nvim-completion
sniprun
nvim-completion | sniprun | |
---|---|---|
8 | 27 | |
527 | 1,353 | |
- | - | |
9.0 | 8.7 | |
over 1 year ago | 6 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
MIT License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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.
nvim-completion
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Introducing nvim-oxi: first-class Rust bindings to Neovim internals
It was originally a much smaller and simpler codebase that I put together while writing nvim-compleet. After a few requests I decided to take the time to develop it into a standalone crate that everyone can use, and yesterday it was finally published on crates.io.
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Neovim 0.7 Released
I don't know how well or not it works, but there is an autocomplete plugin being written in Rust.
https://github.com/noib3/nvim-compleet
- Nvim-Compleet - A Neovim autocompletion framework written in Rust
- Nvim-Compleet – A Neovim autocompletion framework written in Rust
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Announcing nvim-compleet: A new autocompletion framework written in Rust!
This is the branch I'm working on.
sniprun
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Compile and run inside nvim
If you want to compile/run specific lines of code (not the whole project), my plugin sniprun should be worth a look
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How to take input in Python using lunar vim?
If I understand currently this https://github.com/michaelb/sniprun plugin should do the trick for you.
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In-editor lua REPL: nvim-luadev vs neorepl.nvim
I can't speak for the two above plugins (I shall try them!), but... While I'm developing in Lua, I like to use michaelb's sniprun. I'll just build my tests inside the file I'm working on, and see my outputs update live within the buffer as I edit.
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Tools for productivity
REPL??? Do you have a very-easy-to-use way of running and testing your code? From vim-slime to nvim sniprun to autocommands with the built in terminal, to an external repl like ptpython (for python obviously). iron.nvim and conjure are two other neovim repl plugins. There are many ways of running the code that you're working on, and having something that makes this really easy for you is pretty essential. (sometimes I use inotifytools on linux to literally just run the script every time I save it.)
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Favorite REPL/Notebook/Task Running plugins and workflow?
I'm glad for the reminder about sniprun, I had it bookmarked but not categorized well enough and forgot about it.
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TIL: you can run code inside markdown :O
Install SnipRun
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New plugin: Equals (#=)
A similar plugin that comes to mind is sniprun.
- Run code in Nvim
- Is there any plugin or a way where I can see my code like this and not opening a browser to view it?
- Plugin for send code unit to any interpreter
What are some alternatives?
nvim-send - Essentially "nvim --remote-expr <expr>" / "nvim --remote-send <keys>" or "nvr --nostart --remote-send <keys>" in Rust
iron.nvim - Interactive Repl Over Neovim
ocaml-lsp - OCaml Language Server Protocol implementation
codi.vim - :notebook_with_decorative_cover: The interactive scratchpad for hackers.
cargo-limit - Productivity improvements for Rust ecosystem: warnings are skipped until errors are fixed, LSP-independent Neovim integration, etc.
code_runner.nvim - Neovim plugin.The best code runner you could have, it is like the one in vscode but with super powers, it manages projects like in intellij but without being slow
neovide - No Nonsense Neovim Client in Rust
vim-slime - A vim plugin to give you some slime. (Emacs)
coq.artifacts
vim-terminator - :dagger: Run your code in an output buffer or a vim terminal conveniently
neovim-remote - :ok_hand: Support for --remote and friends.
neoterm - Wrapper of some vim/neovim's :terminal functions.