language-server-protocol
vscodium
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language-server-protocol | vscodium | |
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121 | 535 | |
10,675 | 23,621 | |
2.0% | 2.2% | |
8.7 | 9.5 | |
5 days ago | 5 days ago | |
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 | MIT License |
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language-server-protocol
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Ollama is now available on Windows in preview
But these are typically filling the usecases of productivity applications, not ‘engines’.
Microsoft Word doesn’t run its grammar checker as an external service and shunt JSON over a localhost socket to get spelling and style suggestions.
Photoshop doesn’t install a background service to host filters.
The closest pattern I can think of is the ‘language servers’ model used by IDEs to handle autosuggest - see https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/ - but the point of that is to enable many to many interop - multiple languages supporting multiple IDEs. Is that the expected usecase for local language assistants and image generators?
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The Mechanics of mutable and immutable references in Rust
If you tried writing code like the one above, your Rust LSP should already be telling you that what you're doing is unacceptable:
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A guide on Neovim's LSP client
A language server is an external program that follows the Language Server Protocol. The LSP specification defines what type of messages a language server can receive, and also how it should respond. The idea here is that any tool that follows the LSP specification can communicate with a language server.
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The IDEs we had 30 years ago and we lost
> There's a strange dance of IDEs coming and going, with their idiosyncracies and partial plugins.
The Language Server Protocol [1] is the best thing to happen to text editors. Any editor that speaks it gets IDE features. Now if only they'd adopt the Debug Adapter Protocol [2]...
[1] https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/
[2] https://microsoft.github.io/debug-adapter-protocol/
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The More You Gno: Gno.land Monthly Updates - 6
The Gno Language Server (gnols) is an implementation of the Language Server Protocol (LSP) for the Gno programming language. It is similar to the equivalent “gopls” project for Go, as they can be plugged into your code editor through extensions and allow you to access handy features, such as autocompletion, formatting, and compile-time warnings/errors. Gnols makes writing code simpler, working with several editors to suit your preferences. To try it out, visit the CONTRIBUTING.md file, which contains instructions to get you started. Our current documentation targets Vim, Neovim, and SublimeText, but can likely be used with any editor that supports LSP. Feel free to contribute to improving Gnols and adding more features. It’s well-written, and simple to dive into the code and add more capabilities.
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LSP could have been better
Honestly, you should read some of the docs [0] if these are the sorts of questions you're asking.
[0] https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/
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Show HN: Postgres Language Server
hey HN. this is a Language Server[0] designed specifically for Postgres. A language server adds features to IDEs (VSCode, NeoVim, etc) - features like auto-complete, go-to-definition, or documentation on hover, etc.
there have been previous some attempts at adding Postgres support to code editors. usually these attempts implement a generic SQL parser and then offer various "flavours" of SQL.
This attempt is different because it uses the actual Postgres parser to do the heavy-lifting. This is done via libg_query, an excellent C library for accessing the PostgreSQL parser outside of the server. We feel this is a better approach because it gives developers 100% confidence in the parser, and it allows us to keep up with the rapid development of Postgres.
this is still in early development, and mostly useful for testers/collaborators. the majority of work is still ahead, but we've verified that the approach works. we're making it public now so that we can develop it in the open with input from the community.
a lot of the credit belongs to pganalyze[1] for their work on libg_query, and to psteinroe (https://github.com/psteinroe) who the creator and maintainer of the LSP.
[0] LSP: https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/
[1] pganalyze: https://pganalyze.com/
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Refactoring tools
See: https://github.com/microsoft/language-server-protocol/issues/1164
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Nx Console gets Lit
The nxls is a language server based on the Language Server Protocol (LSP) and acts as the “brain” of Nx Console. It analyzes your Nx workspace and provides information on it, including code completion and more.
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How to configure vim like an IDE
LSP stands for "Language Server Protocol", which defines how a language server and an editor (client) can communicate to provide code navigation, completion, etc. (source). Traditional IDE's would have something similar to this baked-in already, but proprietary to their software/language; whereas LSP is an open standard, so anything could implement it.
vscodium
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What is VSCodium ? Better than VS code ?
https://github.com/VSCodium/vscodium/releases
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DHH: VSCode and WSL makes Windows awesome for web development
Well, my Ubuntu with https://vscodium.com/ is certainly much better for web development than fucking windows. I boot windows only for gaming. I detest their spyware adware OS. Furthermore, I detest "99% open source with 1% bullshit on top of it" products like Chrome and VScode. I will never use the official versions of such programs. I use Brave to use Blink/Chromium, it also has the benefit of not suffering from the v3 manifest bullshit they pulled to attack and weaken Adblockers.
WSL is cool and all, but why deal with all the quirks and issue that come with it, why lorn how it works and all the limitations ... when you can just have it all natively the way it was invented and supposed to work?
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Phind-70B: Closing the code quality gap with GPT-4 Turbo while running 4x faster
I wonder if [VSCodium](https://vscodium.com/) suffers from same issues
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JetBrains' unremovable AI assistant meets irresistible outcry
Seems like you still lose the Python plugin and remote extensions? Missing the wsl one is pretty rough. If you’re comfortable with vim (or want to be) I can’t recommend neovim enough.
https://github.com/VSCodium/vscodium/wiki/Extensions-Compati...
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VSCode is no longer compatible with Ubuntu 18.04, here's what you can do
Use Codium. https://vscodium.com/
Anything Microsoft-branded will shoot you in the face sooner or later.
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15 open-source tools to elevate your software design workflow
No matter what project you're developing on, at some point you'll give VSCode (or its open source version) a try. You can use it to develop in a dedicated dev-environment or debug integration scenarios.
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The Loneliness of the Mid-Level Vimmer
Hello, and welcome to vscodium:
https://github.com/VSCodium/vscodium
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Raylib Library For Video Games Programming as Senior Developer
So Raylib library could be your best option. Let's code, just open your text editor like vim or VSCodium in your Windows, Linux or Mac computer and let's build our indie game with Raylib library, no extra dependencies are needed.
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What's the best model for coding with VS Code?
From my own experience Debian Bookworm with XFCE + VScodium is a winner on the X220.
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XCurl
To be fair, there is vscodium[1] which is only a few letters off vscode:
https://vscodium.com/
What are some alternatives?
intellij-lsp-server - Exposes IntelliJ IDEA features through the Language Server Protocol.
Code-Server - VS Code in the browser
tree-sitter-org - Org grammar for tree-sitter
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
omnisharp-server - HTTP wrapper around NRefactory allowing C# editor plugins to be written in any language.
vscode-cpptools - Official repository for the Microsoft C/C++ extension for VS Code.
tree-sitter - An incremental parsing system for programming tools
Visual Studio Code - Public documentation for Visual Studio Code
magic-racket - The best coding experience for Racket in VS Code
pylance-release - Documentation and issues for Pylance
friendly-snippets - Set of preconfigured snippets for different languages.
theia - Eclipse Theia is a cloud & desktop IDE framework implemented in TypeScript.