markdown-oxide
kakoune-lsp
markdown-oxide | kakoune-lsp | |
---|---|---|
2 | 9 | |
587 | 581 | |
- | 1.4% | |
9.7 | 9.3 | |
4 days ago | 15 days ago | |
Rust | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | The Unlicense |
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.
markdown-oxide
- Markdown Oxide: Personal Knowledge Management system for software enthusiasts
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General Recommendations: Should I Use Tree-sitter as the AST for the LSP I am developing?
I have been setting up tree-sitter with rust bindings, and, with a few modifications, the performance is pretty good (for and LSP). The code is here code (the testing stats are linked in the readme)
kakoune-lsp
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Which editor do you use for your Go coding?
Kakoune with LSP (gopls).
- kak-lsp release 11.1.0
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Kakoune + Julia
You could dive into installing kak-lsp, which will provide the code intelligence features you want. Kakoune doesn't do windowing on it's own, so your going to need to rely on something like tmux or a terminal emulator that does similar, such as wezterm, or even a tiling window manager (which is what is being used in the video). Kakoune really needs a lot of time invested to configure well though.
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Massive preludes: why?
Why do you need vscode? Kakoune supports code actions, so this should work in the editor with the best editing model ever. See lsp-code-actions from https://github.com/kak-lsp/kak-lsp.
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Is kakoune more lightweight than vim or minimal? Why kakoune and not vim in your opinion?
In addition, rather than using its own full-fledged programming language for plugins or choosing to use a specific programming language, it provides a limited configuration language that's closer to a domain-specific language and to be used as a "glue" between Kakoune and programs written in any language. For example, the kak-lsp plugin uses a program written in Rust that is integrated with Kakoune with a thin wrapper of Kakoune's configuration language.
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kak-lsp and godot engine
If you're having problems with these capabilities, try to look at the kak-lsp debug output: https://github.com/kak-lsp/kak-lsp#troubleshooting
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kak-lsp + terraform-ls
kak-lsp doesn't print to *debug* under normal operation. If you want to check on kak-lsp, enable verbose logging as described here and tail -f the log file.
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Currently looking for something other than vim and emacs. I have some questions for kakoune.
So, since pretty much everything happens through a shell, you can use anything that produces an executable to write your logic. kak-lsp, for example, is written in Rust, with some kakscript to define the commands, hooks and options a user needs to interface with it.
What are some alternatives?
vscode-langservers-extracted - vscode-langservers bin collection.
gdscript.kak - GDScript syntax highlighting for Kakoune
rayon - Rayon: A data parallelism library for Rust
kakoune-doas-write - Fork of kakoune-sudo-write to use doas instead.
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
tower-lsp - Language Server Protocol implementation written in Rust
age-plugin-yubikey - YubiKey plugin for age
cargo-limit - Productivity improvements for Rust ecosystem: warnings are skipped until errors are fixed, LSP-independent Neovim integration, etc.
nih-plug - Rust VST3 and CLAP plugin framework and plugins - because everything is better when you do it yourself
Rust Language Server - Repository for the Rust Language Server (aka RLS)
LunarVim - 🌙 LunarVim is an IDE layer for Neovim. Completely free and community driven.
zeta-note - Markdown LSP server for easy note-taking with cross-references and diagnostics.