nvim-possession
๐ the no-nonsense session manager (by gennaro-tedesco)
possession.nvim
Flexible session management for Neovim. (by jedrzejboczar)
nvim-possession | possession.nvim | |
---|---|---|
8 | 7 | |
180 | 311 | |
- | - | |
4.8 | 6.5 | |
28 days ago | 11 days ago | |
Lua | Lua | |
MIT License | MIT License |
The number of mentions indicates the total number of mentions that we've tracked plus the number of user suggested alternatives.
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.
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-possession
Posts with mentions or reviews of nvim-possession.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-05-10.
-
Looking for session plugin
Yes, you can use the post_hook callback in nvim-possession, for example.
-
Do you guys also feel a higher cognitive complexity to grasp basic lua plugin usage ?
This morning while reading the documentation of an awesome looking session plugin nvim-possession, I realized that I had a hidden frustration.
-
is there is a session manager plugin ?
nvim-possession
-
How to get Nvim to remember last open buffers, splits and cursor position
I recently wrote nvim-possession: it isn't as feature-complete as most other session plugins, but it does only and exactly what you need (which is its market proposition), and it looks cool ;-)!
-
๐ช Automagic and post hooks for nvim-possession
All the new commands are described in detail in the README and help file, have a look and try it out! Link to the repository.
-
nvim-linefly - Just what the world needs, yet another Lua statusline plugin (I'm sorry)
P. S. Do you mind if I open a PR to support yet another session manager? :p
-
nvim-possession: a simple and minimal session manager
There are already some quite good session managers out there, however for my use case they all seemed to add many features I didn't need and to require learning commands, mappings and events that I didn't use. As such, I wanted to create a minimal sessions picker that only exposes listing, creation and deletion of sessions, ideally with some visual candies and browsing to make it appealing. And nvim-possession is just that: it is aimed to the ones who aren't using sessions yet (it's still one of the least used vim features from what I hear) and only want the bare minimum without digging into bigger plugins. Moreover if you already use fzf-lua you can just install this on top (as most others use Telescope only instead).
possession.nvim
Posts with mentions or reviews of possession.nvim.
We have used some of these posts to build our list of alternatives
and similar projects. The last one was on 2023-05-10.
-
Do you guys also feel a higher cognitive complexity to grasp basic lua plugin usage ?
Anyway I might add that in possession.nvim I took the approach of adding commands as I also feel that in many cases commands are more discoverable. On the other hand I don't like default keybindings as they often collide with my existing ones, I prefer setting them myself. Taking your example with nvim-possession: your config would look almost the same with commands (e.g. vim.keymap.set('n', 'sl', 'PossessionList')) so there is actually not much added verbosity.
-
is there is a session manager plugin ?
possession.nvim
-
nvim-linefly - Just what the world needs, yet another Lua statusline plugin (I'm sorry)
These are the main characteristics of linefly: * Small size (564 lines of Lua) * Very fast startup (almost as fast as the stock Neovim statusline) * Simple tab support (workspace tabs only, not buffer tabs) * Winbar support (works well in combination with global statusline) * Git branch detection * Git status via Gitsigns * Diagnostic status * vim-obsession and possession.nvim session support * Minimal jank as mode changes or write-status or line number changes; I don't like it when the filename moves one or two characters left or right when there are state changes. Not here. * Direct colorscheme support for these themes: moonfly, nightfly (both my own themes) along with: catppuccin, dracula, edge, embark, everforest, gruvbox,gruvbox-material, kanagawa, nightfox, sonokai and tokyonight. All other themes will use best-guess-fallback colors derived from the theme in effect.
-
nvim-possession: a simple and minimal session manager
Nice plugin! There is already a session manager called possession.nvim though.
-
Is it possible to store the current colorscheme into a session?
I use a session manager known as possession. Possession lets me saves the session data in a json file and allows me to save custom data as well. It also provides hooks to add the custom data. A snippet like this will let me save the colorscheme for every session.
-
Which, in your opinion, is the best session management plugin?
A bit less known than some of the others mentioned here, but I quite like possession.nvim. Pretty simple to use with nice and easy hooks using lua functions (before/after save and before/after load).
-
possession.nvim: flexible & extensible session management
possession.nvim is yet another session management plugin. Main goal was to have more extensibility with a more Lua-friendly API. This could previously be done by storing Vim variables in the session file, but this would be tedious. possession.nvim achieves this by storing session data in JSON and providing user hooks that can store arbitrary data in the file and later use it when loading session.
What are some alternatives?
When comparing nvim-possession and possession.nvim you can also consider the following projects:
ticket.vim - Manges git branch specific vim session files
vim-obsession - obsession.vim: continuously updated session files
nvim-linefly - A simple Lua statusline for Neovim
projectlaunch.nvim - Neovim plugin for launching commands in your projects
nvim-luadev - REPL/debug console for nvim lua plugins
nvim - neovim config
memento.nvim - A NeoVim plugin which remembers where you've been
auto-save.nvim - ๐งถ Automatically save your changes in NeoVim
vim-prosession - Handle vim sessions like a pro
persistence.nvim - ๐พ Simple session management for Neovim
vim-session - Extended session management for Vim (:mksession on steroids)
nvim-possession vs ticket.vim
possession.nvim vs vim-obsession
nvim-possession vs nvim-linefly
possession.nvim vs projectlaunch.nvim
nvim-possession vs nvim-luadev
possession.nvim vs nvim-luadev
nvim-possession vs nvim
possession.nvim vs memento.nvim
nvim-possession vs auto-save.nvim
possession.nvim vs vim-prosession
nvim-possession vs persistence.nvim
possession.nvim vs vim-session