uivonim
snap
uivonim | snap | |
---|---|---|
6 | 21 | |
612 | 445 | |
- | - | |
7.2 | 7.5 | |
5 months ago | 4 months ago | |
TypeScript | Fennel | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | The Unlicense |
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.
uivonim
- Pulsar, the best code editor since Atom
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Rebuilding the same project 11 different ways: This week using global state management (with Redux) to help me update the different components with the current application state, but using React to build the UI (not manually building the UI with HTML like in a previous flavor).
I’ve never used Redux, just haven’t cared to look into it for any projects I’ve worked on, but from a quick glance at an example it seems like it could be useful/convenient. Although then again you can write an event dispatcher in like 30 lines of TS, probably with redux-like state with a little extra work, although I’ve never tried, and that could be a bad idea in practice idk.
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Vim is the #4 most loved editor with a 70% rating, according to the 2021 Stackoverflow Developer Survey (Neovim is #1, VSCode #2)
Instead, Nvim provides an RPC protocol that may be implemented by external GUIs. For example, there exists a plugin that embeds Nvim into Firefox when editing textboxes, GUIs that leverage Nvim's multigrid support to support smooth scrolling, translucent popups, minimaps, etc. such as Uivonim, Goneovim and Neovide, and more.
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What's everyone working on this week (31/2021)?
Porting my (forked, so not all my work) text editor uivonim to use Tauri instead of Electron. PR for those curious is here: https://github.com/smolck/uivonim/pull/336
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Microsoft Teams 2.0 will use half the memory, dropping Electron for Edge Webview2
Of course, I'm biased, since I work on a GUI frontend to neovim written in electron (that I forked from a project that already used electron), but I have found that it's not as bad as people make it out to be, or at least that it doesn't have to be that bad. I would like to get rid of it though if I can, maybe by doing the rendering with wgpu-rs and GUI things with egui.
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Shifting GUI colors - seems pretty useless but I kinda like it
I came up with this idea one day as something I could add to uivonim and the result was kinda cool; just thought I'd clean it up a bit and share. Not sure if I'll ever end up adding this for-real, but it's at least a little fun to play with ;)
snap
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Existing non-lua plugins examples
https://github.com/camspiers/snap is written in fennel which compiles to lua.
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Should Neovim now release a standard official configuration so that people who want an editor that just works out of the box get onboarded easily ?
Fuzzy finders (telescope, or snap for the hipsters)
- Some constructive criticism for the hard working plugin maintainers of the Neovim ecosystem
- Telescope too slow for large directories?
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Fuzzy finder plugins
I have gone through many plugins for finding files and live grep. Last time I switched from https://github.com/nvim-telescope/telescope.nvim to https://github.com/camspiers/snap. I liked, that is snap is perceivably faster. My main grudge against snap is that I can't manage to use lsp as a source producer. So I am looking for a new plugin.
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Dash.nvim v0.8.0 now supports Telescope, fzf-lua, and Snap fuzzy finders!
It's been a long road to get here, and required refactoring, like, 95% of the original code, but I'm proud to announce that I've just release Dash.nvim v0.8.0, now supporting Telescope, fzf-lua, and Snap!
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What are the popular fuzzy finders besides Telescope?
Does it support bat previews instead of native? All I could find was this comment in a closed PR.
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Vim is the #4 most loved editor with a 70% rating, according to the 2021 Stackoverflow Developer Survey (Neovim is #1, VSCode #2)
Lua plugins. If you don't want to write lua, that's fine, but that's something plugin authors may wish to do... and they do! They can write more complex and performant plugins more easily. (e.g. snap with user-customizable async producer/consumer API, telescope.nvim, lightspeed.nvim, LSP plugins, ...)
- Updates: Snap: A non-blocking finder system for neovim >0.5
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What are your favorite Neovim plugins exclusive to 0.5?
I recommend this: https://github.com/camspiers/snap
What are some alternatives?
tauri - Build smaller, faster, and more secure desktop applications with a web frontend.
telescope.nvim - Find, Filter, Preview, Pick. All lua, all the time.
neovim - Vim-fork focused on extensibility and usability
fzf.vim - fzf :heart: vim
egui - egui: an easy-to-use immediate mode GUI in Rust that runs on both web and native
nvim-terminal.lua - A high performance filetype mode for Neovim which leverages conceal and highlights your buffer with the correct color codes.
firenvim - Embed Neovim in Chrome, Firefox & others.
LuaSnip - Snippet Engine for Neovim written in Lua.
gtk4-rs - Rust bindings of GTK 4
nvim-peekup - 👀 dynamically interact with vim registers
cef - Chromium Embedded Framework (CEF). A simple framework for embedding Chromium-based browsers in other applications.
telescope-fzf-native.nvim - FZF sorter for telescope written in c