emacs-c-ide-demo
coc-clangd
emacs-c-ide-demo | coc-clangd | |
---|---|---|
1 | 12 | |
269 | 734 | |
- | 0.5% | |
10.0 | 8.4 | |
about 5 years ago | 12 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | TypeScript | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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.
emacs-c-ide-demo
-
Best/Worst C++ IDE you have ever used?
Somehow I always end up back on emacs. Someone has an IDE demo git thingy that adds a fair bit of functionality if you like that sort of thing (https://github.com/tuhdo/emacs-c-ide-demo). Even with all that on it still feels more responsive than the GUI IDEs I've tried. I prefer to do a lot of stuff (compiling, debugging et al) via the command line, though. It's actually pretty nice once you add the vi style paren matching from "Emulation of the vi % command" on https://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/NavigatingParentheses. Just drop the function and global-set-key into the init.el in that github repo.
coc-clangd
-
How to configure vim like an IDE
C/C++/Objective-C
-
Vim C++ Omni Autocompletion
I use coc.nvim with coc-clangd
-
coc.nvim clang++ syntax highlighting but with g++ compiler
I am currently using coc-clangd(https://github.com/clangd/coc-clangd) for c++ syntax highlighting. I use for coding sometimes, and I get an error because is only g++ header, not for clang. What should I do?
-
How to include coc extensions with my dotfiles?
Using this plugin I have installed several extensions like coc-clangd and coc-rust-analyzer .
-
Help with clangd in neovim
I don’t mean to be rude but, what about checking ‘configuration’ section: https://github.com/clangd/coc-clangd
-
Best/Worst C++ IDE you have ever used?
use plugins. I prefer coc.nvim paired with coc-clangd Clangd is what CLion uses under-the-hood for a lot of its autocomplete/linting/etc., so this pair gets you fairly close. (you miss out on CLion's proprietary additions and AI completion, but for quick work or places CLion is too heavy, its great)
-
GitHub’s Engineering Team has moved to Codespaces
Not sure about setting up on OpenVMS, but I've been getting along with simple C/C++ projects with coc-clangd which was very easy to set up.
-
Plugin question
I forgot to mention before, with coc.vim, you will need https://github.com/clangd/coc-clangd to integrated c++
-
Include-what-you-use: A tool to analyze includes in C and C++ source files
Thanks! I read about using LSP/Clangd with vim via [coc](https://github.com/clangd/coc-clangd) and I think that's the path I'll try going down.
Other responses, thanks for your input. Just want to clarify that I have tried VS and VSCode with limited success (sometimes search works, sometimes it doesn't, and my biggest gripe is an occasional lack of transparency into what's going on under the cover).
- Setup coc-clangd for cross compiling
What are some alternatives?
YouCompleteMe - A code-completion engine for Vim
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
watcom-vscode - A basic project template for using Watcom C/C++ tools with Visual Studio Code
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
include-what-you-use - A tool for use with clang to analyze #includes in C and C++ source files
Bear - Bear is a tool that generates a compilation database for clang tooling.
clangd - clangd language server
Code-Server - VS Code in the browser
neovim - Vim-fork focused on extensibility and usability
dotfiles - Personal configuration files (Mirror of https://sr.ht/~tristan957/dotfiles)