nvim-bufbar
vim-smoothie
nvim-bufbar | vim-smoothie | |
---|---|---|
1 | 12 | |
11 | 962 | |
- | - | |
3.0 | 1.8 | |
about 2 months ago | almost 2 years ago | |
Lua | Vim Script | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | MIT License |
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nvim-bufbar
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What neovim plugins do you wish existed?
I've created a small plugin in Lua that might interest you: nvim-bufbar. It simply shows the buffers list in your tabline and provide a few customization options and nothing more.
vim-smoothie
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Set it and forget it plugins?
dirbuf.nvim (or oil.nvim), the genius thing is that it is really just one mapping, plus stuff you already know. Foke's todo-comments.nvim is another typical one, but you're probably aware of that if using Noice. Smooth scrolling plugins? My favourite for some reason is still vim-smoothie, not the Lua alternatives.
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Need help structuring code for an attempt at smooth scrolling
My goal is to try to make something like vim-smoothie in emacs. I want to make this scroll line by line, instead of by pixel with pixel-scroll-mode because that just makes it laggy, and not smooth at all.
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How can I get over the beginner's hump and move around faster?
I can reccomend practicing using D and U to move around to see if you get more used to it, but there's also the vim-smoothie plugin which might make the scrolling easier to follow. Some other usefull ways of moving around are using { and } to move by paragraph (i.e. to next blank line), [[, [], ][ and ]] which move to the start or end of c-style functions. You might also want to try out a fuzzy finder such as vim-fzf or nvim-telescope where you can use :Rg or :Telescope live-grep respectively where you can start typing part of a line and see a list of the lines that fit alongside a preview window
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More senior engineer complains he can’t tell what’s going on in vim
I installed a plug-in that animates my scrolling. I’m not sure if it’s https://github.com/psliwka/vim-smoothie or something comparable (on phone so I can’t check right now). It also shows what’s going on in a more visual way. It’s hypothetically slower since it wastes frames, but I’m used to it now.
- My Only issue with using VIM as an IDE...
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Nvui: A NeoVim GUI written in C++ and Qt
> And smooth scrolling works on regular neovim with https://github.com/psliwka/vim-smoothie
Doesn't 'smooth scrolling' mean scrolling in increments less than a full line, to avoid the janky jarring jump from one line to the next?
I don't get how you can do smooth scrolling in a terminal interface? The screenshots in that link aren't smooth - they jump whole lines at a time.
- vim-smoothie: Smooth scrolling for Vim done right
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How can I navigate between lines on a larger scale better?
That is where this type of plugin can help with that: https://github.com/psliwka/vim-smoothie
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Best recent plugins
Very sexy for reading stuff (like help)
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How do people move vertically?
Wanna add some coconut oil to your c-u/c-d? use psliwka/vim-smoothie for some smooooooth ups and downs. Really helps you keep focus and reduce the need to reorient after the jump.
What are some alternatives?
vim-dadbod-ui - Simple UI for https://github.com/tpope/vim-dadbod
neo-smooth-scroll.nvim - Smooth scroll simple plugin for neovim
neovide - No Nonsense Neovim Client in Rust
neoscroll.nvim - Smooth scrolling neovim plugin written in lua
nvim-monokai - Monokai theme for Neovim written in Lua with tree-sitter support [Moved to: https://github.com/tanvirtin/monokai.nvim]
vis-spellcheck - Spellcheck plugin for the vis editor
instant.nvim - collaborative editing in Neovim using built-in capabilities
gv.vim - A git commit browser in Vim
tmate - Instant Terminal Sharing
st-undercurl - A patch for ST (Simple Terminal) adding support for curly and colored underlines.