Awesome video Ben just started using Neovim and I took your advice on telescope awesome plugin never heard of it. Thank you and keep up the good work !
A pitty I can only hit like once. I am enjoying your videos a lot. First the ones about the Moonlander keyboard (really happy with it). And soon after I got it, I switched from Vim to Neovim. This video and your dotfiles helped me a lot get the functionality I wanted out of it. Thanks a lot for your vids.
Thanks a lot for sharing these useful plugins. I was not aware of some of them 👍🏻. One question: between Sublime Text and Neovim, which one do you prefer? it seems like you are moving from Sublime to Neovim, is that right?
Honestly, I love them both. I’m using Neovim currently but if someone asked me which they should go with, I’d say Sublime, as you can be productive with it immediately. Working Neovim with confidence is a different proposition entirely!
@@benfrainuk Yes definitely. One thing I haven't been able to solve in Neovim is commenting jsx in tsx files. Sublime finally got it right but all plugins I've tried for commenting in Neovim don't do it properly in jsx code snippets. I wonder if you have encountered the same issue and managed to solve it.
@@iduran I don’t do JSX but I do write lit.dev templates extensively (similar in that it is tagged template literals). The commenting plugin I use handles that OK.
@@benfrainuk I just checked the commenting plugin you use. I think it should handle the jsx issue as the key I guess is to adopt treesitter. Thanks again!
Love the presentation! Instead of the silent cut moments though, it would be nicer if the titles would be on the screen as you speak IMO. I feel your pain with jumping around between editors or IDE’s… I had to use different tools for different languages otherwise editors like VSCode and Sublime just get bloated and slow. With 0.5 and Lua, Nvim just gives me the best development experience with vim editing, filetype loaded LSP support, TS, Telescope and more! I suggest you take a look at packer for lazy loading your configurations. NvChad’s configurations is top notch in terms of performance so I recommend having a look at it’s development. Will note it can be cloned for nix OS only but the essence of it is worth playing around with :)!
Thanks Sage, I’ll have a think about titles. I’d wanted a very clear indicator for when people use time links but I’ll try doing them over somehow for my next video 👍🏻 I’d not come across NvChad so thanks for mentioning that. I’ll take a look 👀
@@benfrainuk You’re very welcome. Since making the comment I’ve watched the moonlander’s video and genuinely was mind blown by the design and the depth of customization. Could you share your opinion regards to editing in vim with them?
The Moonlander can adapt to anything so you could get as creative as you wanted. I haven’t really done anything Vim specific with mine. The complication for me is that I use Colemak DHm layout rather than qwerty so ‘j’ and ‘k’ aren’t on the home row. Although it’s considered bad practice in Vim, I’ve just never got out of the habit of using arrow keys so in that regard it hasn’t really affected me much. My next video is likely on my Moonlander layout so I’ll perhaps cover Vim a little there. But, Moonlander can handle anything and they hold value well so if you didn’t like it, you could always sell it on 👍🏻
@@benfrainuk Sweet, I’m looking into customs pricing atm before making a decision. The price tag is already steep haha. My intention is to switch from QWERTY to DVORAK as soon as I get a proper keyboard, so I feel you on the productivity block and to be frank it’s quite intimidating. Best suggestion I ever got for remapping your mind away from the arrow keys is … to disable them :) At least in vim.