tangerine.nvim
Lua
tangerine.nvim | Lua | |
---|---|---|
13 | 118 | |
187 | 7,996 | |
- | 1.3% | |
7.5 | 8.5 | |
6 days ago | 16 days ago | |
Fennel | C | |
MIT License | 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.
tangerine.nvim
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Configuring Neovim with Fennel
local function bootstrap(url, ref) local name = url:gsub(".*/", "") local path = vim.fn.stdpath [[data]] .. "/lazy/" .. name if vim.fn.isdirectory(path) == 0 then print(name .. ": installing in data dir...") vim.fn.system { "git", "clone", url, path } if ref then vim.fn.system { "git", "-C", path, "checkout", ref } end vim.cmd [[redraw]] print(name .. ": finished installing") end vim.opt.runtimepath:prepend(path) end bootstrap("https://github.com/udayvir-singh/tangerine.nvim") -- Optional and only needed if you also want the macros bootstrap("https://github.com/udayvir-singh/hibiscus.nvim") require 'tangerine'.setup { target = vim.fn.stdpath [[data]] .. "/tangerine", -- compile files in &rtp rtpdirs = { "ftplugin", }, compiler = { -- disable popup showing compiled files verbose = false, -- compile every time changes are made to fennel files or on entering vim hooks = { "onsave", "oninit" } }, }
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Setting Up Neovim with Fennel
local function bootstrap (name, url, path) if vim.fn.isdirectory(path) == 0 then print(name .. ": installing in data dir...") vim.fn.system {"git", "clone", "--depth", "1", url, path} vim.cmd [[redraw]] print(name .. ": finished installing") end end bootstrap ( "tangerine.nvim", "https://github.com/udayvir-singh/tangerine.nvim", vim.fn.stdpath "data" .. "/site/pack/packer/start/tangerine.nvim" ) bootstrap ( "hibiscus.nvim", "https://github.com/udayvir-singh/hibiscus.nvim", vim.fn.stdpath "data" .. "/site/pack/packer/start/hibiscus.nvim" ) require'tangerine'.setup{ compiler = { verbose = false, hooks = { "onsave", "oninit" } } }
- Researching Lispy Neovim
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Swapping to Fennel
I can recommend using Fennel with Tangerine (integration) and Hibiscus (macros). My config here for inspiration.
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Whenever I'm looking for plugins these days [OC]
You just need a fennel-to-lua transpiler like tangerine.nvim and you're set.
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Vim 9 has been released
You can use fennel in neovim with https://github.com/Olical/aniseed or https://github.com/udayvir-singh/tangerine.nvim :)
- Nvim config in fennel?
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Plugin: forem.nvim (integration with dev.to)
I'm not using conjure, actually. I'm using tangerine, it has a command to evaluate fennel code too.
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Configurando Neovim com Fennel
local function bootstrap (name, url, path) if vim.fn.isdirectory(path) == 0 then print(name .. ": installing in data dir...") vim.fn.system {"git", "clone", "--depth", "1", url, path} vim.cmd [[redraw]] print(name .. ": finished installing") end end bootstrap ( "tangerine.nvim", "https://github.com/udayvir-singh/tangerine.nvim", vim.fn.stdpath "data" .. "/site/pack/packer/start/tangerine.nvim" ) bootstrap ( "hibiscus.nvim", "https://github.com/udayvir-singh/hibiscus.nvim", vim.fn.stdpath "data" .. "/site/pack/packer/start/hibiscus.nvim" ) require'tangerine'.setup{ compiler = { verbose = false, hooks = { "onsave", "oninit" } } }
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One more nvim config with fennel, I am glad I moved (from vimscript)
There is also https://github.com/udayvir-singh/tangerine.nvim As I understand it it’s a more lightweight more neovim focused fennel to lua transpiler which would act as a replacement for aniseed.
Lua
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5-Step Approach: ProjectSveltos Event Framework for Kubernetes Deployment with Cilium Gateway API
The EventSource uses the Lua language to search for any services with ports set to 80 or 443 in the ‘argocd’ namespace. More examples can be found here.
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Building a Wordle Clone with Lua! 🕹
If you're new to the 12 in 24 series, I'm learning and building projects with a new programming language every month - this month, it's the Lua scripting language. You can find source code for the projects I build in the official GitHub repository (check it out, this week's folder contains code for both this and two other bonus projects!).
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Gearing up for Lua
This month, we're talking about Lua. It's not always a first choice when it comes to programming, but I think there's a lot to enjoy about this little language. Heck, I'm a big game development fan myself - I would look into it even if that was the only reason to.
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Pluto, a Modern Lua Dialect
It’s Portuguese. It’s the same in the Lua codebase [1].
[1]: https://github.com/lua/lua
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Fluent Bit with ECS: Configuration Tips and Tricks
If we think we need more flexibility for processing records, we can write our own embedded filters using Lua language. Lua is a highly efficient programming language used mainly for embedded scripting.
- A Linguagem Lua completa 30 anos!
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The Top 20 Programming Languages and Their Origins
Lua
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Lua C headers, MacOS
➜ ~ brew info lua ==> lua: stable 5.4.6 (bottled) Powerful, lightweight programming language https://www.lua.org/ /opt/homebrew/Cellar/lua/5.4.6 (29 files, 788.7KB) * Poured from bottle using the formulae.brew.sh API on 2023-05-16 at 11:03:06 From: https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/blob/HEAD/Formula/l/lua.rb License: MIT ==> Caveats You may also want luarocks: brew install luarocks ==> Analytics install: 16,599 (30 days), 56,745 (90 days), 139,027 (365 days) install-on-request: 1,763 (30 days), 6,266 (90 days), 21,105 (365 days) build-error: 0 (30 days)
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How do you like code documentation inline in the source code vs. as separate guides, or how would you do it?
I think Lua is a good example of doing documentation well. The source code is commented only as much as needed, mainly with brief comments about things that might not be obvious and a small number of longer explanations of how the architecture works (mainly relevant to developers). It also has a super nice feature that's surprisingly rare: each file has a very short line at the top that describes what the file is, so you don't have to guess based on the filename alone. The API is documented in a single HTML file on the website that has both the high level descriptions of the language and architecture, as well as documentation for each public-facing function. The docs are maintained by hand, but the API is mostly stable, so the docs don't need to change very often.
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Total Noob With a Question.
This is using the Lua language and the Solar2d game framework
What are some alternatives?
hotpot.nvim - :stew: Carl Weathers #1 Neovim Plugin.
julia - The Julia Programming Language
aniseed - Neovim configuration and plugins in Fennel (Lisp compiled to Lua)
assemblyscript - A TypeScript-like language for WebAssembly.
nvim-moonwalk - Use any language that compiles to Lua in your Neovim configuration
NvChad - Blazing fast Neovim config providing solid defaults and a beautiful UI, enhancing your neovim experience.
nvim.conf - datwaft's neovim configuration
lua-nginx-module - Embed the Power of Lua into NGINX HTTP servers
nvim-tetris - Bringing emacs' greatest feature to neovim - Tetris!
kotlin-script-examples - Examples of Kotlin Scripts and usages of the Kotlin Scripting API
zest.nvim - macros to configure neovim in fennel
mal - mal - Make a Lisp