luv
luv-vimdocs
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luv | luv-vimdocs | |
---|---|---|
14 | 3 | |
767 | 69 | |
1.7% | - | |
8.1 | 0.0 | |
27 days ago | about 1 year ago | |
C | ||
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
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luv
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Where do I go after learning lua?
To answer the OP's question, you could tackle luv and libuv ecosystem, as a way to connect Lua to real-world systems (files, sockets, servers...). That's one way to put Lua skills to use, there are other great answers in the thread. Another recommendation is to go through Programming in Lua book, especially the later chapters where you learn how Lua talks to the host application.
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Purist neovim config
Unfortunately I doubt they are able to use netrw, it interfaces with user facing buffers too much. Telescope uses plenary which uses lua's luv implementation (bound to vim.loop). Fzf-lua uses an external binary called fzf
- Is it possible to get a program that doesn't use LUA to send data to a LUA program?
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Library support situation?
Lua is still actively used so there is a great number of libraries that came out in last 9 years. A decent example is the luv library that is packed with great functionality. On the whole I'm quite satisfied with the ecosystem, but it all depends on the domain.
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Run external process from neovim with lua
You should be able to find plenty of examples of asynchronous code at https://github.com/luvit/luv and translate it.
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How do I use libuv filesystem event operations for handling filesystem management for plugins?
The first thing I would recommend is read the official documentation. Both libuv and luvit (or more specifically luv)
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luv documentation in vimdoc format
I spent some time converting the luv documentation to make it available in :help and make the vim.loop module more discoverable. Thought plugin authors might be interested.
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[Question] Multithreading in Neovim
I'm assuming this one.
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Access to libuv is one of the best things about Neovim
I'm sure I'm late to the party, but if anyone's curious, I found this article super helpful in learning how to implement actual non-hello world functionality, and the luv documentation has practically been my homepage for the past few days.
luv-vimdocs
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Is there a way for `nvim-cmp` to show doc of functions in `vim.loop`(libuv) module
I also use this awesome plugin for vim-doc of vim.loop(libuv) module. (https://github.com/nanotee/luv-vimdocs)
- "new_async" doesn't do what you think it does
- luv documentation in vimdoc format
What are some alternatives?
plenary.nvim - plenary: full; complete; entire; absolute; unqualified. All the lua functions I don't want to write twice.
lit - Toolkit for developing, sharing, and running luvit/lua programs and libraries.
nvim-lsp-ts-utils - Utilities to improve the TypeScript development experience for Neovim's built-in LSP client.
fs - Provide cross platform file operations based on libuv.
nvim-lua-guide - A guide to using Lua in Neovim
fwatch.nvim - fwatch.nvim lets you watch files or directories for changes and then run vim commands or lua functions.
denops-documentation - 📖 Denops documentation
awesome-lua - A curated list of quality Lua packages and resources.
luarefvim - Lua reference manual
watchman - Watches files and records, or triggers actions, when they change.
base16-nvim - Neovim plugin for building a sync base16 colorscheme. Includes support for Treesitter and LSP highlight groups.
libuvpp - Minimal Change of libUV for P2P Networking