Emacs is a nice one as well. Its approach and purposes are just different. But in my opinion difference has a lot of benefits, so long life to all the editors and a big thank you to the wonderful devs who offer these tools to us (remember to buy them a coffee or more if you can).
wwwgem
I personally started with vim and I'm now using neovim for years. And I have to admit that it's just an editor... But a perfectly optimized one.
It requires some efforts to learn the basic useful features (like horizontal and vertical motion) but I quickly saw its potential. What made me stick to it and willing to invest even more efforts is the fact that you build it to fit your needs like a glove through the interface customization, no limit and powerful keybindings remapping, and a collection of plugins for everything (without making it slow or bloated). With the right plugins, this editor can handle any regular typing or specific coding language, and makes your workflow way more efficient thanks to a great project management approach and/or speedy fuzzy finder file explorer.
I've barely started a series of posts dedicated to this incredible editor. Whether or not you're using a vim or neovim, I'd recommend to stay curious because there's other editors out there to be aware of and one may prefer them. I've tried quite some of themwhen moving to neovim but this one was just the one for me.
I've talked about few plugins I use if you're interested: https://www-gem.codeberg.page/ I'm lacking motivation to write so this list is far from complete but maybe you'll find some inspiration.
No worries, the confusion is easy to make. Looks like nobody here is using this plugin, or maybe this was a dumb question.
The 13 has touchscreen option as well but I've missed the budget limit. My bad!
I don't own one but I'm looking at the framework 13 for my next machine. It has great reviews and fully support Arch. Its price is the main criticism against this machine, though there's some arguments to justify it but no need to open a trolling post :)
I don't own one but I'm looking at the framework 13 for my next machine. It has great reviews and fully support Arch. Its price is the main criticism against this machine, though there's some arguments to justify it but no need to open a trolling post :)
I've looked at the pull requests again and realized that this feature was already requested in June 2024.
In the absence of response to this ticket, the hope to see it implemented is pretty low though :( Not sure how I can fully benefit of this plugin then...
I know it's confusing. This is a neovim plugin called obsidian, not the obsidian software. That's why I put a link to it but I may edit my post to make it more clear. Thanks.
I've looked at the pull requests again and realized that this feature was already requested in June 2024.
In the absence of response to this ticket, the hope to see it implemented is pretty low though :( Not sure how I can fully benefit of this plugin then...
I used to use the famous Zathura for a long time, but it's really minimal. Sioyek is an incredible pdf reader so overlooked.
Amongst a lot of other things, it lets you:
- quickly preview or jump to figures/references/equations/tables… (even if the PDF does not have links)
- search paper names in any search engine you like (defaults are google scholar and library genesis) by middle clicking on their name or using keybindings
- mark locations (using lower case for local mark and upper case for global mark) or create bookmarks for quick navigation
- highlight text
- save annotations in a local database or embed them in a new version of the PDF file to share them with others
- automatically reload a file when it changes
I wrote a brief overview of it quite some time ago.
Very nice! That's a pretty big boy ;)