vim-medieval
slides
vim-medieval | slides | |
---|---|---|
4 | 19 | |
105 | 9,160 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 6.7 | |
almost 2 years ago | 13 days ago | |
Vim Script | Go | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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vim-medieval
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Week 3 of learning rust - learning resources
Most of the notes about the language are in an interactive readme with runnable code samples. It can be ran in 2 ways: - using nvim to evaluate code snippets inline using neovim with the mdeval plugin. Using FeMaco creates an editing floating window with rust-tools LSP attached and Treesitter attached. - using slides, an interactive terminal presentation tool
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Tried to use vim as a REST client. What do I miss?
I agree this is a convenient approach! I use vim-medieval, which allows to run a code block and output to another code block, and your workflow fits very well with that plugin!
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How to execute a piece of code in a markdown file
I guess someone else already sort of answered that. I.e., no, there are ways to do this without a plugin. But if you are not afraid of installing a plugin, then I find vim-medieval is a good solution here.
- vim-medieval: Evaluate Markdown code blocks in Vim
slides
- Which software do you use to create presentations using Vim that is superior to existing ones?
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[CppSerbia Meetup] C++ Customisation Points
Combination of: - http://maaslalani.com/slides/ - for slides - figlet/toilet/cowsay/lolcat - for generating titles and ascii art - https://github.com/lewish/asciiflow - for charts and diagrams
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🎥 Neovim 0.9.0 - New Features
For those that are curious, I was using the `slides` CLI app to render the presentation via markdown https://github.com/maaslalani/slides
- Slides in Your Terminal
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Marp: Markdown Presentation Ecosystem
This is pretty neat!
I have playing around with using slides^1 before for doing small demos with my team, but I find that outside of highly technical geeks most people don't want to look at presentations in plain text in a terminal window. I like that this lets you create more graphical slides still using markdown + your favorite editor.
[1]: https://maaslalani.com/slides/
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Week 3 of learning rust - learning resources
Most of the notes about the language are in an interactive readme with runnable code samples. It can be ran in 2 ways: - using nvim to evaluate code snippets inline using neovim with the mdeval plugin. Using FeMaco creates an editing floating window with rust-tools LSP attached and Treesitter attached. - using slides, an interactive terminal presentation tool
- Explaining Code Using ASCII Art
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Draw: a simple drawing tool in your terminal
For presentations definitely check out another project of mine: https://github.com/maaslalani/slides
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Do you guys know any flashcard apps that works in tty?
You could also use a presentation type tool (like tpp or slides) to practice around with?
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Command line tool to view list of files in a slides/presentation format?
https://github.com/maaslalani/slides came close but it only accepts one file, and the slides are split by --- inside of that file
What are some alternatives?
nvim-snippy - Snippet plugin for Neovim written in Lua
lookatme - An interactive, terminal-based markdown presenter
rest.nvim - A fast Neovim http client written in Lua
mdp - A command-line based markdown presentation tool.
bullets.vim - 🔫 Bullets.vim is a Vim/NeoVim plugin for automated bullet lists.
patat - Terminal-based presentations using Pandoc
vim-rest-console - A REST console for Vim.
org-tree-slide - A presentation tool for org-mode based on the visibility of outline trees
noboilerplate - Code for my talks on the No Boilerplate channel
slidev - Presentation Slides for Developers
rust-exercises - Learning rust in an interactive way with nvim
wtf-tui - Text-based UI tool for configuring the WTF terminal dashboard