lf.vim
vidir
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.
lf.vim
-
[Plugin] ranger.nvim
You probably already checked it out but https://github.com/ptzz/lf.vim
- New file explorer: oil.nvim, a modern take on vim-vinegar/vidir
- Which file browser do you use ?
-
Any plugin that gives me a floating file manager? I just need it to do operations like move, rename, copy and delete
You can use terminal file manager (e.g. https://github.com/gokcehan/lf) inside vim-floaterm (https://github.com/voldikss/vim-floaterm#use-with-command-line-tools , for lf there is also additive plugin https://github.com/ptzz/lf.vim) You can than map something like this: nnoremap e :Lf nnoremap w :LfWorkingDirectory
-
File tree browser faster than NERDTree
After trying a lot of terminal file browsers I ended up using lf and that's what I use with vim as well. ptzz/lf.vim
-
lf.vim - fullscreen estate LF experience
For those who are not comfortable using floating window concept in `official` lf plugin or get accustomed to ranger.vim but eager to start using LF please welcome lf.vim.
vidir
-
The Gems of Moreutils
I just learned about vidir [1]. Emacs Dired [2] can rename & delete files by editing the buffer directly, and let's say I was thrilled when I saw someone replicated that behavior as a general Unix tool.
[1] https://github.com/trapd00r/vidir
[2] https://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/manual/html_node/emacs/Wd...
-
vimv has not only changed my workflow, it changed my life
I'm sticking with (and would highly recommend) vidir over this.
-
New file explorer: oil.nvim, a modern take on vim-vinegar/vidir
If this sounds familiar, that's because it was not my idea! Almost one year ago exactly, dirbuf.nvim was announced and it blew my mind. From what I can tell, the idea for dirbuf actually came from an earlier plugin called vidir, but this was the first time I'd seen it and, to be fair, its execution is fantastic.
- What's the best command in Linux or windows that you have used and it turned out to be really awesome and helpful .
-
Help Bulk Renaming Files
vidir for the win!
-
dirbuf.nvim: A file manager which let's you edit your filesystem like you edit text
You navigate Dirbuf with your cursor, pressing enter to open a file/directory. Editing in Dirbuf works like vidir where, when you edit a directory, you get a list of the files, directories, etc. in that directory and can edit them like text. Then when you save the buffer, all the files and directories you added get created, everything you copied gets copied, everything you renamed gets renamed, and everything you deleted gets deleted.
What are some alternatives?
nnn.nvim - File manager for Neovim powered by nnn.
vim-filebeagle - A VINE-spired (Vim Is Not Emacs) file system explorer.
nvim-tree.lua - A file explorer tree for neovim written in lua
dirbuf.nvim - A file manager for Neovim which lets you edit your filesystem like you edit text
fzf.vim - fzf :heart: vim
vimv - Batch-rename files using Vim
reprosjession.nvim
mimeopen-gui - Graphical "Open with..." application chooser for Freedesktops
ranger.vim - Ranger integration in vim and neovim
moreutils - moreutils is a growing collection of the unix tools that nobody thought to write long ago when unix was young. Read-only version of `git://git.joeyh.name/moreutils`
telescope-file-browser.nvim - File Browser extension for telescope.nvim
oil.nvim - Neovim file explorer: edit your filesystem like a buffer