vim-smoothie
plenary.nvim
vim-smoothie | plenary.nvim | |
---|---|---|
12 | 58 | |
962 | 2,368 | |
- | 3.8% | |
1.8 | 7.5 | |
almost 2 years ago | 7 days ago | |
Vim Script | Lua | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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vim-smoothie
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Set it and forget it plugins?
dirbuf.nvim (or oil.nvim), the genius thing is that it is really just one mapping, plus stuff you already know. Foke's todo-comments.nvim is another typical one, but you're probably aware of that if using Noice. Smooth scrolling plugins? My favourite for some reason is still vim-smoothie, not the Lua alternatives.
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Need help structuring code for an attempt at smooth scrolling
My goal is to try to make something like vim-smoothie in emacs. I want to make this scroll line by line, instead of by pixel with pixel-scroll-mode because that just makes it laggy, and not smooth at all.
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How can I get over the beginner's hump and move around faster?
I can reccomend practicing using D and U to move around to see if you get more used to it, but there's also the vim-smoothie plugin which might make the scrolling easier to follow. Some other usefull ways of moving around are using { and } to move by paragraph (i.e. to next blank line), [[, [], ][ and ]] which move to the start or end of c-style functions. You might also want to try out a fuzzy finder such as vim-fzf or nvim-telescope where you can use :Rg or :Telescope live-grep respectively where you can start typing part of a line and see a list of the lines that fit alongside a preview window
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More senior engineer complains he can’t tell what’s going on in vim
I installed a plug-in that animates my scrolling. I’m not sure if it’s https://github.com/psliwka/vim-smoothie or something comparable (on phone so I can’t check right now). It also shows what’s going on in a more visual way. It’s hypothetically slower since it wastes frames, but I’m used to it now.
- My Only issue with using VIM as an IDE...
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Nvui: A NeoVim GUI written in C++ and Qt
> And smooth scrolling works on regular neovim with https://github.com/psliwka/vim-smoothie
Doesn't 'smooth scrolling' mean scrolling in increments less than a full line, to avoid the janky jarring jump from one line to the next?
I don't get how you can do smooth scrolling in a terminal interface? The screenshots in that link aren't smooth - they jump whole lines at a time.
- vim-smoothie: Smooth scrolling for Vim done right
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How can I navigate between lines on a larger scale better?
That is where this type of plugin can help with that: https://github.com/psliwka/vim-smoothie
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Best recent plugins
Very sexy for reading stuff (like help)
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How do people move vertically?
Wanna add some coconut oil to your c-u/c-d? use psliwka/vim-smoothie for some smooooooth ups and downs. Really helps you keep focus and reduce the need to reorient after the jump.
plenary.nvim
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How To Create An UI Menu In Neovim
we can create a function to open a pop up menu using plenary.popup like this, you need to install neovim plenary if you don't already have it https://github.com/nvim-lua/plenary.nvim
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How can I run a vim.cmd asynchronously?
If you are really interested in doing this yourself with loop, you should take a look at either plenary.job or netman.shell (I made the latter) as both are very well documented.
- Async module in Lua for Nvim
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How to send curl requests without plugin dependency and read the result all in Lua?
I feel this :( That said, alot of plugins rely on plenary.nvim. Its up to you if you determine this is "non-essential" or not. It will almost certainly be available for you to use already.
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nvim-http: A simple yet modern HTTP client for neovim
The big reason I ask is that reaching out to an external python shell to run commands (disregard the fact that its python running) is going to be much slower than using the in built lua JIT interpreter. Additionally, plenary has a built in curl function so you don't have to "reinvent the wheel".
- Does there exist any simple Lua syntax to extend tables?
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Testing my config?
There is also test harness in nvim-lua/plenary.nvim with a slightly different design, but still usable of course.
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How to write `pretty_print`ed json data into a json file?
I am simply using busted or more specifically vusted which is a wrapper around busted for Neovim. It should be quite straightforward to learn the basics, I would say you mostly need to know these functions: describe, it (these are used to structure your test cases) and assert.are_same (to check for table equality). Some people are also using plenary which is also based on busted.
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Neovim Lua Nix plugin template
It's based on nvim-lua-plugin-template, but uses Nix flakes to run plenary.nvim tests.
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Sympy + Luasnip + Vimtex
Plenary plugin for Nvim
What are some alternatives?
neo-smooth-scroll.nvim - Smooth scroll simple plugin for neovim
async-await.lua - Write async function more like javascript async/await
neoscroll.nvim - Smooth scrolling neovim plugin written in lua
nvim-reload - Plugin to easily reload your Neovim config
vim-dadbod-ui - Simple UI for https://github.com/tpope/vim-dadbod
nvim-lua-guide - A guide to using Lua in Neovim
instant.nvim - collaborative editing in Neovim using built-in capabilities
telescope.nvim - Find, Filter, Preview, Pick. All lua, all the time.
tmate - Instant Terminal Sharing
nvim-lua
st-undercurl - A patch for ST (Simple Terminal) adding support for curly and colored underlines.
telescope-fzf-native.nvim - FZF sorter for telescope written in c