textadept
coc.nvim
textadept | coc.nvim | |
---|---|---|
19 | 320 | |
587 | 23,968 | |
- | 0.3% | |
8.5 | 9.0 | |
4 days ago | 4 days ago | |
Lua | TypeScript | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
textadept
- TextAdept
-
Harlequin.sh DuckDB IDE for your terminal
- Textadept: https://github.com/orbitalquark/textadept
Or "Geany IDE" on desktop environment (while waiting for lapce.dev to get better), I tend to stay away as much as possible from VS Codium, but everyone else seems to love it and already forgot about Atom, few seems to realise how Microsoft really is.
Maybe the plot twist is that you have to accept in your heart that "writing text on anything, is the real IDE", and transcend to writing on nano!
- Micro – A Modern Alternative to Nano
- Textadept
- Scintilla is a free source code editing component with a permissive license
-
Text adept help
For support try here
- Ask HN: Can you recommend me a fast, light text editor for Windows?
-
Lite: A lightweight text editor written in Lua
Looks interesting. Especially in terms of its customisability, this reminds me a bit of Textadept, another Lua-based editor: https://orbitalquark.github.io/textadept/
-
Sunsetting Atom Text Editor
Textadept has both TUI and GUI, and is Free Software: https://orbitalquark.github.io/textadept/
The way it works is that its creator made a TUI implementation if the GUI library he used for the graphical version, so you have the same menus etc.
-
[Find package] Package which runs Sublime inside a terminal
Textadept -https://orbitalquark.github.io/textadept/ - does this out of the box but I couldn't get on with it.
coc.nvim
-
I can't stand using VSCode so I wrote my own (it wasn't easy)
As well as its own plugins Vim/NeoVim can use VSCode's LSPs, DAPs and extensions either directly or via plugins like CoC[1] and Mason[2].
I would be surprised if emacs couldn't do the same.
1. https://github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim
-
Existing non-lua plugins examples
The most famous TypeScript one probably is coc.nvim
-
ready to use neovim for web development (frontend) - beginners
It is flatly the wrong mindset to think of vim as an IDE. vim is a code editor: get in, make change, get out. Consider vim koans, which are a fun little read. You can throw coc.nvim at Neovim, along with a few other bits to give you a Good Enough setup, but vim isn't and will never be an IDE.
-
Using CoC inlay hints
I just did a fresh reinstall of CoC, on a newer version of Neovim. I'm now seeing something I hadn't seen before, which CoC calls "inlay hints". They look like this:
-
C# lsp configuration with neovim CoC
I'm currently on an old setup (using coc and polyglot) and nvim v0.6.1. I'll be updating to a more modern setup within next year, using the native lsp and building nvim more frequently. But that's not today.
-
Does anyone know some good altermatives for these Vim plugins on Emacs?
coc.nvim
-
LazyVim
There are some plugins which have the best documentations I have ever seen, but you need to read it from the Vim.
Example of coc.nvim: https://github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim/blob/master/doc/coc.txt
-
Resources on learning bash scripting
Actually you can with coc.nvim & coc-sh. So long as shellcheck is also installed and in PATH, it'll integrate with coc/vim just fine.
-
how to set up coc.nvim extension on offline machine?
When you install an extension it runs an npm install or yarn, iirc, which is going to be problematic for you being offline. I was going to say you could copy that ~/.config/coc folder directly to the other machine but yeah, Windows, no idea. You see here https://github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim/wiki/Using-coc-extensions
-
GCC autocompletion
You can try https://github.com/neoclide/coc.nvim, the pre-requisite is to install nodeJS, then to install all the languages LSP. This works for me for Angular, Rust, JavaScript, Vimscript, etc
What are some alternatives?
lite-xl - A lightweight text editor written in Lua
YouCompleteMe - A code-completion engine for Vim
LSP-pyright - Python support for Sublime's LSP plugin provided through microsoft/pyright.
vim-lsp - async language server protocol plugin for vim and neovim
vis - A vi-like editor based on Plan 9's structural regular expressions
nvim-treesitter - Nvim Treesitter configurations and abstraction layer
Notepad3 - Notepad like text editor based on the Scintilla source code. Notepad3 based on code from Notepad2 and MiniPath on code from metapath. Download Notepad3:
nvim-cmp - A completion plugin for neovim coded in Lua.
Geany - A fast and lightweight IDE
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
oni2 - Native, lightweight modal code editor
LunarVim - 🌙 LunarVim is an IDE layer for Neovim. Completely free and community driven.