fussy
projectile
fussy | projectile | |
---|---|---|
10 | 31 | |
121 | 3,927 | |
- | - | |
4.4 | 7.6 | |
about 1 month ago | about 1 month ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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fussy
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Fuzzy Finding with Emacs Instead of Fzf
> Emacs has better fuzzy finding
With due respect to Mr. Petersen, and as an Emacs user myself, I really can't agree. When I fire up fzf I just type and generally without any thinking I get what I want. Emacs takes some configuration to get to that point; the built in flex completion is, for whatever reason, not as robust in my experience.
In fact, in my current config I've been using fzf (or really skim) for completion within Emacs, via fussy: https://github.com/jojojames/fussy
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What is the name of the nice light theme
Good idear, I asked in the repos https://github.com/jojojames/fussy/issues/37
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Prioritize exact match in completion styles
As oantolin mentioned, fido completely overrides your preferred completion-styles which I called out here recently as a blocker to really adopt it if you care about performant fuzzy matching. I've done a lot of messing around with configuration in this space and my preferred setup is vertico + hotfuzz. You might also want to check out fussy which supports a bunch of different backends (FWIW, hotfuzz with the dynamic module enabled for me had the best combination of performance and behaviour, but fuz-bin and fzf-native are also great).
- fussy: Emacs completion-style leveraging flx
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Why use Vertico/Consult if i can just use fido-vertical-mode?
Currently, vertico + orderless + fussy (https://github.com/jojojames/fussy) enables you to find something with both fuzzy matching style and orderless style. I tried with Fido, only fussy works, but not orderless.
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I'm switching to emacs from neovim
It's not enough to have a different way to list search results, however. If you want the Telescope experience you need a fuzzy completion. I have been enjoying fussy
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Fuzzy Finding with Emacs Instead of fzf
Someone kinda has with fussy. It supports multiple filtering and sorting techniques, including fzf compiled as a dynamic module for emacs, flx, flx-rs, and more.
- fussy: A completion-style/fuzzy matching/scoring system for fido/icomplete/selectrum/vertico/ivy/helm/default completion systems [with flx, fzf, skim scoring backends]
projectile
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Fuzzy Finding with Emacs Instead of Fzf
Could you explain more about this setup? I'm not familiar with "projectile". Is this https://github.com/bbatsov/projectile the same thing you're referring to?
Sounds interesting. What I've done recently is open my vim in the folder that contains all the organization's repos (the ones I've cloned) and just run ripgrep inside vim to find examples or references to whatever I've seeking. Seems performant enough even without doing anything except letting ripgrep ignore git-ignored stuff (default behavior of ripgrep).
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Emacs: Projectile - Multiple Projects
Sure. It sounds like it's working well enough. Here's a Github issue that may be of interest to you. Apparently you can get this behavior if there's a project marker file at a higher level.
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Project-global building/running/etc
With projectile you can define custom "run", "compile", "test" commands per project. Also there are pre-defined commands for many known project types.
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Two projects side by side?
Thanks for your detailed explanation, but no that is no that is not the question. This is projectile: https://github.com/bbatsov/projectile
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Multi project management - perspective, persp-mode, tab-bar-mode, or...?
I am currently trying with perspective rather than persp-mode, as it segregates the buffer list as I like (#1 above). I've got projectile with persp-projectile, and that seems to give me what I need for project navigation (#2 probably, still not 100%). I get some help in my mode line for project focus (#3, partially).
- Projectile 2.7 has been released
- Projectile 2.7 is out!
- Release Projectile 2.6
- Projectile 2.6
- Projectile 2.6 released!