nvim-local-fennel
parinfer-rust
nvim-local-fennel | parinfer-rust | |
---|---|---|
1 | 15 | |
55 | 516 | |
- | - | |
2.0 | 0.0 | |
10 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Lua | Rust | |
The Unlicense | ISC License |
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nvim-local-fennel
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Emacs to Neovim
Just here to drop a little note to say that with 0.5 being eminent and having used it for awhile, I've completely moved away from my Emacs setup. I fled Vim for Emacs around seven years ago and never thought I'd be back, but with Aniseed, nvim-local-fennel and Fennel itself giving Lua a S-Expression face-lift, it has eliminated almost all of my frustrations with Vim and fixed the worst ones about Emacs, elisp. Also, telescope is amazing, I think we'll possibly convert a lot of Emacs users who use evil back to the fold. Are there any new Lua based plugins that folks here think are good additions to a init.vim|lua coming from Emacs?
parinfer-rust
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neovim plugins that have improved your workflow
parinfer-rust, while LISP only for reasons, is still absolutely amazing overall for its performance compared to the Lua version. I do wish there were more bracketing/scope algorithms out there for other languages. With a parinfer plugin, you only need to start a bracket for it to close what it believes is your scope. Great for enclosing things in functions
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Why is parinfer not as good as I think it is?
While my main daily driver is also IntelliJ, and also for Parinfer, I have found that Neovim + Rust-parinfer works remarkably well.
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Why Rust ?
Another example where rust's benefits show is something like parfiner. Currently I'm using my own ffi interface to https://github.com/eraserhd/parinfer-rust, and it feels significantly faster than the plain-lua version I had before. Getting to write the whole thing in rust just makes life easier and simpler
- paredit.vim – Paredit Mode: Structured Editing of Lisp S-Expressions
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Lisp programming configuration for neovim
I use a combination of parinfer-rust and Conjure for my Clojure, Janet, and Fennel development.
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Can vim become an emacs or is it already one or not?
My personal configuration is also written in fennel if you would like to take. look: https://github.com/shaunsingh/nyoom.nvim. Neovim's come a long way in what you can do with it. Fennel has a macro system as with any lisp, so you can make the syntax feel right at home with emacs https://github.com/shaunsingh/nyoom.nvim/tree/main/fnl/macros. You can even create dynamic-module like integrations with rust programs (see https://github.com/shaunsingh/nyoom.nvim/blob/main/fnl/parinfer/init.fnl, interacting with https://github.com/eraserhd/parinfer-rust/tree/master/src)
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What are your must-have vim/nvim extensions?
eraserhd/parinfer-rust if you do any sort of Lisp programming
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Why Clojure in a single Orgpad diagram
Clojure is an amazing language, and so is Rust. In fact, I think learning both of them is a wonderful way to introduce ourselves to such a broad range of programming ideas that it covers over half of the seven programing ur-languages. It's even worth investigating the differences in the way these languages have developed over time (Clojure being Rich's project and Rust taking a community approach). These ideas aren't in opposition to each other. If they were, the indispensable editor plugin I use to write Clojure wouldn't exist for crying out loud.
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Parinfer fans wanted
Have you seen an excellent parinfer-rust implementation of Parinfer? It's quite fast and can be integrated with other editors, like Emacs, Kakoune, Vim, etc. I think you can try to see if your integration passes their tests.
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Changing shift-left-right Behavior in Lisp Mode
I am currently using parinfer. It’s not exactly minimal, but it doesn’t require much configuration and doesn’t have any special keybinds.
What are some alternatives?
undotree - The undo history visualizer for VIM
nvim-ts-rainbow - Rainbow parentheses for neovim using tree-sitter. Use https://sr.ht/~p00f/nvim-ts-rainbow instead
awesome-neovim - Collections of awesome neovim plugins.
feline.nvim - A minimal, stylish and customizable statusline for Neovim written in Lua
pico8lisp - Lisp implementation for the PICO-8 virtual machine
lispy - Short and sweet LISP editing
nvim-tetris - Bringing emacs' greatest feature to neovim - Tetris!
kakoune-doas-write - Fork of kakoune-sudo-write to use doas instead.
lualine.nvim - A blazing fast and easy to configure neovim statusline plugin written in pure lua. [Moved to: https://github.com/nvim-lualine/lualine.nvim]
nvim-dap - Debug Adapter Protocol client implementation for Neovim