grammar-guard.nvim
nvim-highlite
grammar-guard.nvim | nvim-highlite | |
---|---|---|
5 | 13 | |
153 | 236 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 9.1 | |
9 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Lua | Lua | |
Apache License 2.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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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.
grammar-guard.nvim
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Writing like a pro with vale & neovim
Neat post! I like to throw in angry-reviewer and grammar-guard.
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Help with autocompletion for prose writing.
Something like grammar-guard, proselint and/or language-tool?
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How can I load a user dictionary into ltex-ls?
Hi, it seems that the ltex-ls will not have this features added https://github.com/neovim/nvim-lspconfig/issues/1443, but there is no plugin available to do it, grammar-guard has stalled.
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Configuring Neovim for writing prose and XML
I am actually writing a blog post on almost this exact topic! Ltex-ls https://github.com/neovim/nvim-lspconfig/blob/master/doc/server_configurations.md#ltex is not fully integrated yet, add to dictionary doesn't do anything! You can add manually for now in the setup, for example: lua require('lspconfig').ltex.setup { settings = { ltex = { disabledRules = { ['en-US'] = { 'PROFANITY' } }, dictionary = { ['en-US'] = { 'Deno', 'Neovim', 'ltex-ls' } }, }, }, } The above disables a rule, and adds some words to the dictionary. Adding these rules manually is not ideal, but using ltex-ls in Neovim is new and the ability to do these things automatically has not yet been added. Keep an eye on grammar-guard.nvim for these features being added.
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[Plugin} Grammar Checker in Neovim
I made a plugin that checks your grammar while you're writing LaTeX or Markdown Documents!
nvim-highlite
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Which colorscheme has the best features and granular customization (default colors aside)? Or a plugin for building custom color schemes?
nivm-highlite boasts ease of configuration, but I haven't tried it yet. It shows only dark themes, but most of the themes support `background=light`. However they are kinda low contrast out of the box.
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My first 'basic' colorscheme
My plugin and mini.colors can also do it.
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`nvim-highlite` v4: Colorscheme Template → Exporter, Generator, and Retrofitter
tl;dr: export your favorite themes to new formats (e.g. wezterm theme), generate new colorschemes from only a palette of colors, update old colorschemes to automatically include support for new plugins (it sometimes makes them faster too). Repo link
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mini.colors - tweak and save any color scheme (plus animate transition and convert between some color spaces)
Wow. I just spent like an hour the other day converting colortrans to Lua because I wanted my colorscheme generator to work with all systems, but with this I can just remove built-in support for cterm and suggest mini.color for that purpose.
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Color schemes with semantic highlights
Mine, nvim-highlite
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I contributed to (mostly) 14 top-rated Neovim color schemes. Here are some observations
I do wish there was a builtin way to partially link highlight groups. In my colorscheme I opted for this syntax, which resolves self into the batch of groups being defined recursively unwraps highlight links to fetch the true highlight group being referenced.
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Colorschemes without true color
Shameless self-plug, but nvim-highlite and all of its inheritors support everything from 8-bit to 256-bt and is written using the Neovim API.
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Get impatient.nvim!
Haven't tried newer color schemes on the block, but I have tried a lot and all of them add 100s of ms to startup time. Eventually settled on a copy of https://github.com/Iron-E/nvim-highlite. Another culprit tends to be all the fancy statusline.
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Theme Help!
Not to self advertise (regulars here know I do that enough), but my colorscheme is made to work in any range of color. If you don't like it, look under the usage section— all of the colorschemes others have made with it also work without termguicolors.
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Proposal for lua colorscheme standardization
I'm a little puzzled as to why they'd do that. It's completely possible to use the :colorscheme command.
What are some alternatives?
ltex-ls - LTeX Language Server: LSP language server for LanguageTool :mag::heavy_check_mark: with support for LaTeX :mortar_board:, Markdown :pencil:, and others
cscope_maps.nvim - For old school code navigation. Adds cscope support to Neovim 0.9+.
toggleterm.nvim - A neovim lua plugin to help easily manage multiple terminal windows
telescope-zoxide - An extension for telescope.nvim that allows you operate zoxide within Neovim.
textidote - Spelling, grammar and style checking on LaTeX documents
nightfox.nvim - 🦊A highly customizable theme for vim and neovim with support for lsp, treesitter and a variety of plugins.
languagetool - Style and Grammar Checker for 25+ Languages
emacs-doom-themes - A megapack of themes for GNU Emacs. [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/themes]
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
themes - A megapack of themes for GNU Emacs.
nvim-fzf - A Lua API for using fzf in neovim.
colorbuddy.nvim - Your color buddy for making cool neovim color schemes