vim-mundo
emmet-vim
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vim-mundo | emmet-vim | |
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12 | 30 | |
778 | 6,334 | |
- | - | |
2.3 | 0.0 | |
about 1 month ago | over 2 years ago | |
Vim Script | Vim Script | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | MIT License |
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vim-mundo
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Is there a way to record and view all commands used on the file?
there's also telescope-undo and vim-mundo
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Recommended minimal set of plugins for a great experience
I don't always need it, but when I do I find vim-mundo incredibly helpful. Understanding the vim undotree is hard without a visualization and mundo's ability to search my undo chunks makes it easy to revive some previous change that wasn't committed to version control.
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Undo tree?
Still using mundo here (https://github.com/simnalamburt/vim-mundo)
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How to navigate back and forth through last edits?
You mean undo/redo? that's u and . To view undos visually you can use a plugin like [vim-mundo](https://github.com/simnalamburt/vim-mundo
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Take More Screenshots
I'm glad you found something that works for you, and I don't mean to dissuade you even if I could, but to me that feels like an antipattern if you only use it for typed text.
Consider that with a text editor like Vim, for example, you can "time travel" [0] through your file's edits, or even have undo branches/trees [1][2] available per file. That saves you the trouble of having to transcribe text from screenshots, and also barely uses any storage space.
Plain text is also highly more portable and more likely to be recoverable in case of drive failure or file corruption.
Additionally, or alternatively, you could try any sort of manual versioning system or background automatic backup solution that keeps versions of files as you work on them.
[0]: https://vimtricks.com/p/vimtrick-time-travel-in-vim/
[1]: https://neovim.io/doc/user/undo.html#undo-tree
[2]: https://github.com/simnalamburt/vim-mundo
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What are your must-have vim/nvim extensions?
mundo undo tree
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Time traveling with Vim
It's not just minutes either, you can do seconds with s, hours with h, days with d and get this - "writes" with w. You can also just simply go back to an arbitrary n number of buffer states before; but just like writes, that's hard to keep track of mentally and instead you should probably use a proper plugin for that.
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What do you prefer for NOTE TAKING or similar purposes?
I used to use Typora before I got into Neovim and realised that it wasn't free software either. Now I'm quite satisfied with my current setup, which uses: - aerial.nvim for header outline and navigation - run-code.nvim for running code blocks - vim-mundo for persistent undo history traversal (like Mac's time machine) - Prettier for auto-formatting Markdown as well as code blocks to their respective languages
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Piece of mind for a reddit noob.
Using a plugin like undotree (or Gundo, or Mundo) to visualize the edit history is by far the most practical solution to OP's problem, and I'm shocked you're the only person to suggest it.
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Why is it so hard to see code from 5 minutes ago?
There's a fork called mundo which has an inline diff mode that I'm a big fan of — https://github.com/simnalamburt/vim-mundo
emmet-vim
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newbie, wanna jump from inside one html tag to the inside of another as quickly as possible
If you're going to be doing a lot of HTML, I really love the emmet-vim plugin. In this case, it fills in a little more than you may have wanted ( tags get an automatic href="" attribute), but you can, for instance, put in (li>b)*2 (that is, two tags, each with a inside an
- Wrapping a range of lines in an html tag?
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Using emmet plugin I can´t get a comment
If you're talking about this plugin, you don't need to be in visual mode, just type your abbreviation and press ctrl-y, like this:
- reactjs styled-components auto-completion
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Emmet working in Nvim?
Does anyone have a link to their repository with emmet(https://github.com/mattn/emmet-vim) manually installed?
- What tools you use to write some simple html and css
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Emmet does not seem to work
I installed emmet using packer.nvim. The plugin seemed to be installed correctly without any errors.
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Frustrating beginning with Neovim
I tried emmet-vim, but it's only working in html files
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Help me set up vim for linting and a file tree please and some other stuff
It sounds like vim-emmet would be right up your alley. If you don't use a Vim package manager, install it by git cloneing it into a folder named ~/.vim/pack/plugins/start/ on Unix/macOS or $HOME\vimfiles\pack\plugins\start on Windows (create it beforehand if it doesn't exist), then after you've :EmmetInstalled it into your buffer, you can use the , mapping after the ! to write the Emmet expansion for the HTML boilerplate; Emmet expansion is a very useful but quite complex feature and you can read more on it in [https://docs.emmet.io/](Emmet's documentation).
- Is there an any way to use emmet completion (e.g. df -> display: flex) inside of styled-components in tsx files in nvim?
What are some alternatives?
undotree - The undo history visualizer for VIM
nvim-lspconfig - Quickstart configs for Nvim LSP
undo-tree
emmet-ls - Emmet support based on LSP.
gundo.vim - A git mirror of gundo.vim
vim-lsp - async language server protocol plugin for vim and neovim
gruvbox - Retro groove color scheme for Vim - community maintained edition
vim-react-snippets - Useful snippets for developing in React (Javascript and Typescript)
riscv-v-spec - Working draft of the proposed RISC-V V vector extension
vim-react-snippets - :scissors: React code snippets for vim
StyleCopAnalyzers - An implementation of StyleCop rules using the .NET Compiler Platform
ultisnips - UltiSnips - The ultimate snippet solution for Vim. Send pull requests to SirVer/ultisnips!