easytables.nvim
debugprint.nvim
easytables.nvim | debugprint.nvim | |
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2 | 9 | |
68 | 278 | |
- | - | |
7.7 | 9.5 | |
3 months ago | 5 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.
easytables.nvim
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Neorg ā organize your life in Neovim
No, Neorg does not use the same markup as Org-mode. They use their own specification that is specifically designed to be different from Org-mode spec.
https://raw.githubusercontent.com/nvim-neorg/norg-specs/main...
Furthermore, each item you have listed as a benefit to Org-mode is in fact capable of being done in Markdown via plugins for neovim, and probably other markdown editors, like Loqseq, Roamresearch, or Obisidian, much in the same way you speak of plugins that interface with .org docs.
https://github.com/wthollingsworth/pomodoro.nvim
https://github.com/Myzel394/easytables.nvim
https://github.com/vimwiki/vimwiki
So, my suggestion is that before dismissing a comment regarding a plugin that is unfamiliar to you, is to read its spec, and then try to understand why people would be perhaps dismissive of that tool, especially when it chooses to conflict with existing, more popular choices.
- Show HN: Easytables.nvim ā Easily edit md tables in nvim with a live preview
debugprint.nvim
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debugprint.nvim now at v1.5.1 - check it out to create debug/print statements with ease
Folks, approximately a year ago I announced debugprint.nvim v0.1 here on r/neovim, a plugin to easily insert print-type statements into your code for debugging purposes; I'm happy to announce this since matured a lot and has reached v1.5.1. debugprint.nvim now supports 20 languages out-of-the-box, including virtually every popular modern language, can be extended to support more, and supports modern and classic NeoVim features, like dot-repeatability, normal/visual/operator-pending modes, Treesitter variable integration, and more.
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Is there a canonical pattern for plugins to allow for keymap customization?
Since I know there are quite a few fellow plugin authors on here (and plenty of users who may have an opinion too!), I wanted to ask a question / start a debate about the canonical way to customize keymappings for a NeoVim plugin. I maintain two plugins, debugprint.nvim and wrapping.nvim, both of which allow for users to customize the keymappings using the following kind of Lua-ish pseudo-code (let's call this Option 1):
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printer.nvim - Operator for quickly adding print/logging statements with text from textobject or visual range
Good work! I know Iām promoting my own work here (sorry!) but worth pointing out that my own https://github.com/andrewferrier/debugprint.nvim also already does this. Do you see any differences between the two? Are you interested in combining forces?
- Looking for a plugin that automatically generates a log/print statement for different languages
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Help re-discovering a treesitter based print debugging plugin?
https://github.com/andrewferrier/debugprint.nvim ?
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Guidance for choosing the keys to remap
Of course, there are also keys like g? which technically have a purpose but almost everyone doesn't use. Which is why I map g? by default in my debugprint plugin ;)
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Announcing debugprint.nvim - debug via print() statements with ease!
For anyone already using debugprint.nvim, please be aware that I just pushed a breaking change to the default keybindings. This is for consistency, and I don't plan to make this kind of change regularly (!), but thought now was the time to do it before too many folks picked it up. Details here, including how to restore the old keys if you preferred them.
What are some alternatives?
treesitter-indent-object.nvim - Context-aware indent textobject powered by Treesitter. `vai` to select current context.
wrapping.nvim - Plugin to make it easier to switch between 'soft' and 'hard' line wrapping in NeoVim
task-toggler.nvim - Neovim plugin for toggling tasks in markdown files
printer.nvim - Neovim plugin adding debug printing operator
fsplash.nvim - Show a custom splash screen in a floating window
refactoring.nvim - The Refactoring library based off the Refactoring book by Martin Fowler
nvim-typora - Bindings for Typora's Markdown in Neovim
nvim-snips - My custom luasnip snippets mainly targeting my development work
cmake-tools.nvim - CMake integration in Neovim
logsitter.nvim - Makes debugging easy by automating the process of writing logs, for NeoVim