cheatsheet.nvim
vim-abolish
cheatsheet.nvim | vim-abolish | |
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8 | 17 | |
634 | 2,680 | |
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0.0 | 3.3 | |
3 months ago | 7 months ago | |
Lua | Vim Script | |
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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).
vim-abolish
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How to search and replace inside current workdir like vscode
Additionally, I use vim-abolish[https://github.com/tpope/vim-abolish] with the Subvert command to maintain the case.
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Custom code automation.
Alternatively, you could use vsvim and write a vim macro to do it, but that's a whole other rabbit hole to go down. The vim-abolish plugin should do the trick...
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Preview for vim-abolish?
tpope/vim-abolish provides a useful :Subvert command that works like a smart substitution. Is it possible to preview the command's effects just like for the built-in substitution command?
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what vimL plugins are you still using?
tpope/vim-abolish: Some text manipulation stuff.
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How to extend refactor for better integration for React?
https://github.com/tpope/vim-abolish might be able to do this (I dont use it myself)
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What are your must-have vim/nvim extensions?
tpope/tpope-vim-abolish - Sane search/replace
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Show HN: Vim Reference Guide
The best thing about Vim is that you don't have to choose between Vim and an IDE! Any text editor or IDE that's even moderately popular will probably have a decent Vim plugin. The only downside is that you generally won't have access to Vim plugins (abolish.vim is the one I find myself missing the most: https://github.com/tpope/vim-abolish).
Personally, I learned to use Vim via the VsVim plugin for Visual Studio.
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A pragmatic approach to migrating from VSCode to Neovim
Indent-blankline to draw indentation guides, nvim-autopairs to automatically complete pairs of brackets and quotes (I didn’t know I couldn’t live without it), nvim-ts-autotag to autocomplete pairs of tags as well, targets.vim to target what is inside or outside the mentioned pairs and vim-surround to manage all those pairs with few keystrokes. Kommentary to comment and uncomment lines of code, nvim-cursorline to help locate where the cursor is and nvim-colorizer because I am cheeky. Vim-abolish is definitely an interesting one. I decided to install it because of its case coercion capabilities, but it can do much more than that.
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Abbreinder - abbreviation reminder plugin
I create a lot of abbreviations, especially with vim-abolish. They're generally useful, but the problem is, they're hard to remember if I haven't used them in a while. To solve this problem I created a plugin, abbreinder.nvim, which reminds the user if they've typed the value of something that they could have used a pre-existing abbreviation for.
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Case change
What are the advantages over vim-abolish?
What are some alternatives?
lsp-zero.nvim - A starting point to setup some lsp related features in neovim.
abbrev-man.nvim - 🍍 A NeoVim plugin for managing vim abbreviations.
blinds.nvim - blinds.nvim emphasizes the current window by shading the non-active windows
neovim - Vim-fork focused on extensibility and usability
nvim-lightbulb - VSCode 💡 for neovim's built-in LSP.
hunspell - The most popular spellchecking library.
yode-nvim - Yode plugin for NeoVim
spellsitter.nvim - Treesitter powered spellchecker
vim-buffer-history - A vim plugin to maintain a buffer jump history per window
typos - Source code spell checker
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
local_vimrc - Per project/tree configuration plugins