vim-sensible
ctrlp.vim
Our great sponsors
vim-sensible | ctrlp.vim | |
---|---|---|
27 | 21 | |
5,045 | 5,513 | |
- | 0.5% | |
0.0 | 1.5 | |
about 1 month ago | 2 months ago | |
Vim Script | Vim Script | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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-sensible
-
Obsidian 1.5 Desktop (Public)
That’s a good question. The built in tutorial is actually really good, you can launch it with “vimtutor” on the command line. It doesn’t give you everything, but its instructions and text to try things out on in the editor itself, which I find a good way to learn. It isn’t particularly programming focused either.
For getting used to the motions especially https://vim-adventures.com can be a fun way, in its game format.
For getting started I’d say don’t worry about plugins much, but get https://github.com/tpope/vim-sensible at least so the defaults meant for vi don’t get in the way. The only other thing you might want is a format syntax if your preferred note syntax isn’t highlighted well by default or something. Polyglot can be good to stave that off but really I’d say learn on a really lean config, and get used to using :help or similar. It’s the best way to learn the parts that work everywhere.
-
Share NO-PLUGIN Configs!
it's modified from tpope's https://github.com/tpope/vim-sensible, and https://github.com/mhinz/vim-galore#tips-1.
-
The Vim features that make me a Vim user instead of a Vi user
I didn't realise vim Vs vi purist was a thing.
I'm aware that for a while vim has had some backwards compatibility setting that people recommended turning off to get more modern defaults.
And that Tim Pope had a plugin that took you one step beyond that:
https://github.com/tpope/vim-sensible
> Think of sensible.vim as one step above 'nocompatible' mode: a universal set of defaults that (hopefully) everyone can agree on.
And that neovim took the opportunity to make an updated set of defaults:
https://neovim.io/doc/user/vim_diff.html#nvim-defaults
-
From vscode to vim
tpope/vim-sensible, because the Vim defaults aren't for everyone.
-
mini.basics - Common configuration presets for options/mappings/autocommands
A while back I did a public Neovim options survey (here are the results). One of the goals was to gather a commonly used option values to create a "crowd-sourced" moderate version of tpope/vim-sensible. Well, this is it.
-
How I set up Vim for writing LaTex, Python, C and C++?
opps.. forgot to mention timpopes : https://github.com/tpope/vim-sensible settings :D
-
Show HN: Vim online editor using WebAssembly, storing files using IndexedDB
You don’t want any modern conveniences? Not even stuff from here[0]?
[0]: https://github.com/tpope/vim-sensible/blob/master/plugin/sen...
-
How do you turn off the yellow highlighting after your done with the search?
If you use vim-sensible, which you should, you can reset the highlight with ctrl+l.
-
.vimrc
Check out sensible.vim for lots of settings you might want to turn on.
-
Neovim built-in options survey needs your contribution
What I plan to do with results: - The summary of results will be released in some way, shape, or form after survey is closed (at least two weeks from now when there is a 24 hours without new entries). It will be announced in this sub. - Possibly use the most commonly set non-default settings to power a Neovim variant, crowd-sourced version of tpope/vim-sensible.
ctrlp.vim
-
I use the default file browser in vim (netrw). I know there are plugins that a lot of people like. Should I switch?
But I mostly use ctrlp when I work with projects. A can recommend vim-ripgrep too, it lets you find strings/patterns in your project files.
-
Feeling super slow...
You may find something like ctrlp useful. Some sort of fuzzy definition search.
-
New User
My basic vim workflow is that I open vim, which opens NerdTree for me by default. I can find the file I want in NerdTree, or I can hit Ctrl+p to open a file with fuzzy searching.
-
Fzf: a tool that will transform your CLI life
I'd personally suggest ctrlp.vim: https://github.com/ctrlpvim/ctrlp.vim
-
Here's a question
ctrlp.vim - Fuzzy File Opener (req)
- Which editor do you use for your Go coding?
-
Buffer switchers like VSCode
There's also some relevant plugins: - ctrlpvim/ctrlp.vim: Active fork of kien/ctrlp.vim—Fuzzy file, buffer, mru, tag, etc finder. - vijaymarupudi/nvim-fzf: A Lua API for using fzf in neovim. - nvim-telescope/telescope.nvim: Find, Filter, Preview, Pick. All lua, all the time. - gelguy/wilder.nvim: A more adventurous wildmenu
-
Use Ctrl-P in a whole project
I have set the line let g:ctrlp_working_path_mode = 'r' and according to the GitHub repo it should allow Ctrl-P to do its searches in the whole project I'm in but it doesn't. It stop at the files opened by Neovim. Did I misunderstood the purpose of the plugin, or a I doing something wrong ?
-
What about changing between files? Do you guys touch the mouse?????
i use ctrlp.vim
-
How many plugins do you use on a daily basis and what are they?
CtrlP
What are some alternatives?
vim-cool - A very simple plugin that makes hlsearch more useful.
telescope.nvim - Find, Filter, Preview, Pick. All lua, all the time.
lightline.vim - A light and configurable statusline/tabline plugin for Vim
LeaderF - An efficient fuzzy finder that helps to locate files, buffers, mrus, gtags, etc. on the fly for both vim and neovim.
goyo.vim - :tulip: Distraction-free writing in Vim
vim-clap - :clap: Modern performant fuzzy picker, tree-sitter highlighting, and more, for both Vim and NeoVim
ale - Check syntax in Vim/Neovim asynchronously and fix files, with Language Server Protocol (LSP) support
nerdtree - A tree explorer plugin for vim.
vimrc - Basic vim configuration for your .vimrc
ctrlsf.vim - A text searching plugin mimics Ctrl-Shift-F on Sublime Text 2
vim-easy-align - :sunflower: A Vim alignment plugin
fzf.vim - fzf :heart: vim