LiteIDE
eglot
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LiteIDE | eglot | |
---|---|---|
7 | 66 | |
7,449 | 2,172 | |
- | - | |
5.8 | 3.4 | |
3 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
C++ | Emacs Lisp | |
GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
LiteIDE
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What's the most commonly used IDE for golang development ?
Not common, but worth a mention: I've been using LiteIDE (https://github.com/visualfc/liteide/releases/latest) since Atom + Go dev ceased development.
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Open Source IDE for Linux
There is liteide too: https://github.com/visualfc/liteide Is not super amazing but it does the job and since is purely for Go it has a few nice features. And it's very lightweight!
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What is wrong with VSCode IntelliSense for GO?
I mostly use VS Code, too (or rather VSCodium), but also recommend you try LiteIDE as it's exceptionally fast.
- What IDE‘s are you guys using?
- Is it worth learning Golang using VS code?
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CodePerfect 95 – A fast IDE for Go
If this is the kind of thing you are interested in, I would strongly recommend LiteIDE:
http://liteide.org/en/
https://github.com/visualfc/liteide/releases
It's actively developed, FOSS (LGPL), native C++ (Qt), runs on Windows/macOS/Linux, supports go.mod, and uses gocode/gotools for intellisense instead of gopls. It has integrated debugging, go to definition/usages, and some refactoring support.
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The best free IDE for Go
"technically" https://github.com/visualfc/liteide as that's an IDE
eglot
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LSP could have been better
Recently I stumbled upon this issue:
https://github.com/joaotavora/eglot/discussions/1127
I don't know enough about emacs and LSP to see the full picture, but it seems that both eglot's and corfu's maintainers, assumably very competent programmers, can't find a solution for this.
I only skimmed the thread. My understanding is that LSP dumps a long list of completion candidates at once and they can't decide a cache strategy that works well with existing code...?
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Spurious errors with Eglot / pylsp
It could be. There are unfixed issues with eglot and corfu, and sadly not a lot of willingness to investigate.
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Using Quarto with Emacs
Eglot errors when I add new Python code blocks. The error disappears when I reconnect the language server, but the same happens again when I add a new code block. My "workaround" now is that before I start working on the .qmd file, I just add a bunch of Python code blocks (for which I also have a function) and then reconnect the language server again. This way I can start working for a while until I need to add more code blocks again.
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Looking for help in improving Typescript Eglot, Corfu, Orderless performance
This discussion has helped with some performance issues: https://github.com/joaotavora/eglot/discussions/993.
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Typescript highlighting in emacs incomplete (compared to VSCode) even after using treesitter?
I guess eglot doesn't support it yet: https://github.com/joaotavora/eglot/pull/839
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joaotavora/breadcrumb: Emacs headerline indication of where you are in a large project
This is not by pure chance, João is the developer of the Eglot LSP client and the breadcrumbs from LSP-mode had been requested as a feature, but as far as I remember João thought rightfully that this could be an independent package, see https://github.com/joaotavora/eglot/discussions/988
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Returning emacs user - what packages are common now?
A substantial section of the community is using corfu instead of company, but I wouldn't say company is out of date by any means. In emacs 29 eglot will be a built in, which might act as a replacement for lsp-mode depending on what functionality you need.
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Eglot upgrade strategy
I am currently running emacs 29 (built from emacs-29 branch) which – according to https://github.com/joaotavora/eglot – should contain the latest eglot.
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916 Days of Emacs
Yep. You can use flymake or flycheck for that in combination with eglot or lsp-mode.
See https://github.com/joaotavora/eglot#diagnostics
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Eglot, eldoc and golang
(I have reported this (that is, ElDoc missing docs for callable things at point, when Eglot is enabled) as an issue recently: First on GitHub-discussions https://github.com/joaotavora/eglot/discussions/1200, then on Debbugs https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=62687. But the threads are very long, so I don't recommend reading them.)
What are some alternatives?
vscode-go - Go extension for Visual Studio Code
lsp-mode - Emacs client/library for the Language Server Protocol
snap - The open telemetry framework
dap-mode - Emacs :heart: Debug Adapter Protocol
limetext - Open source API-compatible alternative to the text editor Sublime Text
clangd - clangd language server
toxiproxy - :alarm_clock: :fire: A TCP proxy to simulate network and system conditions for chaos and resiliency testing
rust-analyzer - A Rust compiler front-end for IDEs [Moved to: https://github.com/rust-lang/rust-analyzer]
restic - Fast, secure, efficient backup program
web-mode - web template editing mode for emacs
Docker - Notary is a project that allows anyone to have trust over arbitrary collections of data
company-mode - Modular in-buffer completion framework for Emacs