vim-ada
ctags
Our great sponsors
vim-ada | ctags | |
---|---|---|
7 | 33 | |
26 | 6,292 | |
- | 1.9% | |
0.0 | 9.7 | |
over 1 year ago | 6 days ago | |
Vim Script | C | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
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.
vim-ada
-
The Ada ecosystem?
In terms of bootstrapping your environment and getting started, I'd recommend looking at Vim-Ada and Awesome Ada. I also tried to write up some practical advice from my experience, which might be helpful.
- Ada on any ARM Cortex-M device, in just a couple minutes
-
How do you quickly find Ada documentation?
Vim-Ada has links to a built user-contributed docset to use.
-
Stdlib reference?
There's also instructions about how to install a Zeal docset for Ada in the vim-ada instructions.
-
Vim-Ada version 12.0 released
This version brings a couple (literally) new plugins (EasyMotion, QuickUI), one removed (Vim-Header) and one theme replaced (Gruvbox with Gruvbox8). For more detailed information about the changes, please look at the release page: https://github.com/thindil/vim-ada/releases/tag/v12.0
-
Favorite IDE?
Due to often work with multi-language projects I use NeoVim with many plugins. I even created the project to easily configure Vim/NeoVim on GitHub. Generally, I looked at GPS and VS Code and put into Vim all these parts which I liked: like support for Ada Language Server, Zeal etc.
-
Looking for a "peaceful" font for Ada programming
You could look at Programming Fonts page, probably the best place to try to find any good font for you. Personally, I use FiraCode mostly due to ligatures. You can look here to see how the Ada code looks with FiraCode.
ctags
- If you owned a nvidia tesla a100, what would you do with it?
-
NeoVim & Rust
I also recommend you https://github.com/preservim/tagbar with https://ctags.io/ installed , it will map definitions (functions, enum, struct etc..) to tags and tagbar plugin allows you to open a split window with the mapped list and navigate through your file, it also enabled more advanced features for quick navigation .
-
How do you figure out which #include a function/variable came from?
grep, Ctags, Cscope, LSP
-
Vim plugin like vscode "go to definition" function
Vim has the tag feature built-in, which allows it to jump to the tags that were found by a tool like universal ctags using :h CTRL-]. See :help tags for more information on this. Fun fact: this is the approach that Vim uses when you use :help!
-
Neovim config from scratch (Part II)
Requirements: You need to have a CTags implementation like universal-ctags installed on your system (on every system where you use vim).
-
How to check the memory usage of my plugins?
Install https://github.com/universal-ctags/ctags
-
Project reading tools
If you are heavy Vim user, you do not need anything else. For just quick browsing, simply use ctags, make sure to use universal ctags (https://ctags.io) not exuberant ctags which are no longer well maintained. Go works out of box.
-
Help me set up vim for linting and a file tree please and some other stuff
Other (built-in) tools for file navigation in Vim include: :h :ls and :h :buffer to navigate in your buffer list (i.e. the files you have loaded); everything listed in [https://vimways.org/2018/death-by-a-thousand-files/](romainl's "Death by a Thousand Files" articles in vimways); using tags by installing universal-ctags to generate the tags then using any of the commands in :h tag to navigate them; setting global marks to files you use often with m[UPPERCASE LETTER] and jumping to them with `[UPPERCASE LETTER]; :h :vimgrep…
-
Ctags and referencing static functions, is it possible?
I have good news for you. Universal Ctags, an Exuberant Ctags fork and essentially its replacement, has fixed this already:
-
Searching files or words using fuzzy finders
Vim has built-in functionality that works pretty similar to what you want. If you have a tags file (for example, using universal ctags), you can hit Ctrl-] (:h Ctrl-]) to jump to the declaration of any function under your cursor. Or, if you don't have a tags file, you can use gd (:h gd) to jump to a local declaration within the open file.
What are some alternatives?
zeal - Offline documentation browser inspired by Dash
lsp-mode - Emacs client/library for the Language Server Protocol
ada_language_server - Server implementing the Microsoft Language Protocol for Ada and SPARK
vscode-intelephense - PHP intellisense for Visual Studio Code
gnatstudio - GNAT Studio is a powerful and lightweight IDE for Ada and SPARK.
lsp - Language Server Protocol (LSP) plugin for Vim9
jc.nvim - Java autocompletion for neovim
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
panelmanager.vim - Panel Manager for Vim
coc.nvim - Nodejs extension host for vim & neovim, load extensions like VSCode and host language servers.
libadalang - Ada semantic analysis library.
vim-gutentags - A Vim plugin that manages your tag files