ocaml-lsp | dotfiles | |
---|---|---|
9 | 2 | |
715 | 2 | |
0.7% | - | |
7.7 | 0.0 | |
8 days ago | almost 2 years ago | |
OCaml | Vim Script | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | 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.
ocaml-lsp
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I Wrote an Activitypub Server in OCaml: Lessons Learnt, Weekends Lost
> There is no alternative to Django, for instance.
https://aantron.github.io/dream/, which is new and used by ocaml.org
> No serious IDE, except emacs
and vim, and visual studio, and whatever else supports the LSP protocol via https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml-lsp
> The standard library was so lacking that there is at least an alternative.
While janestreet does have an publish their own stdlib, I personally try to stick to the stdlib whenever possible. Not to knock janestreet. I'm glad they're around and have contributed a bunch.
But overall I agree with you. It's been my favorite language two write in for years now. You can't just reach for off-the-shelf libraries for every little thing. Although the ones that do exist tend to be written halfway decently.
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Merlin: Context sensitive completion for OCaml in Vim and Emacs
Merlin is great, but it's vim plugin leaves a bit to be desired (in particular, it doesn't seem to use any of the modern async apis from vim 8+/neovim). Personally ocaml-lsp (which is still backed by Merlin on the backend) together with neovim's built-in lsp support has been far smoother for me
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The New OCaml Website
Perhaps the README[1] is out of date, but it appears to note that textDocument/implementation is not done? That's a pretty big hole.
[1]: https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml-lsp/#features
- Neovim 0.7 Released
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Toplevel in VSCode?
Short answer: yesWith https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ocamllabs.ocaml-platformand https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml-lspand https://dune.readthedocs.io/en/stable/and utop
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This week in KDE: Fixing a bunch of annoying bugs
This is the one I tried and seems well supported - https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml-lsp . I've only started very lightly playing around with ocaml. It seems to be working fine on vscode and seems to do as expected on nvim too, at least as far as I configured nvim for it.
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opam install problem on Ubuntu 21.04
Typically I would recommend using https://github.com/ocaml/ocaml-lsp which is now the main OCaml language server, and VSCode with the OCaml Platform extension, a combo I know works well.
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In the Interest of Building an SML Language Server
You might also look into ocaml-lsp for inspiration. Not everything will carry over to SML but it might help somtimes.
dotfiles
- Make Vim Look Like BBEdit, Sublime Text, Atom, Visual Studio Code, etc.
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Neovim 0.7 Released
Mouse is off by default. Again, why? I get that it's a terminal editor, but if the technology is there to allow me to select text with my mouse, why do we need act like luddites?
After setting up my .vimrc file with sane defaults and a bit of an attempt to use the editor in earnest, my conclusion is that Vim/Neovim is just a bad editor.
I want more from my editors.
Here's a .vimrc file that attempts to make Vim and compatible editors more like Visual Studio Code, Atom, and Sublime Text:
https://github.com/andrewmcwatters/dotfiles/blob/main/.vimrc
And it's still bad.
What are some alternatives?
neovimcraft - website that makes it easy to find neovim plugins
remote-pbcopy-iterm2 - remote pbcopy for iTerm2
merlin - Context sensitive completion for OCaml in Vim and Emacs
neovim - Vim-fork focused on extensibility and usability
nvim-completion - :zap: An async autocompletion framework for Neovim
which-key.nvim - 💥 Create key bindings that stick. WhichKey is a lua plugin for Neovim 0.5 that displays a popup with possible keybindings of the command you started typing.
neovim-remote - :ok_hand: Support for --remote and friends.
python-lsp-server - Fork of the python-language-server project, maintained by the Spyder IDE team and the community
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
kickstart.nvim - A launch point for your personal nvim configuration