mini.nvim
vim-textobj-user
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mini.nvim | vim-textobj-user | |
---|---|---|
146 | 25 | |
3,638 | 1,409 | |
- | - | |
9.6 | 0.0 | |
7 days ago | about 4 years ago | |
Lua | Vim Script | |
MIT License | - |
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mini.nvim
- FLaNK AI Weekly 18 March 2024
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Alternative to vim-textmanip plugin? (move selected blocks of text)
This is essentially a tagline of mini.move.
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Refactor files and update import paths
Just as the others suggested, oil.nvim solves this outta the box. I freaking love it (here my config in case ya need it). Apparently also mini.files handles this by default
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Looking for good tutorials for learning to use neovim as an IDE.
For example: I spent a lot of time configuring file tree plugins to have the same sorting as VS Code, tweaking their icons, etc. But then I realized I barely used the file explorer at all, and now I'm super happy with the minimal approach of mini.files. I had similar experiences with other plugins that were just adding "fluff" instead of the functionality I was looking for.
- F/f/T/t highlight plugin?
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mini.files updates - file preview, prefix customization, change target window, and more
Around two weeks ago I've announced the release of mini.files - a file explorer module of mini.nvim with column view navigation and "edit text to manipulate file system" design. This resulted into a great feedback from the community, much of which turned into new features.
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New plugin: Notebook Navigator - Execute and manipulate code cells a la VSCode
A mini.ai textobject specification that you can use standalone
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Set it and forget it plugins?
Most of mini.nvim modules are designed for require('mini.xxx').setup() to provide the best possible features out of the box. The ones with biggest quality of life improvement utilities for me are 'mini.ai', 'mini.surround', 'mini.pairs', 'mini.basics', 'mini.bracketed', 'mini.bufremove', 'mini.cursorword'. Of course, there are more UI stuff which I like but not necessarily fit others taste.
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Which one is better?
MiniFuzzy.get_telescope_sorter() from mini.fuzzy. I found that it better represents what I expect from fuzzy matching than fzy: all that "favor with certain weight matching after certain characters" makes it less intuitive for me.
vim-textobj-user
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vim-textobj-variable-segment throws an error using lazy.nvim
Using lazy, it throws the error 70% of the time. when it doesn't throw the error it works. but It uses a dependency (vim-textobj-user) and I already tested it (only using that plugin without other plugins) is not the dependency's fault.
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What are all the accepted "inner" motion arguments?
Just to add to that, there are also various plugins that give you additional text objects, such as: - ii for indent levels (https://github.com/kana/vim-textobj-indent) - iz for folds (https://github.com/kana/vim-textobj-fold) - if for functions (https://github.com/kana/vim-textobj-function) - ic for comments (https://github.com/glts/vim-textobj-comment) - User-defined text objects (https://github.com/kana/vim-textobj-user)
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How to change between slashes using vim-textobj-user?
Thank you, kind vimmer. For others stumbling upon this issue, having same character around is not supported in textobj-user, but there's a workaround: https://github.com/kana/vim-textobj-user/issues/48.
There is a package called https://github.com/kana/vim-textobj-user that let's you add your own patterns to inner and around commands.
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What kind of short cut key if any do you use for changing text up until next underscore character?
The vim-wordmotion plugin extends the idea of words to include snake case and camel case words among other things. On a related note, the vim-textobj-user plugin lets you extend vim's understanding of text objects.
- Installing argtextobj.vim
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How to detect nearest nested bracket (of any type)
if anyone wants to use this, just make sure to also install https://github.com/kana/vim-textobj-user for it to work
- Are there plugins for Neovim that don't exist, that should exist, in your opinion?
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Delete word inside parens without deleting paren or comma
I would highly recommend https://github.com/kana/vim-textobj-user. Specifically, you'd want to pair it with https://github.com/sgur/vim-textobj-parameter. Check the readme for other useful custom text objects, personally I think this is one of my most useful set of plugins
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Leap.nvim: Neovim’s Answer to the Mouse
I NEVER use count, because my mental flow is drastically hindered by pausing for any form of counting in midst of editing; I stay off even relative numbers even. In their place, I enable a vast number of text objects instead, quite a few implemented through the `kana/textobj-user plugin`. Good text object are an embodiment of intent and thus map better mentally than any method using brute counting, even at the loss of some precision and speed.
[kana/textobj-user](https://github.com/kana/vim-textobj-user)
What are some alternatives?
surround.nvim - A surround text object plugin for neovim written in lua. (Fork from blackCauldron7/surround.nvim)
peek.nvim - Markdown preview plugin for Neovim
nvim-treesitter-textobjects
specs.nvim - 👓 A fast and lightweight Neovim lua plugin to keep an eye on where your cursor has jumped.
leap.nvim - Neovim's answer to the mouse 🦘
lsp_lines.nvim - Mirror of https://git.sr.ht/~whynothugo/lsp_lines.nvim
project.nvim - The superior project management solution for neovim.
persistence.nvim - 💾 Simple session management for Neovim
clever-f.vim - Extended f, F, t and T key mappings for Vim.
wildfire.vim - Smart selection of the closest text object
vim-buffer-history - A vim plugin to maintain a buffer jump history per window
nvim-surround - Add/change/delete surrounding delimiter pairs with ease. Written with :heart: in Lua.