ivy-lsp-current-buffer-symbols
lsp-docker
ivy-lsp-current-buffer-symbols | lsp-docker | |
---|---|---|
1 | 7 | |
0 | 238 | |
- | 1.3% | |
1.8 | 7.6 | |
about 3 years ago | 18 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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ivy-lsp-current-buffer-symbols
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From Vim to Emacs in Fourteen Days
I would say that what areally changes the game is to use evil (vi style bindings, 95% stays the same) with Emacs so you keep the muscle memory and you can keep making use of the common ex commands.
I have gone back and forth between vim and emacs, usually for a bunch of years each time before currently settling on emacs with Doom. With the nativecomp branch, it's actually pretty snappy and doom emacs is a great setup to get started without drowning in the amount of configuration.
I would say that I just love vim style input and modal editing, but doing that on top of emacs with evil mode and elisp is a better match for me than vimscript. The feedback loop you get with LISP and emacs is incredible when tweaking things to your liking.
Every function is accessible, there is just a global scope and you can call pretty much anything. It's sounds like an horrible idea, but it also means you can quickly hack stuff by reusing the internals of a package you like.
For example, it took me half an hour to initially POC this https://github.com/jhchabran/ivy-lsp-current-buffer-symbols by just skimming through the emacs-lsp codebase and randomly trying funcs in the repl to get an idea of what each function was doing.
lsp-docker
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What don't dired buffers have a (buffer-file-name)?
I believe this has cost me a ton of time but I did learn a lot along the way. lsp-docker highest level function is lsp-docker-start. It calls lsp-workspace-root which calls buffer-file-name which, if starting from a dired buffer, returns nil so lsp-workspace-root returns nil and the LSP server is not started.
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Emacs and Rails
I'm trying to figure that out right now. There is lsp-docker which is designed (I'm still half guessing) to have a separate container hold the language server. What I want is a pre-existing container to hold the server. There is partial code in that repo to do that but it appears not fully baked.
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Emacs 29.1 is going to be released in 2023 spring with built-in LSP support (Eglot)
If you're on WSL, you may want to take a look at something like lsp-docker which bypass all quirk of Tramp and works directly with your files in WSL. I've never been able to make Tramp work reliably (too much hanging with or without lsp-mode) from Windows -> WSL so bypassing it provides a much better experience.
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Switching from pyenv, rbenv, goenv and nvm to asdf – yujinyuz
This is a reasonable point, and something that is being worked on. I definitely think Docker can provide LSP servers as necessary, we're just not quite there. This is something that I'm interested in working on, though I'm not the only one: https://github.com/emacs-lsp/lsp-docker
- lsp-docker: Scripts and configurations to leverage lsp-mode in docker environment
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Building an Intelligent Emacs with LSP
Yeah, I'm a NixOS user, and nix helps a lot with managing LSP servers on my system at the point that this is not a issue for me, but I agree a solution runing then in a docker or something would fit nice as well, we already have this conecpt: https://github.com/emacs-lsp/lsp-docker/
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Using lsp-docker over TRAMP?
[0] https://github.com/emacs-lsp/lsp-docker#docker-over-tramp-tbd
What are some alternatives?
lem - Common Lisp editor/IDE with high expansibility
lsp-metals - lsp-mode :heart: metals
lsp-dart - lsp-mode :heart: dart
eglot - A client for Language Server Protocol servers
emacs4cl - A tiny DIY kit to set up vanilla Emacs for Common Lisp programming
helm-lsp - lsp-mode :heart: helm
emacs-anywhere - Configurable automation + hooks called with application information
wakib-emacs - Emacs Starter Kit based on Wakib keybindings
public
eclectica - ☀️ Cool and eclectic version manager for any language
.emacs.d - My [old] Emacs Config. I've moved to Doom now 👇
asdf-direnv - direnv plugin for the asdf version manager