dotfiles
vim-oscyank
dotfiles | vim-oscyank | |
---|---|---|
3 | 23 | |
38 | 574 | |
- | - | |
5.3 | 4.8 | |
2 months ago | 4 months ago | |
Lua | Vim Script | |
- | BSD 2-clause "Simplified" 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.
dotfiles
-
nvim-osc52: copy text from remote SSH sessions with OSC52
The plugin itself is a rewrite in Lua of another plugin of mine, vim-oscyank with a clean-up of the code logic (and it allows me to remove one more Vimscript plugin from my config :p)
- Recommend config repos that I can use to structure my config?
-
I've written a guide to set up a basic init.lua covering Neovim 0.5 new features
You may also be interested in my own single-file init.lua from which the post is derived from.
vim-oscyank
-
how do you copy/paste stuff from/to vim?
I'm usung this plugin and map it to https://github.com/ojroques/vim-oscyank
-
Clipboard: Cut, copy, and paste anything, anywhere, all from the terminal
Yes OSC 52 is very handy for vim over SSH: instead of X11 forwarding - you can just yank text from remote vim into the local clipboard using OSC 52 [1].
Overall it's much quicker - as yanking in vim with X11 forwarding and '+clipboard' sometimes had a delay.
(ps: I think OSC 52 is implemented in xterm and URXVT, but not yet in gnome-terminal)
[1]: https://github.com/ojroques/vim-oscyank
-
Leap.nvim: Neovim’s Answer to the Mouse
> Cut and paste
If your terminal supports it (iterm, kitty, later versions of gnome-terminal and others) this osc52 plugin is really sweet. It even works over ssh.
https://github.com/ojroques/vim-oscyank/
- Ojroques/Vim-oscyank: A Vim plugin to copy text through SSH with OSC52
-
Tmux + SSH + vim, mouse selection not copying to clipboard
Hey! I've had some issues with this as well, I opted for this vim plugin, vim-oscyank, which uses escape characters to inform tmux (and therefore your terminal) of your clipboard contents.
-
nvim-osc52: copy text from remote SSH sessions with OSC52
The plugin itself is a rewrite in Lua of another plugin of mine, vim-oscyank with a clean-up of the code logic (and it allows me to remove one more Vimscript plugin from my config :p)
-
Clipboard integration between tmux, nvim, zsh, x11, across SSH sessions
I just use this [0] vim plugin to copy in vim. For copying from the CLI in ssh I use this app [1]. Both leverage OSC52 escape codes which are pretty widely supported by terminals nowadays.
Need to figure out an equally simple solution for CLI paste support though.
[0] https://github.com/ojroques/vim-oscyank
[1] https://github.com/theimpostor/osc52
- So, is your main editor Vim or Neovim?
-
Copy text in visual mode and paste it on local windows 10 computer
Have you looked into vim-oscyank. It uses an ANSI escape sequence to copy to clipboard, provided your terminal supports it (most modern ones do).
-
Yank over SSH?
Thank you everyone for the help! I spent a few days messing with these solutions. FOR ME: vim-oscyank worked best.
What are some alternatives?
dotfiles - A work in progress. Forever.
nvim-neoclip.lua - Clipboard manager neovim plugin with telescope integration
dotfiles - My dotfiles for Neovim, Kitty terminal, Zsh, and a few other things.
vim-osc52 - Copy text via OSC 52 from Vim.
nvim - 🍨 Soothing pastel theme for (Neo)vim
vim-clipper - Clipper integration for Vim
dotfiles - My dotfiles for Neovim, fish, tmux, and friends, optimized for web development on macOS.
rclip - a tool to copy selected text in tmux copy mode on remote host to local system clipboard
dotfiles - Dotfile configurations for my development environment (under active development)
clipper - ✂️ Clipboard access for local and remote tmux sessions
dotfiles - 🏡 /.dotfiles | Includes configs for neovim, tmux, zsh, alacrity, kitty, and more | Managed by GNU stow
vim9 - An experimental fork of Vim, exploring ways to make Vim script faster and better.