nvim-comment
nvim-surround
nvim-comment | nvim-surround | |
---|---|---|
6 | 29 | |
468 | 2,751 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 7.1 | |
6 days ago | 6 days ago | |
Lua | Lua | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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nvim-comment
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An opinionated article about vim
(Neo)vim supports plugins, which make your code editor much better. You need a faster way to comment stuff? Sure, here is nvim-comment. Now you need a better tool to surround text by certain characters? Alright, we also have nvim-surround. And this goes on for almost everything you ever needed. And in the rare case that you can't find a plugin for what you need: Write it yourself! It's very easy to write plugins, as vim and neovim both have a lot of functions that help with writing those.
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Is it possible to configure nvim_comment to change the way it comments if I am inside a jsx/tsx block or outside a jsx/tsx block?
this is intended behavior by nvim-comment
- which comment plugin are you using?
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What tool do you use to browse and edit large C++ projects?
nvim-comment - comment control
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commented.nvim, a commenting plugin that actually works with count.
I need a comment plugin that works in normal mode and virtual mode and accepts count. Neither does kommentary and nvim-comment provide counts, therefore I decided to write one for myself.
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How do you build unit tests for your lua plugins?
I do that exact use case here: https://github.com/terrortylor/nvim-comment/blob/main/tests/comment_spec.lua
nvim-surround
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An opinionated article about vim
(Neo)vim supports plugins, which make your code editor much better. You need a faster way to comment stuff? Sure, here is nvim-comment. Now you need a better tool to surround text by certain characters? Alright, we also have nvim-surround. And this goes on for almost everything you ever needed. And in the rare case that you can't find a plugin for what you need: Write it yourself! It's very easy to write plugins, as vim and neovim both have a lot of functions that help with writing those.
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Using Floaterm, what's the best way to toggle between the editor and opened window and maintain the shell session?
So, I've been using floaterm and I like it a lot so far! But my ideal workflow would look like this
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How to know what is "surrounding" a piece of text
My guess would be to save the current location of the cursor, then iterate through all possible motions you want, i.e. a[, at, etc. After each time your operator marks get updated and you can save those locations, before resetting the cursor position to the original spot. Finally, take the innermost/closest pair of marks to be your selection. That would be my guess at least, I think your question is similar to how aliases are implemented in nvim-surround.
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Efficient way to delete highlighted text
Thanks! I was using nvim-surround, but I didn't check dit
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Can I separate `v` and `vi/va` like Helix?
Oh sorry I forgot to add additional context. I already have keymaps that starts with m but not dealing visual mode. For example, I'm using ms, mr, md for nvim-surround. That is why I'm trying to map mi and ma, not just m for entering visual mode.
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Automatically encapsulate or surround existing code with symbol pair
I'm trying out https://github.com/kylechui/nvim-surround (maybe a Lua port of that same plugin) and it it seems very capable. With some remapped shortcuts I think I can bend it to my will. Thanks!
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markdowny.nvim
The other plugin that can do this is kylechui/nvim-surround. Not sure how to set it up, though.
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Vimtex feature or a script for wrapping a word in a latex command?
You could probably use a surround plugin like nvim-surround and then have an ftplugin that uses the buffer_setup function to create a custom surround.
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ns-textobject.nvim update! Smater, more useful!
require("ns-textobject").setup({}) -- from https://github.com/kylechui/nvim-surround/discussions/53#discussioncomment-3134891 require("nvim-surround").buffer_setup({ surrounds = { ["l"] = { add = function() local clipboard = vim.fn.getreg("+"):gsub("\n", "") return { { "[" }, { "](" .. clipboard .. ")" }, } end, find = "%b[]%b()", delete = "^(%[)().-(%]%b())()$", change = { target = "^()()%b[]%((.-)()%)$", replacement = function() local clipboard = vim.fn.getreg("+"):gsub("\n", "") return { { "" }, { clipboard }, } end, }, }, },
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NeoVim as IDE
this might actually be a better surround plugin for surround https://github.com/kylechui/nvim-surround
What are some alternatives?
vim-commentary - commentary.vim: comment stuff out
vim-sandwich - Set of operators and textobjects to search/select/edit sandwiched texts.
kommentary - Neovim commenting plugin, written in lua.
mini.nvim - Library of 35+ independent Lua modules improving overall Neovim (version 0.7 and higher) experience with minimal effort
plugin-template.nvim - A template to create Neovim plugins written in Lua
indent-blankline.nvim - Indent guides for Neovim
commented.nvim - Neovim commenting plugin in Lua. Support operator, motions and more than 60 languages! :fire:
nvim-treesitter-textobjects
plenary.nvim - plenary: full; complete; entire; absolute; unqualified. All the lua functions I don't want to write twice.
vim-surround - surround.vim: Delete/change/add parentheses/quotes/XML-tags/much more with ease
vusted - A busted wrapper for testing neovim plugin
nvim-parinfer - parinfer for Neovim