yode-nvim
aerial.nvim
yode-nvim | aerial.nvim | |
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8 | 34 | |
372 | 1,473 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 8.6 | |
about 1 year ago | 8 days ago | |
Lua | Lua | |
MIT License | MIT License |
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yode-nvim
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Looking for a plugin to do markdown "hoisting".
Perhaps https://github.com/hoschi/yode-nvim
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How can I delete buffer-local key mappings that a added by a plugin?
The plugin is https://github.com/hoschi/yode-nvim . I've submitted an issue related to this. I just wanted a workaround for the meantime.
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AstroNvim/AstroNvim: AstroNvim is an aesthetic and feature-rich Neovim config
It gets brought up a lot in vim discussions. It's missing a few major things for me;
1. Tabs (like in vim). I've found only vim and emacs have tabs in a way that makes sense to me. Kakoune also has a cool model, where I can use my window manager (or tmux) to recreate tabs.
2. Code folding, I like to fold everything as soon as I open a file to get an "overview" and then slowly unfold as look into the details. Wasn't in Helix last time I checked.
3. Narrowing. Emacs has it built in, (neo)vim requires a plugin [0]. Similar to code folding, when I'm working on a large function, I want to pretend it's the entirety of my buffer.
[0] https://github.com/hoschi/yode-nvim
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Show HN: Vim Reference Guide
Hi, great work releasing this! Trying to explain vim concisely is always an interesting challenge and I had a great time reading your attempt in this book. I always find it really interesting on how people try to group certain vim functions in a way that makes sense to people that don't use vim.
Whenever I try to explain vim to other people, I always start super abstract, i.e 'vim grammar is all (count)? verb then object. Learn actions and then the movements to apply the action where you want'. I think you cover that idea pretty well in your 'Vim philosophy and features' section whilst not making it overly abstract and keeping it relatable.
Some things I noticed, you mention registers in the insert mode section before explaining what they are. It seemed odd to me that you used the word before explaining what it meant, but maybe it is unavoidable?
I also noticed you completely left out folds (z, :help fold). Personally, I aggressively fold code I'm not working on so I think they are super important :D. There was a plugin posted recently thats a cool alternative to folding though (similar to emacs narrow) [0] [1].
[0] https://github.com/hoschi/yode-nvim
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Hacker News top posts: Feb 12, 2022
Show HN: Yode-Nvim – Focused Code Editing for Neovim\ (3 comments)
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Yode-Nvim - Focused Code Editing for NeoVim
found it, check this issue: https://github.com/hoschi/yode-nvim/issues/5
aerial.nvim
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What's this type of plugin called? (it shows the structure of code)
I tried aerial.nvim the other day and it's pretty cool. Haven't tried lspsaga yet so I'm not sure if it fits the same purpose.
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Configuration passed to plugin's setup is not persistent
I am using aerial found here and I really like it except that when I press a function, it doesn't close the window. And I had thought I fixed it with
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How do you automatically switch focus to the newly opened aeiral buffer?
I am referring to the aerial plugin found [here[(https://github.com/stevearc/aerial.nvim)
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How do you jump to the beginning of a function
I use https://github.com/stevearc/aerial.nvim, it knows which is the current function. I currently open the telescope display and just press "enter", but AerialPrev would work just as well.
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Please inform me of the plugin(s) enabling these two features
First one could be lualine and Aerial.
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Navigation between functions
I also use ]m, but it’s not a very good way to choose and move to functions quickly and with intention. Options include aerial.nvim, symbols-outline.nvim, and the new nvim-navbuddy, from the developer who made nvim-navic.
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Introducing nvim-navbuddy! A simple popup window that provides breadcrumbs like navigation feature and more!
This would be amazing if i could open it in a buffer beside (or under...?) my current. Something akin to aerial.nvim.
- Neovim task-focused interface
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Getting outline of manpage
Yup! Aerial.nvim supports man pages, LSP, treesitter, and markdown for outlining
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AstroNvim/AstroNvim: AstroNvim is an aesthetic and feature-rich Neovim config
AstroNvim is using aerial.nvim which is a great code outline plugin. It has several supported backends on top of LSP and Treesitter it also supports Man page structure and Markdown structure explicitly. We also use the API for building the breadcrumbs at the top of each window as well!
https://github.com/stevearc/aerial.nvim
What are some alternatives?
cheatsheet.nvim - A cheatsheet plugin for neovim with bundled cheatsheets for the editor, multiple vim plugins, nerd-fonts, regex, etc. with a Telescope fuzzy finder interface!
symbols-outline.nvim - A tree like view for symbols in Neovim using the Language Server Protocol. Supports all your favourite languages.
NrrwRgn - A Narrow Region Plugin for vim (like Emacs Narrow Region)
lsp-inlayhints.nvim
blake3-6502 - the BLAKE3 hash function implemented in 6502 assembly
overseer.nvim - A task runner and job management plugin for Neovim
xmonad - The core of xmonad, a small but functional ICCCM-compliant tiling window manager
nvim-navic - Simple winbar/statusline plugin that shows your current code context
ppk_bluetooth - Bluetooth HID adapter for the Palm Portable Keyboard
wildfire.vim - Smart selection of the closest text object
vim-abolish - abolish.vim: Work with several variants of a word at once
tagbar - Vim plugin that displays tags in a window, ordered by scope