persistence.nvim
lsp_lines.nvim
persistence.nvim | lsp_lines.nvim | |
---|---|---|
8 | 6 | |
536 | 115 | |
- | - | |
5.8 | 0.0 | |
2 months ago | almost 2 years ago | |
Lua | Lua | |
Apache License 2.0 | ISC 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.
persistence.nvim
- per project session saving
-
People who migrated from vscode
persistence.nvim for using session management which is useful
-
is there is a session manager plugin ?
i use persistence.nvim plugin, and i map the commands on my dashboard so i can open my last session
-
How do you handle project specific configuration?
I've been using vim sessions for a while now. Sessions can have their own configuration files and that's what I use for projects. For this to be actually convenient you'll need plugin like persistence.nvim to handle the sessions themselves (or make your own workflow).
-
Guide: Structuring Lua plugins
I like the idea of a "config" module. Plugins like persistence and mason.nvim have it, they allow you to set variables without calling the main module.
-
what are the most underrated plugins in your view?
persistence.nvim: Small session manager. I use some of its functions to also manage project local configs. It is because of this plugin I can use language servers the way I want.
-
which session manager for nvim
persistence.nvim * Automatically save active session to a configurable directory * API to load most recent or current session based on cwd * No direct support for a telescope picker but could probably be setup with vim.ui.select()
-
alpha-nvim: lua powered startup screen
yeah, I was planning on shimming this functionality out to another plugin. sessions have little to do with a startup gui imo. i mention in the docs using something like https://github.com/folke/persistence.nvim
lsp_lines.nvim
-
Diagnostics in nvim
The one you say you have now is coming from the lsp_lines plugin. The below version is much more like the default virtual text.
-
`lsp_lines.nvim` configuration
I'm trying to install lsp_lines.nvim and in the documentation it is suggested to disable virtual text with following snippet: -- Disable virtual_text since it's redundant due to lsp_lines. vim.diagnostic.config({ virtual_text = false, }) In the Astro documentation I found a reference to diagnostics so I've created a astronvim/diagnostics.lua file and pasted the contents above.
-
People who migrated from vscode
lsp-lines for error-lens but better.
-
rust diagnostics hides details of the problem
I'm also really liking https://github.com/ErichDonGubler/lsp_lines.nvim
-
Error messages getting out of screen
I started using https://github.com/ErichDonGubler/lsp_lines.nvim to get multiline diagnostics, but I dont have it enabled all the time since it gets really messy. I have a shortcut to enable it when i need it.
- what are the most underrated plugins in your view?
What are some alternatives?
neovim-session-manager - A simple wrapper around :mksession.
mini.nvim - Library of 35+ independent Lua modules improving overall Neovim (version 0.7 and higher) experience with minimal effort
markdown-preview.nvim - markdown preview plugin for (neo)vim
harpoon
persisted.nvim - 💾 Simple session management for Neovim with git branching, autoloading and Telescope support
alpha-nvim - a lua powered greeter like vim-startify / dashboard-nvim
nvim-lightbulb - VSCode 💡 for neovim's built-in LSP.
dirbuf.nvim - A file manager for Neovim which lets you edit your filesystem like you edit text
trouble.nvim - 🚦 A pretty diagnostics, references, telescope results, quickfix and location list to help you solve all the trouble your code is causing.
dial.nvim - enhanced increment/decrement plugin for Neovim.