mini.nvim
- FLaNK AI Weekly 18 March 2024
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Alternative to vim-textmanip plugin? (move selected blocks of text)
This is essentially a tagline of mini.move.
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Refactor files and update import paths
Just as the others suggested, oil.nvim solves this outta the box. I freaking love it (here my config in case ya need it). Apparently also mini.files handles this by default
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Backwards inner/outer motions?
You mean backwards seeking text objects? You can get those with mini.ai https://github.com/echasnovski/mini.nvim/blob/main/readmes/mini-ai.md
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mini.nvim - release 0.10.0 (files, clue, operators, and minor updates)
I would like to offer you to join me in saying late greetings to this autumn with a release of mini.nvim version 0.10.0. It is mostly about introducing three (quite feature full, dare I say) modules and minor updates of existing ones.
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Shoutouts to u/echasnovski
Last night I cleaned up all the dead code in my config and realised that mini.nvim has to be the single best plugin that I've used. I have a couple of other favourites but this collection has been so consistently good that I wanted to give some thanks to the juggernaut that is u/echasnovski! Thanks for all the work you plugin authors and core maintainers put in to make this editor what it is <3
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Looking for good tutorials for learning to use neovim as an IDE.
For example: I spent a lot of time configuring file tree plugins to have the same sorting as VS Code, tweaking their icons, etc. But then I realized I barely used the file explorer at all, and now I'm super happy with the minimal approach of mini.files. I had similar experiences with other plugins that were just adding "fluff" instead of the functionality I was looking for.
- F/f/T/t highlight plugin?
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mini.files updates - file preview, prefix customization, change target window, and more
Around two weeks ago I've announced the release of mini.files - a file explorer module of mini.nvim with column view navigation and "edit text to manipulate file system" design. This resulted into a great feedback from the community, much of which turned into new features.
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New plugin: Notebook Navigator - Execute and manipulate code cells a la VSCode
A mini.ai textobject specification that you can use standalone
What are some alternatives?
lsp-zero.nvim - A starting point to setup some lsp related features in neovim.
surround.nvim - A surround text object plugin for neovim written in lua. (Fork from blackCauldron7/surround.nvim)
blinds.nvim - blinds.nvim emphasizes the current window by shading the non-active windows
peek.nvim - Markdown preview plugin for Neovim
nvim-lightbulb - VSCode 💡 for neovim's built-in LSP.
specs.nvim - 👓 A fast and lightweight Neovim lua plugin to keep an eye on where your cursor has jumped.
yode-nvim - Yode plugin for NeoVim
leap.nvim - Neovim's answer to the mouse 🦘
vim-buffer-history - A vim plugin to maintain a buffer jump history per window
lsp_lines.nvim - Mirror of https://git.sr.ht/~whynothugo/lsp_lines.nvim
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
persistence.nvim - 💾 Simple session management for Neovim