quick.nvim
impatient.nvim
quick.nvim | impatient.nvim | |
---|---|---|
6 | 31 | |
281 | 1,230 | |
- | - | |
8.3 | 5.9 | |
2 months ago | about 1 year ago | |
Lua | Lua | |
- | MIT License |
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quick.nvim
- quick.nvim now uses native LSP!
- Tab for auto completion
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Is your NeoVim still fast after adding plugins ?
I use quick.nvim, which uses coc.nvim + a bunch of other plugins like Treesitter, Telescope, etc. and has a startup time of ~70ms.
- A fast Lua based Neovim configuration that uses coc.nvim for intellisense
- A very fast Lua based Neovim configuration that uses coc.nvim for intellisense
impatient.nvim
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Reduce Neovim startup time with plugins
You could use impatient.nvim or the new vim.loader module if you’re on nightly. Both work really well. I used impatient for a long time and it reduced my startup time by half. I’m using vim.loader now and it reduces it by about the same amount
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Optimizing my startup time
The 20-30 ms promise depends on your hardware. In my case, vanilla Neovim takes about 18 ms to startup, so a realistic good startup time for my config is around 50-60 ms. Lines of code isn’t a great reference either because you could just lazy load a bunch of plugins and have more LoC but still better startup times. What I would recommend is using lazy.nvim or if you wanna stick with packer, then pairing it with impatient.nvim .
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lazy.nvim is amazing!
automatically caches all startup code before :h VimEnter or :h BufReadPre (basically what impatient.nvim does)
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fzf is so powerful when you use it well ! code/files/tags/git history
there is an amazing plugin called impatient.nvim that cache a lot of stuff and make other pluggins go so fast !
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neovim startup optimization
Try installing https://github.com/lewis6991/impatient.nvim first.
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Guide: Structuring Lua plugins
:lua vim.pretty_print(vim.mpack.decode(vim.mpack.encode({some = { thing = false }}))) used by impatient.nvim
- Can neovim config be baked in to make neovim blazingly fast?
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Default mappings override user mappings in Rust ( [[ and ]] mappings )
Did you defined your [[ and ]] mappings in that file or just created it? the after directory runs at the end of your config so you can override this kind of settings. Maybe you are using impatient.nvim? From their README:
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what is your startup time like?
Are you using impatient.nvim? It caches lua modules. My startuptime with 72 plugins (including it) and zero lazy loading is 600ms.
- Why do Neovim users actively seek out lua rewrites?
What are some alternatives?
nvimdots - A well configured and structured Neovim.
trouble.nvim - 🚦 A pretty diagnostics, references, telescope results, quickfix and location list to help you solve all the trouble your code is causing.
nvim-fzf - A Lua API for using fzf in neovim.
barbar.nvim - The neovim tabline plugin.
NvChad - Blazing fast Neovim config providing solid defaults and a beautiful UI, enhancing your neovim experience.
indent-blankline.nvim - Indent guides for Neovim
glow.nvim - A markdown preview directly in your neovim.
vim-startuptime - A plugin for profiling Vim and Neovim startup time.
neovim - Vim-fork focused on extensibility and usability
filetype.nvim - A faster version of filetype.vim
nvim - My own NVIM (>=NVIM v0.10.0-dev-2993+gc81b7849a) lua config