telescope-github.nvim
diagnostic-languageserver
telescope-github.nvim | diagnostic-languageserver | |
---|---|---|
3 | 16 | |
214 | 406 | |
1.4% | - | |
0.0 | 1.6 | |
5 months ago | 3 months ago | |
Lua | TypeScript | |
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.
telescope-github.nvim
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Interactive GitHub notifications in Telescope + your statusline
Why are you not (or are you) reusing parts of telescope github ? Would be nice to explain differences (in goals) abit or offering a way to reply to the issue thread etc.
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Which plugins or functionality do you think is missing from nvim for you personally?
there is a telescope plugin and another plugin in lua for it: https://github.com/nvim-telescope/telescope-github.nvim
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nvim LSP and Typescript, ESLint and Prettier
There are already some plugins out there that show how much you can do (like nvim-telescope/telescope-github.nvim).
diagnostic-languageserver
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Vim - Using clippy as a linter
I'm not using the rust-analyzer plugin actually. I'm using the system installed rust-analyzer and diagnostic-language-server which integrates it with vim. Is there a flag or something to make rust-analyzer return clippy results as well?
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diagnosticls-configs-nvim - pre-defined linter and formatter configs for diagnostic-languageserver
For those who use diagnostic-languageserver, this plugin provides a list of pre-defined configurations for you to use without the hassle to figure out the config on your own. Making it easier to integrate with less code.
- How to determine which linter is currently being used?
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Eslint Lua Solution?
So reading through everyones suggestions it seems like diagnosticls is the way to go. Looks like this is the official neovim solution https://github.com/iamcco/diagnostic-languageserver formerly https://github.com/nvim-lua/diagnostic-nvim
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Config to edit bash scripts with fancy LSP features, linting and formatting
Does anybody have such? Maybe you could share your experience? I use coc.nvim. My eyes fell on these 3 tools. The first one is language server and it has coc extensions coc-sh. But others are not so I am not sure which vim plugin should I use to hook them up: besides diagnostic-languageserver there are syntastic and neomake - bash-language-server - shellcheck - shfmt
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Neovim LSP and typescript
>https://github.com/iamcco/diagnostic-languageserver
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TypeScript: ESLint code actions and (experimental) diagnostics / formatting
I also added 2 experimental features designed to reduce the amount of boilerplate required to get a functional TypeScript development environment. diagnostic-languageserver and efm-langserver are powerful, but they can be tough to set up for new users, so I wanted to implement low-config, out-of-the-box alternatives for formatting and linting:
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Losing my mind with formatting
I’ve personally never gotten efm to work at all, and I never figured out why (much like your situation). I use diagnostic-languageserver, which worked like a charm the first time. I’ve heard some users say it’s slower (TypeScript versus Go), but I’ve never had any speed issues.
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Neovim - Why I'm switching to Native LSP over CoC
Aside from that, the biggest difference versus CoC is the ecosystem, which affects setup / tweaking time and code actions. I was able to set up ESLint diagnostics with diagnostic-languageserver, but it doesn't integrate with typescript-language-server at all, and I haven't been able to set up ESLint fixing + Prettier, either, All of that is trivial with CoC.
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LSP and pylama…
Some LSP like diagnostic language server and efm language server do that for you. However, you will need to do some manual setup yourself for pylama to work with them, unfortunately, I don't see either of them have an example for pylama so you will have to write one yourself for those LSP servers.
What are some alternatives?
octo.nvim - Edit and review GitHub issues and pull requests from the comfort of your favorite editor
null-ls.nvim - Use Neovim as a language server to inject LSP diagnostics, code actions, and more via Lua.
chadtree - File manager for Neovim. Better than NERDTree.
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
telescope-project.nvim
efm-langserver - General purpose Language Server
telescope-zf-native.nvim - native telescope bindings to zf for sorting results
coc-spell-checker - A basic spell checker that works well with camelCase code for (Neo)vim
telescope-gradle.nvim - Telescope extension to run gradle tasks
neomake - Asynchronous linting and make framework for Neovim/Vim
cli - GitHub’s official command line tool
syntastic - Syntax checking hacks for vim