oni2
LunarVim
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oni2 | LunarVim | |
---|---|---|
42 | 272 | |
7,735 | 17,463 | |
0.0% | 2.0% | |
0.0 | 7.6 | |
over 1 year ago | 10 days ago | |
Reason | Lua | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
oni2
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We Have to Start Over: From Atom to Zed
It was onivim2. Iirc it was a one-man show, and stopped when funding dried up. I also hoped to see a a lot from it. Maybe the dev took too much work on his plate, with an unproven language with limited libraries?
https://github.com/onivim/oni2
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How VSCode made bracket pair colorization 10,000x faster
It's unfortunate that oni2 stopped development.
It had the promise of all the benefits of VS Code, but performance of a native app.
https://v2.onivim.io
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Reflections from 12 years of vim (ramble)
Yeah, https://github.com/onivim/oni2/issues/3811
- Onivim – The retro-futuristic modal editor
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VSCode-Neovim: Use embedded Neovim in VSCode without emulation
Onivim development has stopped, it is now abandonware: https://github.com/onivim/oni2/issues/3811#issuecomment-9103...
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VSCode with Neovim
It's MIT licensed now, so anyone could pick it up and continue work on it, but the original authors have basically stopped working on it. This GitHub issue was the last major news update.
- Onivim 2 – “Has the dev stopped?”
- Leap.nvim: Neovim’s Answer to the Mouse
- Neovim 0.8 Released
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HypeScript: Simplified TypeScript's type system in TypeScript's own type system
I never tried CoffeeScript since nobody pays me for it, though I am curious about ReasonML as an alternative, there's a Neovim front-end[0] coded in Reason that compiles natively[1], and supports existing VS Code plugins from the VSCodium plugin repository[2] which I still have yet to look at how the heck they pulled that bit off, but it is pretty interesting.
[0]: https://github.com/onivim/oni2#introduction
[1]: https://github.com/revery-ui/revery
[2]: https://open-vsx.org/
LunarVim
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Every Neovim, Every Config, All At Once
LunarVim
- LunarVIM: An IDE Layer for Neovim
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Tools to achieve a 10x developer workflow on Windows
I would suggest to start getting into vim by first trying out popular vim keybinding plugins available on your favorite code editor and get used to those first. Then, if you want to dive deeper into the power of Neovim, try out popular configs like LazyVim, LunarVim, NvChad... Taking Neovim from a mere text editor to a full-featured IDE with features like intellisense, debugging, testing, etc... on your own takes quite a lot of work and configuration.
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Helix 23.10 Highlights
I used Helix for a while due to its support for LSP out-of-the-box, which my Vim config at the time couldn't live up to. I switched back to NeoVim after finding LunarVim[1] which had everything I was trying to get setup in my own config.
[1] https://www.lunarvim.org/
- How to Transform Vim to a Complete IDE?
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Mastering Emacs
I'll admit I didn't look into it, but Helix sounds like something like LunarVim (https://www.lunarvim.org/)
Personally I much prefer that the editor NOT ship with something like that by default, especially when it's so easy to set up. I have several different vim config I use, including a pretty bare-bones one for headless systems, and I much prefer the ability to customize something very specifically.
Build tools that can compose together, rather than a single do-it-all tool. That is the power of the low level editors vs IDE's.
- No inline errors in Python unless I add and delete a line
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LazyVim
I can't comment on any implementation details, but at least with LunarVim (which I use for daily coding), a slowdown when interacting with LSP is very noticeable. Some others have attested to this on a GitHub issue.
I'm not doubting your experiences with the lack of a slowdown, but there is truth that others do experience it. That might be more of a problem with LunarVim itself rather than Vim, but how likely am I (as someone who would like to avoid what he calls "config hell") or other newcomers to avoid whatever pitfalls there are, if a distribution designed for ease of use by people who know better fall into them?
https://github.com/LunarVim/LunarVim/discussions/3359
- Should Neovim now release a standard official configuration so that people who want an editor that just works out of the box get onboarded easily ?
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neovim config
Anyways, although i have not used them, LazyVim and LunarVim comes highly recommended. You can try these and see what suits you .
What are some alternatives?
vscode-neovim - Vim mode for VSCode, powered by Neovim
AstroNvim - AstroNvim is an aesthetic and feature-rich neovim config that is extensible and easy to use with a great set of plugins
NvChad - Blazing fast Neovim config providing solid defaults and a beautiful UI, enhancing your neovim experience.
SpaceVim - A community-driven modular vim/neovim distribution - The ultimate vimrc
my-lunarvim-config - My config for LunarVim
NvChad - An attempt to make neovim cli as functional as an IDE while being very beautiful , blazing fast. [Moved to: https://github.com/NvChad/NvChad]
openvsx - An open-source registry for VS Code extensions
doom-nvim - A Neovim configuration for the advanced martian hacker [Moved to: https://github.com/doom-neovim/doom-nvim]
Neovim-from-scratch - 📚 A Neovim config designed from scratch to be understandable
helix - A post-modern modal text editor.
LazyVim - Neovim config for the lazy