When looking for the most up-to-date link to grab a scihub url
we used to use wikiless but now simply directly scrape from
wikipedia.
Functionality is not changed but should work much faster and
more reliably.
Add 'glances.nvim' plugin which shows the LSP references, definitions and
implementations in a very nice floating preview window. (Previously we
used Telescope which is still called if the glances plugin does not
exist.)
Can preview, scroll in the floating window, go to the destination, open
the destination in vert/horiz splits.
If the cursor was on the very first letter of a word it would fix
the misspelled word instead - now it should stay and fix the
current word under cursor instead.
Hide the years that ncpmpcpp always adds to the library albums, and
don't split them by date. Also importantly use 'album_artist' to
sort the corresponding artists instead of just 'artist' since beets
will often sort the individual acting artist for the latter, pulling
apart single songs from larger albums.
Lastly, add a 'data_fetching_delay' (of I believe 250ms) when quickly
scrolling through the artist/album list so it goes a little smoother
when loading data from remote sources.
Added 'Mod+Shift+L' as shortcut to open the associated file of a
papis library item. May make more sense in a dedicated river
mode but for now is good enough to get an overview of papis items
and open them if needed. Could also probably use an equivalent
of 'open edit file' and 'open note if exists' but again -
let's see how much I use it first.
Takes a second to open with my library size.
Since reorganizing my screens we have to switch the output
order of wallpapers. Would be really useful to be able to
talk to `swww` like kanshi with the full screen ID instead
of just the output number for wallpaper setting.
Flash.nvim provides a very tasty remote editing functionality which lightspeed
does not. Otherwise it behaves *mostly* the same. For now, I have the flash
search label functionality activated (default) but if it is annoying I will
turn it off (It injects labels into the normal neovim search. So if you search
a word and want to go directly there, you just press the label key as part
of the search and it jumps there. This might be problematic if I quickly type
something that does not exist but it picks up a non-existent letter as label
instead.)
Otherwise, the remote editing functionality is activated by
<operator>r<label><movement>, such as `yr<label>iw` to yank inside a word
somewhere else and stay at the current position. Similarly for example
`cr<label>$` to change from the label to the end of the line and then jump
back to the original position and so on.
Slightly adapt lualine to not have arrow section/component dividers,
but simple slanted lines. Gets rid of a tiny bit of noise while still
clearly subdividing the sections for me which I need.
Also, removed displaying the hostname. I know which host I am on
generally, and rarely make use of it so it's just unnecessary info
for me.
Tab display can be toggled on or off with `Ctrl+Shift+T`. The toggling
takes place per-window and not globally, so we can have a wezterm
terminal on desktop 1 with a tabbar and on desktop 2 without. Opening
a new terminal always defaults to an enabled tab bar.
Since I would like to keep my plugin configurations as modular as possible
I think it is a good first step to move the mini configuration directly
into the core plugin file where mini is loaded. Since this is the plugin
spec I want to take to basically any nvim installation I have, having it
in a single file makes it much easier to be portable.
Toggleterm, as nice as it is, is not one of my core dependencies.
I do not 'need' toggleterm on every nvim installation I have. Instead,
it can go into ui-related plugins since that is what it does, extend
nvim's UI functionality with new terminal dropdowns/floats.
Removed vim-exchange which, while an amazing functionality, is also
exactly replicated in mini.nvim (along with even more operators).
Uses slightly different mapping - not `cx<movement>` anymore but
`gx<movement>`. But this actually makes sense and fits in well with
my other g-prefixed operators (`gc` for comment and `ga` for align).
It is also the prefix for the other additional operators supplied
by mini.operators: `gs` for sorting text, `gm` for multiplying,
`gr` for replacing, `g=` for evaluating.
By invoking 'print' for ics files from neomutt we can simply
add it to our local calendar directly from the interface.
Neat little 'cheat' to provide custom functions for specific
file types.
Since we already have the mini library installed in our setup, we don't
need to make use of external base16 plugins. It provides the same exact
functionality, and seems slim and bug-free. Nothing changes for the
user, but we have 1 plugin less to take care of (and it was
mis-behaving in new versions anyway).
Also set lualine to be reloaded on theme switch so it takes on the
colorscheme as well.
Added mapping to insert a link to an existing Zettel with
`<localleader>ni` (note insert), either from normal mode which creates
the complete link, or from visual selection mode which surrounds the
current selection (as visible link text) with the link.
New zettel links still use my own implementation so I have full control
over their naming scheme.
When switching the current buffer to the Zettelkasten index page
(`<leader>ni`), we now also switch the working directory to the
corresponding notes directory.
The redirector can now be fed with either a list of targets to pick from
(as before) or a "farside" entry which points to a farside service
redirect or multiple.
The dict entry then looks like:
```python
"quora": {
"source": ["quora.com"],
"farside": ["quetre"],
}
```
It has the source service url as usual, but then instead of a "target"
entry contains a "farside" entry.
A redirect dict entry can take both "target" and "farside" entries, but
will then always give precedence to farside choices.
This should go a long way in helping keep OSS frontends up to date. It
now mostly depends on farside entries in turn being updated.
One potential concern is the new centralization in relying on farside as
the redirect authority.
Synchronizes a git repository for the taskwarrior data directory,
automatically committing any changes after each command; and pushing and
pulling on syncing taskwarrior.
Apparently marking subsections like `[section.subsection]` (toml-like)
is deprecated in the configuration. This commit fixes this by using the
recommended `[section "subsection"]` syntax.
See: https://git-scm.com/docs/git-config#_syntax
Fixed taskopen script not opening the correct numbered task
when passed one (either on the command line with `to <id>`
or through taskwarrior with `t <id> open`).
Now it does directly open the correct note.
Added atuin for nice shell history. Trying it out for now
but seems non-intrusive enough that I will probably keep
it for a while even if I don't use it.
Switched terminal environments (bash,zsh,nushell) to starship
prompt (from pure-prompt/no prompt). Is mimicking the pure-
prompt however, so no big change visible. Needs additional
package on the system, which is added to the packages.
Some remaining issues with nushell (vi prompt indicator).
Setting `vim.g.disable_autoformat` to true will disable automatic linting globally,
though I have not set up commands or mappings for manual linting. It is also
missing buffer-local linting which could be copied from buffer-local formatting.
Moved loading and setting up file watching to the loading of the plugin itself.
Will make it a little more self-contained and not crash or complain if we are
missing the plugin.
HACK
At the same time, reverted back to pinned base16 commit since the new one did
not work again. Gotta figure it out at some point but no time now.