ocaml-lsp
which-key.nvim
ocaml-lsp | which-key.nvim | |
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9 | 115 | |
715 | 4,472 | |
0.7% | - | |
7.7 | 6.8 | |
8 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
OCaml | Lua | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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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Perhaps the README[1] is out of date, but it appears to note that textDocument/implementation is not done?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.
which-key.nvim
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Modeless Vim
There is a well known plugin for neovim to do this kind of behavior. You can even create your own hotkeys into that plugin and will help you navigate and memorize different hotkeys for the editor. The plugin is called whichkey, and this is their github https://github.com/folke/which-key.nvim
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Visual Mode Issue + startuptime optimization
The menu most certainly comes from folke/which-key.nvim. Take a look into part of your config which sets it up.
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How to Transform Vim to a Complete IDE?
By default, most of nvim packages have WhichKey plugin which shows popup with available commands. For instance, you press space or g and what for a second:
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My Favorite Vim Oneliners for Text Manipulation
One of the recent innovations in the Vim space that I've appreciated a lot is which-key by folke for Neovim: https://github.com/folke/which-key.nvim
It makes keybindings in vim discoverable, it's quite magical. For example, press g and get a table of all the various commands that follow from there. Press mapleader and get a table of various commands from there, etc.
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LazyVim
>The problem with that is that for some rarely used action one forgets...
Install https://github.com/folke/which-key.nvim and you will always have a popup that will tell you what keys to use next.
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Resources for mastering vim motions
https://github.com/folke/which-key.nvim - it's like a cheat sheet in neovim!
- Is there a way to confine key remapping to particular files (.tex)?
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Set it and forget it plugins?
folke/which-key.nvim will help with you with your key maps.
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Named registers populated by unrecognized content
I recently started actively using which-key plugin that shows the contents of all registers when pressing ".
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Should I learn lua? I am a vs code power user, which prevents me from completely adapting neovim, since I always find something is missing in neovim.
3) I'd recommend using Telescope, more specifically, :Telescope keympas. There's also which-key, which might be more intuitive, but I haven't used it.
What are some alternatives?
neovimcraft - website that makes it easy to find neovim plugins
NvChad - Blazing fast Neovim config providing solid defaults and a beautiful UI, enhancing your neovim experience.
merlin - Context sensitive completion for OCaml in Vim and Emacs
vim-which-key - :tulip: Vim plugin that shows keybindings in popup
nvim-completion - :zap: An async autocompletion framework for Neovim
LunarVim - 🌙 LunarVim is an IDE layer for Neovim. Completely free and community driven.
neovim - Vim-fork focused on extensibility and usability
telescope.nvim - Find, Filter, Preview, Pick. All lua, all the time.
doom-emacs - An Emacs framework for the stubborn martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs]
nvim-tree.lua - A file explorer tree for neovim written in lua
python-lsp-server - Fork of the python-language-server project, maintained by the Spyder IDE team and the community
rest.nvim - A fast Neovim http client written in Lua