dmh

joined 2 years ago
[–] dmh 3 points 1 year ago

On terminals? like what?

[–] dmh 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

I use something simpler in my config that runs on BufWritePost:

silent !svgo %

I wrote that right after reading this koan:

Master Wq and the Markdown acolyte

A Markdown acolyte came to Master Wq to demonstrate his Vim plugin.

“See, master,” he said, “I have nearly finished the Vim macros that translate Markdown into HTML. My functions interweave, my parser is a paragon of efficiency, and the results nearly flawless. I daresay I have mastered Vimscript, and my work will validate Vim as a modern editor for the enlightened developer! Have I done rightly?”

Master Wq read the acolyte’s code for several minutes without saying anything. Then he opened a Markdown document, and typed:

:%!markdown

HTML filled the buffer instantly. The acolyte began to cry.

https://blog.sanctum.geek.nz/vim-koans/

[–] dmh 7 points 2 years ago (1 children)

¿Porqué no los dos?

https://github.com/doomemacs/doomemacs

I absolutely love the concept of modal editing provided by vim. But if you're into all the things that Emacs and you don't have the patientce to build your config from scratch, then Doom Emacs is for you.

[–] dmh 2 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago) (1 children)

I’m having a hard time opening side-by-side terminals

Side-by-side how? the way I imagine this is starting with a single window with a regular buffer, then opening two toggleterm terminals in splits to end up like this:

If that's what you mean, all you need is to pass unique terminal ids as you call ToggleTerm.

  • :ToggleTerm 1<CR>
  • :ToggleTerm 2<CR>

You could then map that to whatever keys you want, like <c-1> and <c-2>:

vim.keymap.set('n', '<c-1>', ':ToggleTerm 1<CR>')
vim.keymap.set('n', '<c-2>', ':ToggleTerm 2<CR>')

I have a similar setup: https://github.com/davidmh/dot-files/blob/3b0e79919f231db1f3628f6fde06e9f78f347b87/nvim/fnl/own/plugin/toggle-term.fnl

  • ctrl + 1-5 for dedicated split terms
  • alt + 1-5 for dedicated tab terms
  • ctrl + t as a wildcard split term, that's my go to
  • alt + t to attach or start a tmux session in a tab
[–] dmh 4 points 2 years ago (1 children)

I use a variation of that setup, I install plain neovim as a package, and symlink the neovim config: https://github.com/davidmh/dot-files/blob/main/home.nix#L115-L118

Mostly because I want to manage the neovim plugins with lazy.nvim, not with nix derivations.