haskell-tools.nvim
lemmy-help
haskell-tools.nvim | lemmy-help | |
---|---|---|
7 | 11 | |
387 | 142 | |
- | - | |
9.2 | 0.0 | |
2 days ago | 6 months ago | |
Lua | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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.
haskell-tools.nvim
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haskell-tools.nvim 1.10.0 - nvim-dap configuration discovery for haskell-debug-adapter
haskell-tools.nvim 1.10.0 now has the ability to discover nvim-dap launch configurations for haskell-debug-adapter from cabal and stack projects.
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`haskell-tools.nvim` 1.9.0 - Minimising the impact on Neovim's startup footprint with ftplugin support
For language-specific plugins and configs, it can make sense to load them only when actually working with the respective language. For this reason, I have added better support for setting up haskell-tools.nvim in ~/.config/nvim/ftplugin/haskell.lua.
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haskell-tools.nvim - New experimental feature: Evaluate all code snippets in the current buffer
I thought it would be neat if there were a way to update all haskell-language-server evalCommand code lenses at once. So I implemented it in haskell-tools.nvim.
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Plugin devs: type check your lua plugins with lua-language-server and EmmyLua (GitHub action)
When I added some EmmyLua docs to one of my plugins (to generate Vimdoc using lemmy-help), I noticed lua-language-server was giving me diagnostics based on my documentation. This was something I was not getting from linters like luacheck. So I asked myself, "Can I leverage lua-language-server and EmmyLua to statically type check my Lua code?"
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haskell-tools.nvim new feature release 1.2.0
I just completed work on some new features for my haskell-tools.nvim plugin!
- New plugin: Supercharge your Haskell experience in neovim
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Supercharge your Haskell experience in neovim
haskell-tools.nvim
lemmy-help
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Question for lua Plugin devs.
So let me tell you about my experience! In the stone ages of lua plugins, I was maintaining a markdown file to note down all the APIs but as the plugin was constantly changing, docs were getting out of sync very quickly and it was a royal pain to update them. So, in my case emmylua was the obvious choice for the docs, so I began searching for tools that convert emmylua to vim-help, luckily I found tree-sitter-lua#docgen and mini.doc. But in the end, I decided to write my own tool, and thus lemmy-help was born. Here a help file generated by it
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Plugin devs: type check your lua plugins with lua-language-server and EmmyLua (GitHub action)
When I added some EmmyLua docs to one of my plugins (to generate Vimdoc using lemmy-help), I noticed lua-language-server was giving me diagnostics based on my documentation. This was something I was not getting from linters like luacheck. So I asked myself, "Can I leverage lua-language-server and EmmyLua to statically type check my Lua code?"
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PSA: Code Blocks can now be highlighted in vimdoc
This will drastically improve the UX of help files. I am adding support for this in lemmy-help here https://github.com/numToStr/lemmy-help/pull/65 and I hope other doc generators can leverage this to provide beautiful help docs :)
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Are there any good starter templates for writing Neovim plugins?
If you want to provide vim doc, I recommend to use lemmy-help as soon as possible.
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Side simple project in Rust
Rust is great for parsing text. I created https://github.com/numToStr/lemmy-help to parse emmylua from lua code and convert it into vim help doc. I am also reading https://craftinginterpreters.com/ to expand my parsing knowledge and using Rust as the implementation language.
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lemmy-help v0.8.0 - Emmylua to vimdoc generator now has full support for emmylua types
I just released lemmy-help v0.8.0 which now has support for all* emmylua types. That means you can use any complex types in you emmylua annotations and it will be parsed correctly and vimdoc will be rendered as expected
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Vim doc to markdown
And if you are writing lua plugin which have public API, I would recommend writing emmylua and covert that into vimdoc using https://github.com/numToStr/lemmy-help (Self Plug)
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lemmy-help v0.5.0 | Generate vimdoc from emmylua
multiline ---@field description
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Generating docs for plugins?
I've just released https://github.com/numToStr/lemmy-help :)
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lemmy-help | A CLI for generating help docs from emmylua
That's just too much. You can just download the binaries from the releases page https://github.com/numToStr/lemmy-help/releases
What are some alternatives?
iron.nvim - Interactive Repl Over Neovim
git-hooks.nix - Seamless integration of https://pre-commit.com git hooks with Nix.
kitty-runner.nvim - A neovim plugin allowing you to easily send lines from the current buffer to another kitty terminal
torqc - The official zeta compiler
haskell-debug-adapter - Debug Adapter for Haskell debugging system.
panvimdoc - Write documentation in pandoc markdown. Generate documentation in vimdoc.
telescope-manix - A telescope.nvim extension for Manix - A fast documentation searcher for Nix
boilit - create boilerplate structure for neovim plugins
dmap.nvim - nvim plugin providing a subtle overview of LSP diagnostics
videocall-rs - teleconference system written in rust
neotest-haskell - Neotest adapter for Haskell (cabal or stack) with support for Sydtest, Hspec and Tasty
tree-sitter-lua - Neovim Tree Sitter Lua Grammar & Library