telescope-project.nvim
projectile
Our great sponsors
telescope-project.nvim | projectile | |
---|---|---|
19 | 31 | |
555 | 3,920 | |
4.1% | - | |
3.0 | 7.6 | |
4 days ago | 19 days ago | |
Lua | Emacs Lisp | |
MIT License | 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.
telescope-project.nvim
- [Neovim] Quel directeur de session pour NVIM
-
Directories not showing up in "recent projects."
Projects are handle by the telescope-project plugin (https://github.com/nvim-telescope/telescope-project.nvim) Does is change when you open folder by its name ? With “lvim .” ? With just “lvim” ?
-
How to manage projects efficiently in neovim using telescope
I found this plugin for telescope that does all of the above, except that it requires a redundant step where even though I'm inside a project, I still have to select the project before I can search / grep inside. Basically, I want to create a mapping that allows me to search inside the project without having to always select the project that I am in (it should be able to detect that the file from which I am searching belongs to such-and-such project and so can instantly search from within that project).
-
olddirs.nvim: oldfiles, but for directories
telescope-project.nvim
Sharing a lightweight plugin I wrote yesterday which provides some functions for accessing previously used current working directories. I know that this is similar to some other "workspace" / "project" plugins which already exist, so I've pasted the motivation section from the README. >I work in a large monorepo and change my working directory depending on what part of the codebase I'm looking at to give my LSP (gopls) a chance and to improve the usefulness of fuzzy finding files. I want to change the current working directory back to a previously used one without having to configure a "project" or "workspace" beforehand. This requirement is not satisfied (as far as I can tell) by existing similar plugins: > - project.nvim > - telescope-project.nvim > - workspaces.nvim. > - neovim-session-manager > olddirs.nvim is very lightweight and doesn't provide any niceties (out of the box) like some of the above plugins, it's literally just :oldfiles for directories. > \ I say "out of the box" since some features like the searching or browsing of files inside a previous directory can be implemented by adding actions to the olddirs.nvim Telescope picker.
- Switching between projects
-
My first plugin: ProjectMgr - lets you quickly switch between projects and define custom startup commands for each.
This seems to be a https://github.com/nvim-telescope/telescope-project.nvim
-
which session manager for nvim
Few months ago I tried https://github.com/nvim-telescope/telescope-project.nvim but it does not restore windows layout (seem to only cd into project dir). Are there any other session managers that support features listed above?
-
A pragmatic approach to migrating from VSCode to Neovim
Anyhow, I started clearing the last requirements standing by installing telescope-project.nvim and todo-comments.nvim. They were a convenient choice, as both extend the already mentioned Telescope plugin. Seamless terminal integration was possibly the feature I was looking for the most. As I hoped, Neovim offers transparent terminal emulation out of the box, making to open a terminal buffer feel like a first class operation.
-
Find Files Across Project
To be fair, there is telescope-project, which almost does what I'm looking for. The only drawback for me is, that I want a command, that I can call with a single keystroke. telescope-project always shows a list of all registered projects and you have to select the first one, which adds friction to the editing-flow.
projectile
-
Fuzzy Finding with Emacs Instead of Fzf
Could you explain more about this setup? I'm not familiar with "projectile". Is this https://github.com/bbatsov/projectile the same thing you're referring to?
Sounds interesting. What I've done recently is open my vim in the folder that contains all the organization's repos (the ones I've cloned) and just run ripgrep inside vim to find examples or references to whatever I've seeking. Seems performant enough even without doing anything except letting ripgrep ignore git-ignored stuff (default behavior of ripgrep).
-
Emacs: Projectile - Multiple Projects
Sure. It sounds like it's working well enough. Here's a Github issue that may be of interest to you. Apparently you can get this behavior if there's a project marker file at a higher level.
-
Project-global building/running/etc
With projectile you can define custom "run", "compile", "test" commands per project. Also there are pre-defined commands for many known project types.
-
Two projects side by side?
Thanks for your detailed explanation, but no that is no that is not the question. This is projectile: https://github.com/bbatsov/projectile
-
Multi project management - perspective, persp-mode, tab-bar-mode, or...?
I am currently trying with perspective rather than persp-mode, as it segregates the buffer list as I like (#1 above). I've got projectile with persp-projectile, and that seems to give me what I need for project navigation (#2 probably, still not 100%). I get some help in my mode line for project focus (#3, partially).
- Projectile 2.7 has been released
- Projectile 2.7 is out!
- Release Projectile 2.6
- Projectile 2.6
- Projectile 2.6 released!
What are some alternatives?
neovim-session-manager - A simple wrapper around :mksession.
project.nvim - The superior project management solution for neovim.
treemacs
vscode-project-manager - Project Manager Extension for Visual Studio Code
emacs-inspector - Inspection tool for Emacs Lisp objects.
ohmyzsh - 🙃 A delightful community-driven (with 2,300+ contributors) framework for managing your zsh configuration. Includes 300+ optional plugins (rails, git, macOS, hub, docker, homebrew, node, php, python, etc), 140+ themes to spice up your morning, and an auto-update tool so that makes it easy to keep up with the latest updates from the community.
hydra - make Emacs bindings that stick around
nnn - n³ The unorthodox terminal file manager
vim-session - Extended session management for Vim (:mksession on steroids)
perspective-el - Perspectives for Emacs.