Python-mode
coc-pyright
Python-mode | coc-pyright | |
---|---|---|
10 | 15 | |
5,440 | 1,253 | |
-0.0% | - | |
5.0 | 8.9 | |
7 months ago | 9 days ago | |
Vim Script | TypeScript | |
GNU Lesser General Public License v3.0 only | MIT 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.
Python-mode
-
NVIM: More complete autocomplete
As for the Vim auto complete plug-in to use. The biggest (and rather quite bloated provider) are coc and youcompleteme. Vim had countless other completion provider plugins over the years, I lost track of which ones are still good to use and which ones should already be superseded by better techs, but one I personally use python-mode, which uses rope and vim-lsp which supports pylsp.
-
Vim - How to Maintain Shell Output?
python-mode plugin works well as an IDE-like solution: https://github.com/python-mode/python-mode
-
Moved from IDE to Terminal + VIM. Need tips for managing it correctly.
If you're happy with a plugin, pymode (https://github.com/python-mode/python-mode) is worth a look. Map running to r (or whatever works for you) makes running easy. End result is IDE-like.
-
IDE Similar to PyCharm for Work
If you want a quick start to building Vim based IDE for Python, I recommend python-mode. It gives you most of the things you're going to need in one plugin, there are often better implementations of some of its features in other more specialised plugins, but if you don't have time to research and learn to integrate a lot of different plugins, it's a great base to start from. Over time as you learn how you prefer to work and found specialised plugins that suits your workflow better, you can disable many of its features and replace them with more specialised plugins.
-
Python Devs who Use Vim, Share Your Expertise!
I also highly recommend python-mode for Python refactoring using python-rope. It supports variable/function/class renaming, extract method/local variable, variable/method inlining, adding/removing/rearranging parameters from method signature, removing unused and duplicate imports, and many other useful code transformations.
-
My problem with vim
However, adding all these things by hand takes time. I only know python so that's what im using vim for, and i tried out pymode, but that's way too many features introduced at once. For this reason I've also avoided using others configurations.
-
Folding annoyance
Eg for python (there are several others) https://github.com/python-mode/python-mode
-
Use Vim as a Python IDE
There is a plugin called python-mode. This adds syntax highlighting and many other features to your vim.
- Vim with Python
-
How to use python (no IDE)?
Update that tool to work with Python. For example, Python-Mode.
coc-pyright
-
How to configure vim like an IDE
Python has several here, pylsp, pyright & a fork of vscode-python
-
How to get inlay hints working with pyright
If you use coc.nvim, the coc-pyright module supports inlay hints: https://github.com/fannheyward/coc-pyright
-
NVIM: More complete autocomplete
I highly recommend coc.nvim with coc-pyright for python support. Works regardless of vim variant (vim/nvim/etc)
-
any way to tell coc-pyright to use mypy for its type checking instead?
Yup! Go here: https://github.com/fannheyward/coc-pyright And search for python.linting.mypyEnabled
- Code Linting
-
Configuring vim for Flask and SQLAlchemy
I think coc-python has been deprecated for a while. You might want to try coc-pyright: https://github.com/fannheyward/coc-pyright
-
Jinja and Django development
And for python dev, you can try & install these coc extension: - https://github.com/fannheyward/coc-pyright - https://github.com/yaegassy/coc-htmldjango
-
What IDE do you use at your job? And what is the primary language you develop in?
VSCode's LSP was the key technology that enabled Vim to get IDE features. I've heard it works well for python.
-
pyee Release 9.0: Type Annotations, New APIs & More!
As a bonus, pyright's baked in vscode support - something it shares with typescript - not only implies a buttery smooth vs code environment, but also leaves the door open for other lsp-friendly editor/IDE plugins. I personally use neovim and coc.nvim, and as it turns out pyright integrates with coc.nvim quite nicely.
-
coc - microsoft python server language high memory usage.
coc-pyright is considered the successor to coc-python.
What are some alternatives?
Jedi-vim - Using the jedi autocompletion library for VIM.
jedi-language-server - A Python language server exclusively for Jedi. If Jedi supports it well, this language server should too.
YouCompleteMe - A code-completion engine for Vim
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
python-lsp-server - Fork of the python-language-server project, maintained by the Spyder IDE team and the community
pyright - Static Type Checker for Python
Suplemon - :lemon: Console (CLI) text editor with multi cursor support. Suplemon replicates Sublime Text like functionality in the terminal. Try it out, give feedback, fork it!
nvim-treesitter - Nvim Treesitter configurations and abstraction layer
vim-slime - A vim plugin to give you some slime. (Emacs)
lite - A lightweight text editor written in Lua