ts-movement
cursorless
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ts-movement | cursorless | |
---|---|---|
4 | 22 | |
55 | 1,063 | |
- | 4.2% | |
3.7 | 9.6 | |
about 2 months ago | 7 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | TypeScript | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | 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.
ts-movement
- ts-movement: Emacs 29+ minor mode for syntax tree navigation using Tree Sitter
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Tree-sitter starter guide
evil-mode users already have options, and there seems to be a new package with general applicability too.
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ts-movement: a package to navigate the tree-sitter syntax tree (supports multiple-cursors)
https://github.com/haritkapadia/ts-movement works for me
cursorless
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Launch HN: Aqua Voice (YC W24) – Voice-driven text editor
What are your opinions on https://www.cursorless.org/ ?
Are you targeting developers?
My understanding was people who are serious about developing via voice use it pretty exclusively.
Like, yeah you need to learn commands, but "are often not worth it" feels like brushing a pretty massive offering under the rug.
Is learning vi / emacs commands not worth it (or shortcuts in another IDE?)
Is there a middle ground?
- Cursorless: Voice Coding at the Speed of Thought
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Cursorless is alien magic from the future – Xe Iaso
actually I just saw that someone is working on a keyboard mode for Cursorless! https://github.com/cursorless-dev/cursorless/issues?q=is%3Ai...
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Best Emacs tools and set ups for RSI…??
See for example: - https://youtu.be/xtOkYdwUves?si=X01vGNVhNRjj7kXh - https://www.cursorless.org/ - https://talonvoice.com/
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Hands-Free Coding (2020)
I would highly recommend checking out https://www.cursorless.org/, an editor for voice built on Talon (what’s being used here by Josh) and a VSCode extension. If for nothing else than to watch the dev live code with it.
- Cursorless: Code editor for voice built on Talon and VSCode
- Control Emacs with voice?
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Nearly 40% of software engineers will only work remotely
Yep. So I've been working for about fifteen years, had it from the start, but it just keep on getting worse. So now have migrated to a no keyboard solution, and am working on a no mouse solution.
My setup, software:
- talon (https://talonvoice.com/), basing my configuration on the standard repo (https://github.com/knausj85/knausj_talon/), with some minor modifications. This is how I navigate my whole computer, and runs the voice recognition and eye tracking. This is how I'm typing this right now. There are also a bunch of other little system changes that you need to make (eg, on macOS, disable double space to type a period), which is documented by the community with varying levels of success.
- cursorless (https://www.cursorless.org/), and then vscode. Before this I used Sublime Text for years and years, but cursorless is too good for coding. I know there are some projects on going to port it to different editors, but I haven't massively looked into it.
- vimium extension for web browsing (works in both chrome and firefox). This makes things like clicking links easier with your voice, without having too use an eye tracker all the time.
And then hardware:
- DPA 4488 microphone -> DAD6001 microdot-XLR converter -> Shure X2U USB XLR interface. ~£800. It's a very expensive microphone, but it's what the developer of talon uses (same brand anyway), and since I'm using this for work I want to remove every obstacle to having my voice recognised correctly and quickly
- Tobii Eye Tracker 5. ~£250. This is basically the only game in town. It works well enough but needs a lot of light. It also needs to be physically mounted to a monitor. In theory this means I don't need to use a mouse, but because I have a 34" ultrawide it doesn't work well on the edges, so I have a specific window size and location configured (say "layout mouse") which I could move apps into if I need to.
- At some point soon I want to replace the X2U with something higher quality and more permanent on my desk. Soon!
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TabFS – a browser extension that mounts the browser tabs as a filesystem
If you're programming, and open to doing it by voice, definitely check out Cursorless: https://www.cursorless.org/
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Numen: Voice Control for Handsfree Computing
It's worth mentioning Talon[0] here, which is a system for offline voice control as well, with great python-based scripting.
Using your computer or programming with it works like a charm, with some interesting and impressive projects like Cursorless[1] coming out as well, based on it.
[1]: https://github.com/cursorless-dev/cursorless
Disclaimer: not affiliated, just a happy occasional user
What are some alternatives?
combobulate - Structured Editing and Navigation in Emacs with Tree-Sitter
cursorless-talon - The cursor never loved you anyway
haskell-ts-mode - Emacs major mode for Haskell tree-sitter support.
nerd-dictation - Simple, hackable offline speech to text - using the VOSK-API.
expand-region.el - Emacs extension to increase selected region by semantic units.
emacs-cursorless - making cursorless & emacs talk to each other?
puni - Structured editing (soft deletion, expression navigating & manipulating) that supports many major modes out of the box.
Vim - :star: Vim for Visual Studio Code
symex.el - An intuitive way to edit Lisp symbolic expressions ("symexes") structurally in Emacs
raycast-script-commands - Personal Scripts for Raycast Script Commands https://github.com/raycast/script-commands
smartparens - Minor mode for Emacs that deals with parens pairs and tries to be smart about it.
vscode-gitlens - Supercharge Git inside VS Code and unlock untapped knowledge within each repository — Visualize code authorship at a glance via Git blame annotations and CodeLens, seamlessly navigate and explore Git repositories, gain valuable insights via rich visualizations and powerful comparison commands, and so much more