dotfiles
tig
dotfiles | tig | |
---|---|---|
21 | 60 | |
45 | 12,170 | |
- | - | |
9.0 | 7.3 | |
21 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Shell | C | |
- | 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.
dotfiles
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How do you organise your snippets?
You put your snippets in a lua file, like here (with syntax according to the luasnip documentation) and invoke such file somewhere in your configuration so that it's required (i. e. "loaded").
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Function: Attempt to call global 'xxx' (a nil value)
Without knowing your precise folder structure and where you are requiring what is a little hard to understand. However, I do something similar but I have a functions file in my lua folder (without any nested subfolder) and I just require all the .lua stuff in my init.lua here.
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Select filetype based on Filename?
Some examples here, but as other users suggested it's vim.filetype.add().
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which snippet engine are you using?
You can find my snippets here: to be honest they are rather simple, so creating such doesn't take me too long. In general I would say either style is fine (or equally ugly :p).
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I refactored my lua structure and have lost some UI styling ?
Whilst at the moment I do not have time to go through your config, this is my noice config and my lsp. You can copy&paste, I have borders set and normal highlight window. It works, so just copy it and then work back till you add yours.
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lsp handlers textDocument issue after update Noice
If it can be of help this is my noice configuration and lsp setup. It is working fine for me and I tested updating everything right now.
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TreeSitter Code Highlight
See examples here.
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minimal config for sessions management
Here - it is just a config file with a few functions: use it as inspiration! The code is probably not optimised yet (I just got it working and I wanted to share, do let me know if you can make it better): mappings to operate
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your favorite cheatsheet app ?
I use navi and I am very satisfied: it's very easy to create your own cheatsheets, see for instance what I do here.
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...and now gh-i to search for issues interactively!
It is macOS with iTerm2 and zsh as shell. The DE is the standard one that comes pre-installed, I didn't make changes; you can find my configurations here
tig
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Ask HN: Interesting TUIs (text user interfaces), maybe forgotten ones?
https://github.com/jonas/tig is one of the first things I install on a new dev machine. It's a really nice UI for staging files or hunks. Since it's just a companion to the git CLI, it feels much more focused than full-blown git GUIs, and doesn't do anything magical.
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Every Git Command I Use (Cheatsheet)
Related but I use tig, a TUI, a lot to examine the state of my working tree and index and stage/unstage/reset changes piecemeal. It works great.
- Tig: Text-Mode Interface for Git
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Magit
I'd like to plug [tig](https://github.com/jonas/tig) for those who don't use emacs. I see lazygit recommended here too, but I've been using tig for years now and love it's simplicity.
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Is there any solution like Github Desktop and Gitkraken For terminal Users
Try tig
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What is your preferred version control software and what additional features do you wish it had?
I'm normally a CLI git (and tig) user.
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TexStudio - git integration for easy committing?
Sometimes when I work in command line I use tig (https://jonas.github.io/tig/). There is also similar tool lazygit (https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazygit)
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gti, gtti, giit, gut, gti, got, hit, jit, git <enter> {f%ck} <up-arrow-key>
And you accidently open a git TUI
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This is how I use vim and git, any other tips?
tig +My custom command to fix MR comments by quickly editing an old commit's changes at the time when that commit was created. (Like a more controlled git-absorb that explicitly selects a commit to fixup and therefor avoids rebase-conflicts when squashing)
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tig to switch branches
today I looked at tig which is a nice text based GUI, and I think I will never use git log again :-)
What are some alternatives?
noice.nvim - 💥 Highly experimental plugin that completely replaces the UI for messages, cmdline and the popupmenu.
lazygit - simple terminal UI for git commands
navi - An interactive cheatsheet tool for the command-line
gitui - Blazing 💥 fast terminal-ui for git written in rust 🦀
indent-blankline.nvim - Indent guides for Neovim
lazygit.nvim - Plugin for calling lazygit from within neovim.
vimspector - vimspector - A multi-language debugging system for Vim
vim-floaterm - :computer: Terminal manager for (neo)vim
ale - Check syntax in Vim/Neovim asynchronously and fix files, with Language Server Protocol (LSP) support
gitsigns.nvim - Git integration for buffers
dotfiles - My Dotfiles
cz-cli - The commitizen command line utility. #BlackLivesMatter