dprint
lsp-mode
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dprint | lsp-mode | |
---|---|---|
20 | 118 | |
2,922 | 4,653 | |
3.1% | 0.7% | |
8.8 | 9.3 | |
5 days ago | 3 days ago | |
Rust | Emacs Lisp | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
dprint
- Oxlint – written in Rust – 50-100 Times Faster than ESLint
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How do I stop Prettier from de-structuring object properties onto separate lines?
Prettier is opinionated. dprint is highly configurable.
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Rome v12.1: a Rust-based linter formatter for TypeScript, JSX and JSON
I mean, I know I am a bad person because of those long names, but that is how life goes sometimes! And the blank line there at the top is just very important to like, catch one's breath, while reading this code.
(I'm really just posting this in the hopes that somebody will throw me a "Bro, just use hpstrlnt, it totally lets you configure that!" -- I have not actually tried Rome to see if it does (it's Monday morning and I'm not quite ready to be disappointed again...))
[1]: dprint is good, and I recommend it as the best code formatter I currently know of: https://dprint.dev/
- Is there an extension for forcing a code style?
- What would you rewrite in Rust?
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What's the best way to generate code?
If it's something in the vein of one of those things then, worst case, you generate the code first, then run it through something like dprint.
- Ask HN: Alternatives to Prettier?
- dprint – Code Formatter
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Announcing Rome Formatter
Why not compare Rome formatter to the actual competition, https://dprint.dev/ ?
- dprint – Instant JS/TS Code Formatter
lsp-mode
- lsp-mode: Emacs client/library for the Language Server Protocol
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lsp-keymap-prefix not working
I also tried to the solutions suggested ![here](https://github.com/emacs-lsp/lsp-mode/issues/1532) and ![here](https://github.com/emacs-lsp/lsp-mode/issues/1672), but nothing worked. I moved the (setq lsp-keymap-...) line outside (and before) use-package. I also used :config (define-key lsp-load-map...) in my use-package block. But none of them worked.
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Help getting the yaml language server working with eglot
Not sure how much this might help, but lsp-mode has lsp-yaml-select-buffer-schema and lsp-yaml-set-buffer-schema commands to pick schema from a list or set from a URI. Checking the source of them might give some hints about how the same could be implemented in eglot?
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What LaTeX setup do you use?
Beyond that you might as well embrace the suck and install autex with a language server: https://emacs-lsp.github.io/lsp-mode/
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Emacs bankruptcy
Smart completion these days is done primarily through LSP. eglot is fairly minimal but built-in as of 29, also available via GNU Elpa. lsp-mode is another option with more integrations and a bit more fleshed out.
- The bottom emoji breaks rust-analyzer
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Setting up a fundraiser for multi-threaded Emacs, any thoughts on this?
Are you running emacs-29? It has numerous speed-ups compared to emacs-28 and older versions, many of them coded by Mattias Engdegård, e.g. commit def6fa4246. I have a fresh build of emacs-29 running on Linux and a new mac with an M1 CPU, and it's stupid fast. I don't use the native-comp feature. I rarely notice any hesitation or slowness. I don't use Elpy. I do use lsp mode.
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Newbie here! Need Help!
Since you are doing code development, the first things to go for would be setting up your emacs packaging (installing use-package and melpa (use-package's documentation covers this) so you have more packages to choose from (do be careful to not just pick things willy nilly but research them a bit first)) and then setting up lsp-mode. lsp-mode lets you use LSP servers for the specific programming languages you work with in a somewhat unified fashion. You then need to install and setup the LSP servers for the languages you use, and possibly install language specific Emacs packages as support (note, Emacs has builtin functionality for many).
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Emacs 29: Install Tree-Sitter parser modules with a minor mode
And first of all, I'm trying to understand, how is it connected to https://github.com/emacs-lsp/lsp-mode? I'm sure, that existed lsp implementations already parse source code. Why TreeSitter?
What are some alternatives?
prettier - Prettier is an opinionated code formatter.
eglot - A client for Language Server Protocol servers
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
tide - Tide - TypeScript Interactive Development Environment for Emacs
dotfiles - 👨🏻💻 My dotfiles including Neovim Lua config, ZSH with zinit plugin manager & powerlevel10k prompt
ctags - A maintained ctags implementation
deno - A modern runtime for JavaScript and TypeScript.
ANTLR - ANTLR (ANother Tool for Language Recognition) is a powerful parser generator for reading, processing, executing, or translating structured text or binary files.
apriori-rs - Apriori for association rule mining with Python bindings 🦀🐍
dap-mode - Emacs :heart: Debug Adapter Protocol
deno_lint - Blazing fast linter for JavaScript and TypeScript written in Rust
company-lsp - Company completion backend for lsp-mode