note.nvim
nvim-navic
note.nvim | nvim-navic | |
---|---|---|
3 | 32 | |
52 | 1,304 | |
- | - | |
7.9 | 6.7 | |
7 days ago | 3 months ago | |
Lua | Lua | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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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.
note.nvim
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Ask HN: Do you make a work breakdown structure before programming?
I write a hierarchical structured task list (very similar to op) with a neovim plugin I wrote (https://github.com/gsuuon/note.nvim). Sometimes I'll write these items as commit messages, make the changes and check them off as I commit. I mark the current task so that if I get interrupted I can recontextualize fairly quickly.
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Ask HN: Product management for solo side projects?
I use my neovim plugin note.nvim[1] to brainstorm and plan features as well as track day-to-day stuff. It's one of the few projects of mine that I've spent more time using than building - by a good amount.
I have a top level ~/notes/projects/foo. When the project is small I just keep everything in a single file. Each feature gets its own item hierarchy and I use folds to manage which 'scope' I'm seeing. After I decide on what (not) to work on, I can mark that node as "won't do" or "pending". When I pick up a task for the day I can deep-link to where I initially brainstormed the feature.
[1]https://github.com/gsuuon/note.nvim
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The Notetaking Cold War (2020)
I think if you've spent more than 2 full weeks trying to figure out an effective note-taking system, it's time to just design and build out your own. Nothing will ever be more perfect for you than the one you build for yourself. Mine's at https://github.com/gsuuon/note.nvim
I just wanted easy daily task tracking and timestamped notes at first, now I slowly add things to it. I can deep-link to items or sections in other files (even at different commits) and have helpers that effectively exposes an API for my tasks. Everything else is just standard neovim things, like using Telescope for finding labeled items.
nvim-navic
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What's this type of plugin called? (it shows the structure of code)
This can be done using a statusline plugin like nvim-navic
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[WIP] A feature-rich, polished, highly customizable winbar, with drop down menu support and multiple backends
Zero-depency, yes, this is not another extension of navic. It does not even depends on nvim-treesitter or nvim-lspconfig, nor do you need to register an 'on_attach' function. as long as treesitter parsers or language servers are intalled correctly, the winbar should start working out of the box
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what plugin added the breadcrumb/context info to the winbar?
nvim-navic. This option is particularly nice because it also enables using nvim-navbuddy which I have found incredibly useful for navigating large files.
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Navi: your NeoVim assistant. I made a plugin based on the idea of "natural language first based development". We've got scaffolding of code, edit selected code, review selected code and an in editor chat. Still got ways to go, but the outline is there and it kinda works! :D My first go at plugins
Kudos for writing your first plugin! However, that's a rather poor name choice. There's already a neovim plugin called navi (https://github.com/mattiasbonte/navi.nvim), as well as an old unmaintained vim one (https://github.com/alexvoss/navi), not to mention slight variations like https://github.com/SmiteshP/nvim-navic or https://github.com/taohexxx/navim (the latter again looking unmaintained, but the former being relatively popular).
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winbar below lualine buffers
Just like this? If yes, you can try lspsaga.nvim, nvim-navic, or barbecue.nvim.
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Navigation between functions
I also use ]m, but itโs not a very good way to choose and move to functions quickly and with intention. Options include aerial.nvim, symbols-outline.nvim, and the new nvim-navbuddy, from the developer who made nvim-navic.
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Introducing nvim-navbuddy! A simple popup window that provides breadcrumbs like navigation feature and more!
Paired with my other plugin nvim-navic this completes the breadcrumbs experience that you would typically find in an IDEs like VScode. I hope you all like it :)
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LuaLine : Global status line AND per window status line?
I use global status line (3) and winbar. I use Nvim-navic so that the winbar shows me my current file name highlighted also shows the path and the context.
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Newbie Question: Can someone tell me which plugin/module this bar is coming from?
Could also be https://github.com/SmiteshP/nvim-navic
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What are optional core plugins?
I was trying to activate some optional plugin and found out that it couldn't be enabled using the mentioned config. I checked the github repository and saw that, for example, `SmiteshP/nvim-navic` is not present there. (link to core plugins list in repo).
What are some alternatives?
neorg - Modernity meets insane extensibility. The future of organizing your life in Neovim.
lualine.nvim - A blazing fast and easy to configure neovim statusline plugin written in pure lua.
nvim-compe - Auto completion Lua plugin for nvim
winbar.nvim - winbar config for neovim
task-toggler.nvim - Neovim plugin for toggling tasks in markdown files
barbecue.nvim - A VS Code like winbar for Neovim
aerial.nvim - Neovim plugin for a code outline window
neo-tree-diagnostics.nvim - A diagnostics source for neo-tree.nvim
LunarVim - ๐ LunarVim is an IDE layer for Neovim. Completely free and community driven.
nvim-gps - Simple statusline component that shows what scope you are working inside
vim-grepper - :space_invader: Helps you win at grep.
nvim-treesitter-context - Show code context