plotinus
vertico
plotinus | vertico | |
---|---|---|
9 | 61 | |
1,014 | 1,361 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 8.7 | |
almost 3 years ago | 11 days ago | |
Vala | Emacs Lisp | |
- | 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.
plotinus
- ITT we post apps that need a GTK update to Gnome 40+ so people with skills can see which apps need design updates!
- Command Palettes: How Typing Commands Became the Norm Again
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Plotinus: A searchable command palette in every modern GTK+ application
This code seems to be pretty hacky, it works by injecting a dynamic library into the program and then looping on a timeout to rescan every window and attach a key handler: https://github.com/p-e-w/plotinus/blob/master/src/Keybinder....
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Hacker News top posts: May 22, 2021
Plotinus: A searchable command palette in every modern GTK+ application\ (10 comments)
- What are your thoughts on having the application menu on the titlebar?
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Global Menu
Sublime Text is actually a good example showing that the menubar and the command palette are two unrelated things. Sublime Text implements its own command palette, which has nothing to do with the global menu on macOS. A lot of apps do the exact same thing. I don't know why people insist on tying these two features together. You can even get menubar-less GTK apps a command palette with the GTK module Plotinus, without ever having to see a menubar.
vertico
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Minibuffer faces for highlighting file names in a project while de-emphasizing long directory paths?
It would be great if you add your snippet to the Vertico wiki. Such tweaks can be quite instructive for others who want to achieve the same or similar effects for other completion commands.
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Magit-branch-checkout list order
If you want completion to be sorted by your "most recent" I suggest you have a look at completion libraries. One example is vertico; when you enable savehist mode, the variable magit-revision-history, containing the branches you visited is persisted between sessions and vertico use that offer completions by most-recently-used, by default.
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Input completion in emacs
I think vertico is best alternative recently, really fast on Linux, macOS and Windows.
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[Emacs Git] Add :vc keyword to use-package
(use-package modus-themes :vc (:url "https://gitlab.com/protesilaos/modus-themes" :branch "main")) (use-package vertico :vc (:url "https://github.com/minad/vertico" :rev :newest :lisp-dir "extensions/"))
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Returning emacs user - what packages are common now?
An example relevant to your list would be some changes many people are taking with their completion framework - using package that leverage core emacs functionality rather than replacing it with a complete package that 'overrides' it. Consult, vertico, orderless and associate packages come to mind here. If you do a bit of a search you'll find plenty of info. Here is a video from Prot on the subject, but there are many others as well. I think Prot actually went on to write his own completion system to overlay native emacs functionality as well.
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Best emacs configs for Javascript and/or users who don't like to memorize keybindings?
Next you "only" have to remember (elisp) function names. "Completion UIs" like ivy/counsel, icomplete, helm or vertico/consult, give you a nice auto completion list on M-x (choose the one of them, you like the most). Some of those Completion UIs will display existing keybindings and a short documentation for commands, near the auto complete candidates. So you will start to remember more keybindings without "learning sessions", just because invoking functions via keybindings is much faster (more convenient).
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Why does elpaca make emacs startup so much faster?
Wow, interesting that my response is getting down voted. It seems not enough that I give away my work for free. Nevertheless I appreciate support from the community, as other Emacs package developers. The support is actually helpful. To clarify, publishing my configuration would translate into quite a bit of work, requiring separation of private and public bits.
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How to combine rtags and vertico
I thought that lsp and rtags were different tools to do different things. Regarding lsp, I configured lsp-mode in my init file indeed! Currently I'm using Vertico (plus recommended sub-packages at github repository) and lsp-mode.
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Call for new package volunteers
Hey! There has already been a horizontico.el. ;)
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How to Make Emacs Look Cooler with Simple Customization
FYI, selectrum is getting deprecated in favor of vertico. https://github.com/minad/vertico/issues/237
What are some alternatives?
clamtk - An easy to use, light-weight, on-demand virus scanner for Linux systems
helm - Emacs incremental completion and selection narrowing framework
plasma-hud - Provides a way to run menubar commands in KDE Plasma through rofi, much like the Unity 7 Heads-Up Display (HUD).
selectrum - 🔔 Better solution for incremental narrowing in Emacs.
Spedread - GTK speed reading software: Read like a speedrunner!
swiper - Ivy - a generic completion frontend for Emacs, Swiper - isearch with an overview, and more. Oh, man!
Keypirinha-PackageControl - Provides commands to install/update/remove Keypirinha Packages
icomplete-vertical - Global Emacs minor mode to display icomplete candidates vertically
gnome-pomodoro - A time management utility for GNOME based on the pomodoro technique!
corfu - :desert_island: corfu.el - COmpletion in Region FUnction
snapshot-explorer - A GTK-based application for browsing ZFS snapshots using the system file manager (e.g. Nautilus on GNOME) and restoring files from them.
consult - :mag: consult.el - Consulting completing-read