undotree
vim-surround
undotree | vim-surround | |
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35 | 83 | |
3,550 | 13,049 | |
- | - | |
5.8 | 0.0 | |
19 days ago | 11 months ago | |
Vim Script | Vim Script | |
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License | - |
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undotree
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Gitless a simple VCS built on top of Git
What's helped me much more lately is undotree for vim [1]. It basically logs every single time a file is saved. Its much more useful because commits have to be made by humans and they may not do it often (and usually there is an incentive for "clean or working commits"). There have been many times where I went back to copy something from the undotree.
[1]: https://github.com/mbbill/undotree
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Some plugin for tracking and visualizing of changes across multiple buffers? Or switches between buffers?
Hi, I love Vim, and use it for big projects too, with many files. Often I switch between many files, make changes, undo, and get lost in them, trying to find a file that I edited and undoed a few minutes ago. I think, maybe exists some plugin, that will visualize my history of changes, like UndoTree, but across multiple buffers? And/or list of my teleportations between buffers? I can imagine this, also like a tree...
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Opening undotree does not automatically change focus to the buffer
The plug-in could be found here
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Which vim plugins do not have a lua equivalent yet?
undotree
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mini.basics - Common configuration presets for options/mappings/autocommands
undotree: tree like visualization of undo history
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Superpowers but...
Install undo tree and your life turns into a choose your own adventure story.
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Tell HN: Vim users, `:x` is like `:wq` but writes only when changes are made
> I really hate autosave. I like using saving like a checkpoint where i have the ultimate undo button by ditching the unsaved changes.
Although I don't use autosave, I don't think it matters that much with vim because you can always use undotree[0]
0: https://github.com/mbbill/undotree
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Any good reason not to remap "u" to "g-" and "<c-r>" to "g+"?
I finally got around to clear up the vague notions I had about the `g+` and `g-` commands which I knew helped me jump to across branches but was never exactly sure how. With the help of undotree module, it is now crystal clear what the difference was between `u` and `g-` and between `` and `g+` are.
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Just discovered "mbbill/undotree" - I am amazed!!!
Here the link: https://github.com/mbbill/undotree
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Resolving the Great Undo-Redo Quandary
Vim has a plugins for that too. ;)
I use https://github.com/mbbill/undotree but if that's not to your choice there are many others.
vim-surround
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Difftastic, a structural diff tool that understands syntax
I don't know what exactly you mean by pasting around the second selection, but you can paste selections, registers or even files at specific lines with some vim-fu. If it's generic enough you could write a function or even keyboard shortcut if it's very simple.
I have set ",',(,[,{ in visual mode to cut the selection insert the pairs then paste it back as a very hacky solution, but it gets the job done. If you want something more advanced to add or change anything around the selection tpope has solved that with vim-surround[1].
[1]: https://github.com/tpope/vim-surround
- Surround.vim: Delete/change/add parentheses/quotes/XML-tags with ease (2022)
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Macro usage of replace
ysw https://github.com/tpope/vim-surround basically i surround the word with " So basically i wanted to surround the first word in line qoutes and then replace the first occurence of = with : Example:
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Wrapping a range of lines in an html tag?
vim-surround is likely the plugin answer.
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Quick Text Shortcuts?
If you have Tim Pope's vim-surround plugin, you can also add this to your Vimrc:
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How do you manually install plugins
If you don't want to leverage Vim's package feature or you want to put your plugins in some other place, add the folder of the plugin to your :h 'runtimepath'. For example, if you download Tim Pope's vim-surround at ~\Documents\vim-surround, you should add this to your Vim configuration:
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How to select multiple lines which are a 'component' quickly?
I'm using the vim-surround plugin by tPope and I know I can do ysw to surround words with whatever tag i want, I also know about cst (Change surrounding tag). But I'm wondering if there is a quick and easy way to wrap components. Some components might have closing tag and some components might not.
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Is there anything like "vim-surround" built-in?
Is there any similar plugin to https://github.com/tpope/vim-surround?
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ShadowVim embeds Neovim inside Xcode
Vim plugins (without UI) work out of the box. Hello vim-surround, argtextobj.vim and whatnot.
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Vim function to move following word into parentheses?
If you don't insist on staying in insert mode then you can use vim-surround, which is perfect for this: yse
What are some alternatives?
nvim-dap - Debug Adapter Protocol client implementation for Neovim
nvim-autopairs - autopairs for neovim written in lua
gundo.vim - A git mirror of gundo.vim
vim-sandwich - Set of operators and textobjects to search/select/edit sandwiched texts.
vim-mundo - :christmas_tree: Vim undo tree visualizer
Neovim-from-scratch - 📚 A Neovim config designed from scratch to be understandable
nvim-local-fennel - Execute local Fennel Lisp files in Neovim upon startup
tabout.nvim - tabout plugin for neovim
wishlist - A public catalogue of Lua plugins Neovim users would like to see exist
delimitMate - Vim plugin, provides insert mode auto-completion for quotes, parens, brackets, etc.
undo-tree
micro-editor - A modern and intuitive terminal-based text editor