vimfiles
scripting_course
vimfiles | scripting_course | |
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12 | 16 | |
- | 1,338 | |
- | - | |
- | 5.9 | |
- | about 1 month ago | |
Vim Script | ||
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vimfiles
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How to make Language specific keywords and comments italic?
Here's how I override some groups (requires some Vim script understanding) https://gitlab.com/egzvor/vimfiles/-/blob/b3f6916ae9b639e0914b136a7d53f86abeca12ba/pack/integrated/start/vim-mycolors/autoload/mycolors.vim
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plugin vs package?
Take a look at my config. I extracted this plugin into its own package in order to have an autoload directory specifically for it https://gitlab.com/egzvor/vimfiles/-/blob/main/pack/integrated/start/vim-textobjects/plugin/textobjects.vim
- Whats Your VIMRC Setup For 2023?
- Project & File navigation
- How do you decide what to put in ~/.vim/after/ftplugin/foo.vim vs ~/.vim/ftplugin/foo.vim?
- Keybinding to remove a quickfix entry
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Why should I be working directly with buffers over windows?
:b filen - not sure what you don't like about it, but I use it for switching between files all the time. Or some version of it. You can improve it by using :ls t:b filen (you can map this! nnoremap b :buffers t:buffer) or go as far as creating a plugin to list buffers in a certain order (https://gitlab.com/egzvor/vimfiles/-/blob/main/plugin/buflist.vim). You could also try a fuzzy finder instead.
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A single* function plugin to associate buffers with anything
[2] I haven't extracted it from my dotfiles, but you can just copy it https://gitlab.com/egzvor/vimfiles/-/blob/main/plugin/marks-maps.vim.
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Python developers, how do you use vim/nvim?
Specific to Python dev, I used ALE for linting and UltiSnips for snippets. My config is here https://gitlab.com/egzvor/vimfiles/vimrc.
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Show most recently used and most frequently visited buffers
Implementation in my config https://gitlab.com/egzvor/vimfiles/-/blob/main/plugin/buflist.vim
scripting_course
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Whats Your VIMRC Setup For 2023?
I'm still on Vim 8.1 (Ubuntu 20). Most of my settings are available here: https://github.com/learnbyexample/scripting_course/blob/master/.vimrc
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.vimrc
Here's mine: https://github.com/learnbyexample/scripting_course/blob/master/.vimrc
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Not Your Grandfather’s Perl
I wrote ebooks on CLI one-liners based on grep/sed/awk/perl/ruby/coreutils/etc. These are free to read online: https://github.com/learnbyexample/scripting_course#ebooks
Plenty of examples and exercises.
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Ask HN: What are the best open source books?
There are huge lists on freely available books on programming topics here:
* https://ebookfoundation.github.io/free-programming-books/boo...
* https://ebookfoundation.github.io/free-programming-books/boo...
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All my book are free to read online and markdown source are available on GitHub: https://github.com/learnbyexample/scripting_course#ebooks
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Show HN: Command line text processing with GNU Coreutils eBook
I did have an option couple of years back, but there were hardly any buyers. So I closed that store instead of spending time in keeping them updated.
All my books are free to read online: https://github.com/learnbyexample/scripting_course#ebooks
Also, you could print to pdf using the markdown source from my GitHub repos or use tools like pandoc to convert markdown to pdf/epub.
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Ask HN: Anyone prefer a terminal based coding setup?
These might help:
* https://blog.sanctum.geek.nz/series/unix-as-ide/
* https://themouseless.dev/
Personally, I use gvim for all my text editing needs and use a normal terminal (i.e. no tmux, i3, etc). There's not much to share, unless you are interested in my vimrc, aliases, etc: https://github.com/learnbyexample/scripting_course
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[Giveaway] My books on regexp, cli and scripting are free for a few days
Thanks, do you mean web versions of my books? I made those using mdBook to convert markdown to html (plus js for things like search features).
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Advice on Getting Better with Regex?
https://github.com/learnbyexample/scripting_course#ebooks - I have several books on regex with plenty of examples/exercises (free to read online)
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Where can I learn to write Regular Expressions?
I have separate books for Python/Ruby/JS regexp. My books on grep/sed/awk include detailed chapters on regexp. You can read them for free online, see https://github.com/learnbyexample/scripting_course#ebooks for links. I use lots of examples to present a concept and there are plenty of exercises to test your knowledge as well.
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Can anyone provide any references to learning Bash Scripting for newbs? Preferably with some exercises?
I have a few resources collected here: https://github.com/learnbyexample/scripting_course/blob/master/Linux_curated_resources.md#shell-scripting
What are some alternatives?
volt - A meta-level vim package manager
bashcrawl
dotfiles - My personal Linux shell settings
awesome-regex - A curated collection of awesome Regex libraries, tools, frameworks and software
cpeditor.nvim - Competitive programming neovim plugin
awk-hack-the-planet - Source code repo for Ben Porter (FreedomBen)'s free course on Awk (originally a talk at Linux Fest Northwest 2019 and 2020)
dotfiles - My personal configuration files.
vimrc - The ultimate Vim configuration (vimrc)
dotfiles - These are my dotfiles. There are many like them, but these ones are mine.
unix-as-ide - The ebook version of Tom Ryder's series on the Unix programming environment
dotfiles - All in one dotfiles: Vim/Neovim/Tmux/Zsh/Bash/Docker/Python/CLI...
.dotfiles - :fireworks: Arch Linux with i3 / nvim / tmux / urxvt / zsh / ...