lispe
leap.nvim
lispe | leap.nvim | |
---|---|---|
33 | 41 | |
366 | 3,968 | |
2.5% | - | |
9.6 | 9.3 | |
7 days ago | 19 days ago | |
C | Fennel | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
lispe
leap.nvim
-
Your favourite Neovim plugins?
Also I really like leap.nvim which in my opinion is the best thought out "hop" variation.
-
This Week In Neovim #44 — Mon May 29th 2023
Your plugins are great but I haven't tried mini.jump2d. However, compared to hop.nvim I prefer leap.nvim's jumping philosophy because it uses information you already have before starting the jump, and you just have to type one "virtual" character, which in my opinion is a smoother experience.
- Feeling super slow...
- leap.nvim meets vim-illuminate
-
Anyone know if there are plans to add leap.nvim behavior to helix?
Here's the repo if you haven't heard about it: https://github.com/ggandor/leap.nvim Otherwise, does anyone know if there are ways to emulate that behavior with existing keybings? And, if all else fails, would you like to see it as a feature request?
-
People who migrated from vscode
leap.nvim absolutely turned my movements and navigation experience in neovim upside down.
- What do you use 's' for in normal mode? vanilla? or something like leap?
-
I’m a vscode user who wants to migrate to neovim but still can’t get all the features I want, I’m trying out lazyvim, which plug-ins should I use?
I like Leap
-
How come NeoVim, with all the "API is first-class" and "extensibility" brags, has such bad documentation on these topics compared to Vim?
Another example. https://github.com/ggandor/leap.nvim Leap provides great paragraphs giving overviews of what it does and why it is designed the way it is, including some compare and contrast with other plugins.
-
find-extender.nvim A Plugin that extends the nvim find command
Nice, but you've reinvented the wheel :) https://github.com/goldfeld/vim-seek -> https://github.com/justinmk/vim-sneak -> https://github.com/ggandor/leap.nvim
What are some alternatives?
lisp-in-life - A Lisp interpreter implemented in Conway's Game of Life
hop.nvim - Neovim motions on speed!
zork-mdl - Original MDL source code for MIT's version of Zork
vim-easymotion - Vim motions on speed!
janet - A dynamic language and bytecode vm
mini.nvim - Library of 35+ independent Lua modules improving overall Neovim (version 0.7 and higher) experience with minimal effort
rc - rc shell -- independent re-implementation for Unix of the Plan 9 shell (from circa 1992)
lightspeed.nvim - deprecated in favor of leap.nvim
xv6-public - xv6 OS
avy - Jump to things in Emacs tree-style
tinylisp - Lisp in 99 lines of C and how to write one yourself. Includes 20 Lisp primitives, garbage collection and REPL. Includes tail-call optimized versions for speed and reduced memory use.
vim-sneak - The missing motion for Vim :athletic_shoe: