tree-sitter-norg
lispy
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tree-sitter-norg | lispy | |
---|---|---|
2 | 21 | |
92 | 1,184 | |
- | - | |
3.3 | 0.0 | |
8 days ago | about 2 months ago | |
C | Emacs Lisp | |
MIT License | - |
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tree-sitter-norg
- tree-sitter-norg: A TreeSitter parser for the Neorg File Format
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Tree Sitter and the Complications of Parsing Languages
neorg (which has it's treesitter grammar)
lispy
- Sapling: A highly experimental vi-inspired editor where you edit code, not text
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What are the small reasons to try Emacs?
Some killer features in Emacs, which I would recommend checking out, is imenu and movement by s-expression (functions like forward-sexp). These are built into Emacs and make navigating across or inside blocks of code very easy. I have also seen that lispy, which is usually used for Lisp code also supports Python. Again I can't speak to any specifics about how well these things work for Python devs.
- What packages do I need to for the best elisp editing environment?
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Any way to make lispy format works automatically?
While writing other programming languages with LSP, it formats the buffer once I hit save. Is there any way to make https://github.com/abo-abo/lispy do some equivalent behaviour?
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Let's share your top 3 packages that you can't live without.
Without any order magit, lispy and minions.
- paredit.vim – Paredit Mode: Structured Editing of Lisp S-Expressions
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Emacs/Slime equivalent of some Cider features?
I don't know cider, but...I found lispy mode a revelation in making the easy, easier.
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Why is it hard to get started with elisp in emacs
The level of interactivity in your emacs determines how easy trying emacs-lisp becomes. I suggest checking out https://github.com/abo-abo/lispy, it makes it easy to look up documentation (C-c 1 I believe) and evaluate S-expressions on the fly (keybinding is e). Also C-h f, C-h k, C-h v are always very helpful. Also check out helpful (the package), selectrum, marginalia, prescient, etc.
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Tree Sitter and the Complications of Parsing Languages
Emacs seems to attract quite a lot of people who want structural code editing. We now have * paredit * smartparens * evil-cleverparens * lispy * symex * combobulate (more?)
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The State of Structural Editing in Emacs?
Obviously, we have packages like Paredit and Lispy, recently we got SymEx, but these are all for the Lisp family of languages, where syntactic redundancy is very high because of the homoiconicity.
What are some alternatives?
tree-sitter-org - Org grammar for tree-sitter
smartparens - Minor mode for Emacs that deals with parens pairs and tries to be smart about it.
orgmode - Orgmode clone written in Lua for Neovim 0.9+.
parinfer-rust - A Rust port of parinfer.
combobulate - Structured Editing and Navigation in Emacs with Tree-Sitter
symex.el - An intuitive way to edit Lisp symbolic expressions ("symexes") structurally in Emacs
orgmode - Org Mode parse and generation library for Haskell
emacs-config - My personal Emacs configuration
neorg - Modernity meets insane extensibility. The future of organizing your life in Neovim.
babashka - Native, fast starting Clojure interpreter for scripting
evil-cleverparens - Evil normal-state minor-mode for editing lisp-like languages
objed - Navigate and edit text objects with Emacs. Development on pause.