vilpy
symex.el
vilpy | symex.el | |
---|---|---|
2 | 18 | |
12 | 255 | |
- | 1.2% | |
5.5 | 6.2 | |
6 months ago | 18 days ago | |
Emacs Lisp | Emacs Lisp | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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vilpy
- vilpy: vilpy is a vi-like paredit, a fork of lispy with many "extraneous" dependencies stripped
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What modal sexp editing mode should I switch to?
I created vilpy, which is a fork that removes tons of stuff and dependencies from lispy. Note that keybindings are changed as well. It’s a personal project, I don’t usually announce it, but there it is if it fits your use case.
symex.el
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Sapling: A highly experimental vi-inspired editor where you edit code, not text
I also recommend symex[1]. Although it is more “locked-in” to s-expressions than other solutions (which takes some getting used to at first), I find that for me this is exactly what makes movement feel much more intuitive and editing much more precise.
The one thing I don’t like is that symex depends on so many other plugins (especially Evil, which I am trying to swap out with the more lightweight meow), but this will apparently change soon. They are also working towards support for non-Lisp languages via tree-sitter, but I don’t know how well it works.
[1]: https://github.com/drym-org/symex.el
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We've launched Attribution Based Economics
The pilot projects (including Symex.el) are accepting financial contributions and will distribute them to sources of value including contributors and antecedent projects in a process that we all have a say in.
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Tree-sitter starter guide
This is a really useful synopsis. symex has recently had TS support merged in, and apparently includes navigation and structural editing similar to its lisp-like language capabilities. I think it's still early going and I haven't tested, but may be worth a look.
- Learn Lisp the Hard Way
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What modal sexp editing mode should I switch to?
Has anyone used symex.el without evil? I just learned it can be use with vanilla emacs (despite the 2nd word in its tagline). I also learned they have a tree-sitter branch which will expand its powers to many languages.
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Advice on config hacking / yak shaving / bikeshedding
I started out using evil, but now I mostly use Symex. (Structural editing. non-lisps support wip for those sad moments you can't use lisp). For now depends on evil, but could be separated.
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You are invited to the First Congress for Attribution-Based Economics!
The purpose of this congress is to engage in the process of Dialectical Inheritance Attribution, which is a collective process by which we apply agreed-upon standards to the task of appraising and attributing the value of work done in the world. At this initial congress, there are two open source projects on the agenda to be appraised: Symex.el which is an Emacs extension, and Qi, which is a functional DSL on the Racket platform.
- symex.el: An evil way to edit Lisp symbolic expressions ("symexes") as trees in Emacs
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paredit based on treesitter
symex has a branch that’s been working on integrating with tree-sitter.
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Paredit 25 Released
If you want to go nuts with structural editing you may also want to check out symex mode: https://github.com/drym-org/symex.el
It uses paredit (among others) for its low level functionality, but the vim-style modal interface allows you to manipulate the tree structure with single keystrokes in a precise and very expressive way. Keep in mind that you have to actively learn how to use it and it will feel awkward at first (similar to how vim feels for beginners), but I find the editing experience very pleasent and smooth after I got used to it.
Another thing I really like about it is that you can still switch to normal mode and it doesn’t get in your way like other plugins where I had to change my keybindings all the time because the amount of convenient shortcuts is still quite limited in the end. This modal switching to different editing contexts (or languages?) is something I feel should be explored much further.
What are some alternatives?
lispy - Short and sweet LISP editing
lispy - Short and sweet LISP editing
lux - The Lux Programming Language
elisp-tree-sitter - Emacs Lisp bindings for tree-sitter
puni - Structured editing (soft deletion, expression navigating & manipulating) that supports many major modes out of the box.
smartparens - Minor mode for Emacs that deals with parens pairs and tries to be smart about it.
countvajhula
gopcaml-mode
emacs - Mirror of GNU Emacs
typescript.el - TypeScript-support for Emacs
evil-textobj-tree-sitter - Tree-sitter powered textobjects for evil mode in Emacs