nvim-neorg / neorg Goto Github PK
View Code? Open in Web Editor NEWModernity meets insane extensibility. The future of organizing your life in Neovim.
License: GNU General Public License v3.0
Modernity meets insane extensibility. The future of organizing your life in Neovim.
License: GNU General Public License v3.0
Welp, it happened! I've known about nvim-cmp
for a pretty long time now but I didn't think the deprecation notice would come this early. Will create a new completion source for it tomorrow so you don't have to use old stuff (ew)
I've noticed that when I leave a neorg buffer sometimes the filetype of the buffer I was in before opening the neorg file is set to norg
.
The way that I reproduce this is is using the following config
use {
'vhyrro/neorg',
branch = 'unstable',
requires = { 'vhyrro/neorg-telescope' },
config = function()
require('neorg').setup {
load = {
['core.defaults'] = {},
['core.integrations.telescope'] = {},
['core.keybinds'] = {
config = {
default_keybinds = true,
neorg_leader = '<Leader>o',
},
},
['core.norg.concealer'] = {},
['core.norg.dirman'] = {
config = {
workspaces = {
notes = '<path>',
},
},
},
},
}
end,
:Neorg<CR>
sometimes this will open my neorg index file in my notes workspace, sometimes it won't ๐คindex.norg
.:bd
norg
Hi there!
Cool project :) I've recently migrated and liking it a lot so far.
One thought I've had looking at #60 is to maybe reuse neogits popup builder system, which looks amazing. Ideally, the system could be upstreamed to plenary such that other projects (including neorg) can lever it. I'm suggesting this of course hoping neogit's maintainer would be OK with this (cc @TimUntersberger)
As initial references:
No
I'd be able to, but helping to maintain and adding features to telescope already takes a lot of my time ๐
But maybe I can look into this some time :)
NVIM v0.5.0
Neorg never starts due to this bug so there is no log. The following is the message when opening a neorg file:
Error detected while processing /home/kat/.local/share/nvim/site/pack/packer/start/aniseed/plugin/aniseed
.vim:
line 2:
E5108: Error executing lua [string "luaeval()"]:1: Vim(echoerr):E15: Invalid expression: ...ua/neorg/modu
les/core/integrations/nvim-compe/module.lua:22: nvim-compe not found, aborting...
master
Lua compiled from fennel
(require("neorg")).setup( {load = {
["core.defaults"] = {},
["core.keybinds"] = {config = {default_keybinds = true, neorg_leader = "<Leader>n"}},
["core.norg.concealer"] = {},
["core.norg.dirman"] = {config = {autochdir = true, autodetect = true, workspaces = {my_workspace = "~/neorg"}}}}})
Neorg should start without nvim-compe just fine
Neorg never starts because it expects nvim-compe
No response
I am compiling from fennel, but I cannot see a way for the fennel compilation to interfere with Neorg
Yes
No response
NVIM v0.6.0-dev+8-g75f758b99
N/A
unstable
neorg.setup({
load = {
["core.defaults"] = {},
["core.norg.concealer"] = {},
["core.norg.dirman"] = {
config = {
workspaces = {
my_workspace = "~/notes",
},
},
},
["core.keybinds"] = {
config = {
default_keybinds = true,
neorg_leader = "<Leader>o",
},
},
},
})
When I type in **
for it to render the icon instead of the broken icon.
When I type in **
(or and other * combos, haven't tested with other icons), it renders this
If I remove space at the start of the line it fixes it.
What I noticed happens, is if I'm at the beginning of the line, and type in **
it's going to insert a space before those characters and render the bugged-out icon. If I remove the space it inserts at the start of the line it fixes it.
No response
No response
No
No response
Hi,
When opening files, Neorg changes the working directory.
Usually I work in a project and at some point in time I want to quickly add something to my TODO list, so I open my my norg
file and add it. The moment I do this, I'm in a different working directory (which for example doesn't let me grep through my code base anymore).
~/foo
, open up Neovimnorg
file in the neorg directory: :e ~/neorg/foo.norg
:pwd
(outputs ~/neorg
)Thanks and best regards,
David
I use a lightweight, GTD-inspired system to manage my tasks, and it would be great if neorg considered those scenarios as it's being built out. This is one way that neorg could be better than org mode, which has a whole host of implementation approaches to consider.
The most important parts of GTD are very simple:
That's most of it. Otherwise it's useful to have some tagging and attributes per task and per project (e.g. "Work" vs "Personal"). There are other parts, like tasks you're waiting on others for, and events tied to a calendar, but I suspect you'd add those anyway...
hello, this might be helpful for a simple telescope function for people to setup their notebook location, maybe people could also share what they used for neorg here:
function neorg_roam()
require('telescope.builtin').find_files({
prompt_title = "Notebook";
cwd = "~/path/to/neorg";
})
end
and also I think https://github.com/folke/todo-comments.nvim plugin can also help with colorizing some stuff so it's more integrated as a notebook and as a little fancy notebook for others to start using it (maybe better than what emacs org did), I didn't know if it's mentioned elsewhere, but might be a good idea.
thank you for this awesome plugin!
It would be super awesome if it could include something along the lines of calcurse to manage appointments and tasks.
I am currently looking into ways to get organized and calcurse is almost what I was looking for. Just wished it could be more easy to integrate with other programs.
I have never written a plugin for vim, but I could try and help on this idea.
There's a few discrepancies that need fixing, and I'll get to work on them as soon as i can:
If you find that your neorg doesn't work as intended despite following the code snippets now you know why :P
NVIM v0.5.0-dev+1357-g192f89ea1 (on Win10)
No such file available
master
lua << EOF
require('neorg').setup {
-- Tell Neorg what modules to load
load = {
["core.defaults"] = {}, -- Load all the default modules
["core.norg.concealer"] = {}, -- Allows for use of icons
["core.norg.dirman"] = { -- Manage your directories with Neorg
config = {
workspaces = {
my_workspace = "~/neorg"
}
}
}
},
}
No errors when opening an norg file.
When opening an norg file (:e c:\tmp\foo.norg
) I get the following error:
It seems like vim.opt_local
is nil for some reason. As far as I can tell from the neovim documentaiton, it should be available so maybe this issue should go there instead?
No response
No response
No
No response
In formats such as Org-Mode and RMarkdown, it is possible to use a syntax for generating and displaying data as E.G. tables and graphs. Neorg lacks such functionality, forcing the external creation and embedding of information into a document. In the spirit of avoiding unneeded dependencies, I propose that we use the Lua engine built into Neovim to allow execution of tagged code blocks which generate Neorg markup to e.g. display a generated image.
I've observed that neorg's link syntax does not get concealed, which could be on purpose.
I think though that this is a good use case for vim's built in conceal (as opposed to extmarks) because all the edge cases are handled already, a user can set their conceal cursor which controls the visibility of the concealed text so it is easy to edit. Lastly if transforming the existing text rather than replacing it then it is able to maintain normal highlights.
There is no good way to do this from lua and frankly I don't believe it is worth it to try till there is an API for it but in vimscript you could do something like what vim-markdown
does.
NVIM v0.6.0-dev+98-ga5c25e4f3
No such file
master
require("neorg").setup({
load = {
["core.defaults"] = {}, -- Load all the default modules
["core.norg.concealer"] = {}, -- Allows for use of icons
["core.norg.dirman"] = { -- Manage your directories with Neorg
config = {
workspaces = {
my_workspace = "~/neorg"
}
}
}
}
})
neorg have some kind of fallbacks for lazy loaded nvim-compe, here's the configuration for packer.nvim:
use {"hrsh7th/nvim-compe",
event = "InsertEnter",
config = function()
require'compe'.setup {
enabled = true;
autocomplete = true;
debug = false;
min_length = 1;
preselect = 'enable';
throttle_time = 80;
source_timeout = 200;
resolve_timeout = 800;
incomplete_delay = 400;
max_abbr_width = 100;
max_kind_width = 100;
max_menu_width = 100;
documentation = {
border = { '', '' ,'', ' ', '', '', '', ' ' },
winhighlight = "NormalFloat:CompeDocumentation,FloatBorder:CompeDocumentationBorder",
max_width = 120,
min_width = 60,
max_height = math.floor(vim.o.lines * 0.3),
min_height = 1,
};
packer.nvim: Error running config for neorg: ...ua/neorg/modules/core/integrations/nvim-compe/module.lua:22: nvim-compe not found, aborting...
nvim-compe, packer.nvim
None.
Yes, but I don't know how to start. I would need guidance (check question below)
Can you provide a clear structure of the project and where is the related scripts?
There's currently a bug where using modifiers like markers, headings etc gets highlighted in @code tags, not epic. Will have to use TS to detect the parent node.
Would there be support for exporting the code segments to an actual file , like many emacs users do. They write well documented code in org and then just export it.
Yes, but I don't know how to start. I would need guidance
I read in the CONTRIBUTING.md that i have to write everything in modules
. So i make a new dir in /modules and start hacking away? Any help would be appreciated !
Originally posted by ITHDevelopment September 17, 2021
Another big completion engine is completion.nvim and it would be great to have support for it. Just that.
0.5 release version
There is no log output or log file
master
["core.defaults"]
["core.norg.concealer"]
["core.norg.dirman"]
You can use the :Neorg command etc
There is no :Neorg command or any other aspect of the plugin loaded.
The neorg git repo is cloned and sitting on my machine by packer correctly.
I can produce an error if I rm the git repo, so it is definitely being loaded by packercompiled.vim
No response
I used the code snippet in readme to set up Neorg, I also tried loading it in my init.lua and init.vim but still could not get it working
No
No response
Yo,
I read you like to make music so I just wanted to know which daw you fancy mate???
Hey, I've been following this project for a while now, it looks awesome. I've read the specification and there's a few things that I think were just excellent decisions in the design of this. I love how clean the syntax looks (personally I don't have any problem with markdown but this definitely looks better and makes more sense). And the other thing that I love is that this is being created within the context of being use with vim bindings. An example of this is the ordered lists, that fact you're using just tags to enclose ordered lists makes it so people can just dd
a line and change the position without having to worry about the number (this is a pain in markdown), when I was reading the specification I thought that was such an elegant solution considering that is being made to be use in neovim.
Now the real question of this issue, I didn't see any mention of exporting to other filetypes like with org mode. I think that one of the key features of org is being able to export to html, pdf, latex... and more. I suppose that if you're thinking if making this a better alternative to org, the export feature is planned. But I was wondering when you think this will be possible. (or mybe it already is, idk)
There's a bug as of right now that prevents the user from editing a module's configuration if that module is already being loaded in e.g. a metamodule beforehand. The load function for the module gets invoked whenever the module is initially loaded - if the module does anything reliant on config options during this time it will not be using the overrode defaults. Big sad, will fix before 0.1 releases. Shouldn't pose too much of a problem for users as of right now :)
I can't put my finger on what I'm missing but I can't seem to get my @code
blocks to be formatted.
I believe I've followed the instructions:
require('neorg').setup {
load = {
['core.defaults'] = {},
['core.norg.concealer'] = {},
}
}
local parser_configs = require('nvim-treesitter.parsers').get_parser_configs()
parser_configs.norg = {
install_info = {
url = "https://github.com/vhyrro/tree-sitter-norg",
files = { "src/parser.c" },
branch = "main"
},
}
require('nvim-treesitter.configs').setup {
...
I've confirmed that I have the Ruby Treesitter parser installed (I've also tried JavaScript).
I've tried the unstable
branch as well in case that mattered.
side question -- is there any way to influence the size or color of the glyphs? I've tried a couple of different colorschemes but the glyphs end up a little hard to see (note: I've scaled up the font size in my screenshots here).
Is Neorg intended to have file format compatibility with org mode?
If so, is there some way to support files with the .org
extension, in addition to (or instead of) .norg
files?
NVIM v0.6.0-dev+8-g75f758b99
N/A
unstable
neorg.setup({
load = {
["core.defaults"] = {},
["core.norg.concealer"] = {},
["core.norg.dirman"] = {
config = {
workspaces = {
my_workspace = "~/notes",
},
},
},
["core.keybinds"] = {
config = {
default_keybinds = true,
neorg_leader = "<Leader>o",
},
},
},
})
When I paste a plain text link for it no to be concealed and all characters to be visible.
The plain text of it is: https://neovim.discourse.group/
But its displaying it as in the picture
No response
No response
No
No response
So it is a simple question can we do a Literate config " Literate programming" my init.lua
in neorg
like emacs
with org-mode
.
That would be cool so I can organize my giant config file.
I'll be watching this project closely.
Also take my Stare.
Edite: Fix spelling.
NVIM v0.6.0-dev+nightly-3-g384a43fe7
Build type: Release
LuaJIT 2.1.0-beta3
Features: +acl +iconv +tui
unstable
core.defaults
core.norg.concealer
core.integrations.telescope
core.norg.completion
core.norg.dirman
Latex code highlighting should be the same as a normal .tex file.
Latex code is not highlighted at all.
Hi,
This is a feature request to make code blocks a bit nicer to use.
@code javascript
const foo = () => { console.log('hello world') }
@end
Have the same identifiers as in GitHub markdown, e.g.
@code js
const foo = () => { console.log('hello world') }
@end
Also allow triple backticks, e.g.
| ```js
| const foo = () => { console.log('hello world') }
| ```
Hi! I have been trying to find a note-taking plugin for neovim that will work for me, and I think this may be it. I am excited to see how this progresses and would even like to try and help contribute if possible. Right now, though, what I am struggling with is understanding what the syntax is to do even just the basics.
Is the syntax a superset/modified version of Markdown?
Are you experiencing errors after updating the plugin to the latest version, and are getting an error along the lines of:
E5108: Error executing lua [string "luaeval()"]:1: Vim(echoerr):E121: Undefined variable: Failed
Error detected while processing BufEnter Autocommands for "*.norg":
E5108: Error executing lua Failed to load parser: uv_dlopen: /home/vhyrro/.local/share/nvim/site/pack/packer/start/nvim-treesitter/parser/norg.so: undefined symbol: tree_sitter_norg_external_scanner_create
Error detected while processing BufEnter Autocommands for "*":
E5108: Error executing lua Failed to load parser: uv_dlopen: /home/vhyrro/.local/share/nvim/site/pack/packer/start/nvim-treesitter/parser/norg.so: undefined symbol: tree_sitter_norg_external_scanner_create
Error detected while processing CursorMoved Autocommands for "*":
E5108: Error executing lua ...start/nvim-treesitter-context/lua/treesitter-context.lua:236: Vim(lua):E5108: Error executing lua Failed to load parser: uv_dlopen: /home/vhyrrolocal/share/nvim/site/pack/packer/start
/nvim-treesitter/parser/norg.so: undefined symbol: tree_sitter_norg_external_scanner_create
Error detected while processing WinScrolled Autocommands for "*":
E5108: Error executing lua Failed to load parser: uv_dlopen: /home/vhyrro/.local/share/nvim/site/pack/packer/start/nvim-treesitter/parser/norg.so: undefined symbol: tree_sitter_norg_external_scanner_create
Failed to get context: Failed to load parser: uv_dlopen: /home/vhyrro/.local/share/nvim/site/pack/packer/start/nvim-treesitter/parser/norg.so: undefined symbol: tree_sitter_norg_external_scanner_create
Fear no more! Simply take a look at the readme present in the unstable
branch and scroll down to the treesitter installation section. We've slightly changed the code snippet as the new parser we're using also includes a scanner. After you've taken that code and replaced it in your own config run :TSUpdate
and voila!
The color for code blocks seems to be hard coded to brown, which I think will not necessarily work for a lot of colorschemes. I think a simpler solution would be to link to a common highlight group but since it's not really clear what highlight group will necessarily be darker than the Normal
background color, what I do in my plugins is use a function which darkens the hex value of the normal background, so it works for most colour schemes without depending on a potentially absent highlight group.
I've also noted that the points after I insert a new line aren't highlighted, no idea why haven't looked into it at all, but just thought I'd mention.
NVIM v0.6.0-dev+1667-g32024787b
Not applicable
unstable
Here is my setup:
require('neorg').setup {
load = {
["core.defaults"] = {},
["core.highlights"] = {},
["core.integrations.telescope"] = {},
["core.integrations.treesitter"] = {
config = {
highlights = {
Heading = {
["1"] = {
Title = "+TSTitle",
Prefix = "+TSTitle",
},
},
},
},
},
["core.keybinds"] = {},
["core.norg.concealer"] = {
config = {
icons = {
heading = {
level_1 = {
icon = "โ",
},
level_2 = {
icon = "โ",
},
level_3 = {
icon = "โ",
},
level_4 = {
icon = "โบ",
},
},
},
},
},
["core.norg.completion"] = {
config = {
engine = "nvim-cmp",
},
},
["core.norg.dirman"] = {
config = {
workspaces = {
org = "~/Org",
},
autodetect = true,
autochdir = true,
},
},
["core.norg.esupports"] = {},
},
}
This is an assortment of bugs which I encountered while working on #80.
The vim-regex responsible for highlighting attached modifiers can break in cases
where the char is actually escaped:
-
broken-
chars at the beginning of lines are being consumed. This breaks unordered
lists, tasks and links as well as the ---
delimiting modifier' appearances.
I believe the reason for this is that pairs like --
are seen as empty
strikethrough objects which the vim regex then hides.
I think the link modifier should generally be hidden, otherwise output like the
following is rather illegibile:
Nested quotes do not get concealed:
If we decide to do this, however, we need to discuss how to differentiate a
two-level quote from a drawer. One possibility is to use the box-drawing char
โ
for quotes instead of the pipe. This looks quite nice, especially for
multi-line quotes like this one:
@embed
When encountering an @embed
tag the TS parser outputs ERROR
as seen below on
the bottom left:
I expected drawers to be one of the first objects to be foldable but this does not work right now.
Update (07. Sep 2021): Drawers are now a thing of the past. We may however introduce a @fold
tag in the future.
<CR>
on links does not work when the link is immediately preceded by an
opening parenthesis like this:
My awesome text ([and this reference](https://github.com/)).
Inlined above
No response
No response
Yes
I think with some minor pointers I will be able to address some of these issues.
This looks interesting but I'm still trying to grok the installation instructions. You list "Packer:" which to the uninitiated (me!) looks like one bundle manager amongst many (I currently use pathogen). It's not clear whether Packer is a hard requirement, or merely a suggestion, and it would be good to clarify that.
I don't see any clear indication as to which Neovim versions are supported, but Packer has >= 0.5.0 (which is newer than Debian have managed to package so far, for example), so if Packer is a hard requirement than that's a transitive minimum Neovim version for neorg, too.
NVIM v0.6.0-dev+8-g75f758b99
I think those errors are from when I was trying to run some neorg commands and are likely not related to the actual bug but regardless, maybe it is connected somehow.
[ERROR petak, 30. srpnja 2021. 18:23:12 CEST] ...r/start/neorg/lua/neorg/modules/core/neorgcmd/module.lua:295: Unable to execute neorg command under name set-mode - minimum argument count not satisfied. The command requires at least 1 arguments.
[ERROR petak, 30. srpnja 2021. 18:24:07 CEST] ...r/start/neorg/lua/neorg/modules/core/neorgcmd/module.lua:295: Unable to execute neorg command under name core.keybinds.trigger - minimum argument count not satisfied. The command requires at least 2 arguments.
[ERROR petak, 30. srpnja 2021. 20:33:11 CEST] ...r/start/neorg/lua/neorg/modules/core/neorgcmd/module.lua:295: Unable to execute neorg command under name nil - minimum argument count not satisfied. The command requires at least 1 arguments.
[ERROR petak, 30. srpnja 2021. 20:33:15 CEST] ...r/start/neorg/lua/neorg/modules/core/neorgcmd/module.lua:295: Unable to execute neorg command under name module.load - minimum argument count not satisfied. The command requires at least 1 arguments.
unstable
neorg.setup({
load = {
["core.defaults"] = {},
["core.norg.concealer"] = {},
["core.norg.dirman"] = {
config = {
workspaces = {
my_workspace = "~/notes",
},
},
},
["core.keybinds"] = {
config = {
default_keybinds = true,
neorg_leader = "<Leader>o",
},
},
},
})
When I close a norg
file, for it to not error out.
When I close a norg
file I get the following error.
I'm closing it with :qa
Error executing luv callback:
...tart/neorg/lua/neorg/modules/core/norg/dirman/module.lua:371: bad argument #3 to 'fs_write' (number expected, got no value)
No response
This happens regardless if there is content in the file or not.
No
No response
Neovim version: v0.6.0-dev+42-geece0735f
There are some function calls in neorg.lua that are found in plenary.nvim. But without it at least my neovim freaked out each time I tried testing neorg with a blank .norg file.
packer.nvim: Error running config for neorg: ...al/share/nvim/site/pack/packer/start/neorg/lua/neorg.lua:46: module 'plenary.async_lib.async' not found:
^Ino field package.preload['plenary.async_lib.async']
^Ino file './plenary/async_lib/async.lua'
^Ino file '/home/ms45/Software/neovim/.deps/usr/share/luajit-2.1.0-beta3/plenary/async_lib/async.lua'
^Ino file '/usr/local/share/lua/5.1/plenary/async_lib/async.lua'
^Ino file '/usr/local/share/lua/5.1/plenary/async_lib/async/init.lua'
^Ino file '/home/ms45/Software/neovim/.deps/usr/share/lua/5.1/plenary/async_lib/async.lua'
^Ino file '/home/ms45/Software/neovim/.deps/usr/share/lua/5.1/plenary/async_lib/async/init.lua'
^Ino file '/home/ms45/.cache/nvim/packer_hererocks/2.1.0-beta3/share/lua/5.1/plenary/async_lib/async.lua'
^Ino file '/home/ms45/.cache/nvim/packer_hererocks/2.1.0-beta3/share/lua/5.1/plenary/async_lib/async/init.lua'
^Ino file '/home/ms45/.cache/nvim/packer_hererocks/2.1.0-beta3/lib/luarocks/rocks-5.1/plenary/async_lib/async.lua'
^Ino file '/home/ms45/.cache/nvim/packer_hererocks/2.1.0-beta3/lib/luarocks/rocks-5.1/plenary/async_lib/async/init.lua'
^Ino file './plenary/async_lib/async.so'
^Ino file '/usr/local/lib/lua/5.1/plenary/async_lib/async.so'
^Ino file '/home/ms45/Software/neovim/.deps/usr/lib/lua/5.1/plenary/async_lib/async.so'
^Ino file '/usr/local/lib/lua/5.1/loadall.so'
^Ino file '/home/ms45/.cache/nvim/packer_hererocks/2.1.0-beta3/lib/lua/5.1/plenary/async_lib/async.so'
^Ino file './plenary.so'
^Ino file '/usr/local/lib/lua/5.1/plenary.so'
^Ino file '/home/ms45/Software/neovim/.deps/usr/lib/lua/5.1/plenary.so'
^Ino file '/usr/local/lib/lua/5.1/loadall.so'
This all went away once I installed plenary, it genuinely caused me some panic and I even recompiled neovim, but it was all fixed with plenary, so maybe plugging it somewhere in the README? Maybe I was too blind and didn't see it mentioned anywhere.
Hello, pressing backspace on prompt selection somehow inserts a new line.
We should lock into the same line.
One of the things that bugs me a lot is the fact that inside core.integrations.treesitter
we perform several calls to require('nvim-treesitter.ts_utils')
. This is pretty unsafe especially since we can't guarantee everyone will have nvim-treesitter installed (even though they should :P)
All we need is a small refactor. During the module's load sequence we perform a pcall-wrapped require call to nvim-treesitter and then store it in a variable and supply a function to reference it (like e.g. core.integrations.treesitter.public.get_ts_utils()
). This is a safer approach and will at least provide a more insightful error message lol. I'm placing this in an issue cause I'm not bothered to do it now but at the same time I don't want to forget it ๐
I believe it's important that I keep this issue up until the release of 0.1. As we approach that milestone closer and closer every day I can't possibly keep updating the docs every single time I make a small change. That's why I've decided to just stop updating the documentation until I feel that our feature set is where I want it to be for the first release. After that happens I will then overhaul the README and the wiki. For you this unfortunately means that without some experience in reading code you're gonna have a bit of a bad time if you're using unstable
:P
If I make a big or significant change then I will post it here. I know it's a bit late but it just occurred to me that this is a good method of informing users about changes without having to update the entirety of the docs lol
I think the most important changes are related to the file format:
/this/
is now italic_this_
is underline@
) need to stay at the beginning of a line. You'll see that if you have realtime indentation enabled Neorg will do this for you. The reason is that until our magical treesitter parser does not become waay more intelligent parsing the contents of tags is an absolute disaster. You have to account for extra indentation, tabs vs spaces etc.. It's horrid.After all wiki documentation is complete all of the markdown files will be ran through a converter to convert them to vim help files so you can easily access them from the comfort of your favourite editor :)
0.5, Treesitter branch = 0.5 compat
Empty..
master
It's an issue with treesitter
It works normally. In the past this configuration worked. I have not used this plugins for a month or so, was working fine last time. So there has been a breaking change recently.
Running :TSUpdate give the following errors
โฏ gcl
nvim-treesitter[norg]: Error during compilation
src/scanner.cc:94:39: error: expected expression
return std::vector({ lhs, static_cast(rhs) });
^
src/scanner.cc:97:27: warning: rvalue references are a C++11 extension [-Wc++11-extensions]
std::vector&& operator|(std::vector&& lhs, TokenType rhs)
^
src/scanner.cc:97:62: warning: rvalue references are a C++11 extension [-Wc++11-extensions]
std::vector&& operator|(std::vector&& lhs, TokenType rhs)
^
src/scanner.cc:100:16: error: rvalue reference to type 'vector<...>' cannot bind to lvalue of type 'vector<...>'
return std::move(lhs);
^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
src/scanner.cc:315:41: error: expected ';' at end of declaration list
std::vector<size_t>& get_tag_stack() noexcept { return m_TagStack; }
^
;
src/scanner.cc:551:27: warning: in-class initialization of non-static data member is a C++11 extension [-Wc++11-extensions]
TokenType m_LastToken = NONE;
^
src/scanner.cc:554:26: warning: in-class initialization of non-static data member is a C++11 extension [-Wc++11-extensions]
size_t m_ParsedChars = 0, m_IndentationLevel = 0;
^
src/scanner.cc:554:50: warning: in-class initialization of non-static data member is a C++11 extension [-Wc++11-extensions]
size_t m_ParsedChars = 0, m_IndentationLevel = 0;
^
src/scanner.cc:560:54: warning: in-class initialization of non-static data member is a C++11 extension [-Wc++11-extensions]
const std::array<int32_t, 6> s_DetachedModifiers = { '*', '-', '>', '|', '=', '~' };
^
src/scanner.cc:118:13: error: use of undeclared identifier 'advance'
advance(lexer);
^
src/scanner.cc:131:13: error: use of undeclared identifier 'advance'
advance(lexer);
^
src/scanner.cc:141:17: error: use of undeclared identifier 'advance'
advance(lexer);
^
src/scanner.cc:148:21: error: use of undeclared identifier 'advance'
advance(lexer);
^
src/scanner.cc:162:13: error: use of undeclared identifier 'advance'
advance(lexer);
^
src/scanner.cc:167:48: error: use of undeclared identifier 'm_Current'
if (lexer->lookahead == ']' && m_Current != '\')
^
src/scanner.cc:169:21: error: use of undeclared identifier 'advance'
advance(lexer);
^
src/scanner.cc:177:17: error: use of undeclared identifier 'advance'
advance(lexer);
^
src/scanner.cc:184:20: error: use of undeclared identifier 'check_link'
return check_link(lexer);
^
src/scanner.cc:188:13: error: use of undeclared identifier 'advance'
advance(lexer);
^
No response
No response
No response
No response
As far as I can tell, comments are implemented by using certain tags, such as @comment ... @end
. But according to the docs, these need to be at the beginning of the line. Is there any way to do inline comments? I currently use markdown a lot and extensively use <!-- -->
to write comments to myself about individual sentences that require editing.
This is somehow related to the add_listener
and to the reset
functions
NVIM v0.6.0-dev+nightly-1026-g274a3504a
[ERROR Thu Aug 26 17:11:55 2021] .../nvim/site/pack/packer/start/neorg/lua/neorg/modules.lua:165: Unable to load module core.norg.qol.toc - module 'neorg.modules.core.norg.qol.toc.module' not found:
no field package.preload['neorg.modules.core.norg.qol.toc.module']
no file './neorg/modules/core/norg/qol/toc/module.lua'
no file '/usr/local/Cellar/luajit-openresty/2.1-20210510/share/luajit-2.1.0-beta3/neorg/modules/core/norg/qol/toc/module.lua'
no file '/usr/local/share/lua/5.1/neorg/modules/core/norg/qol/toc/module.lua'
no file '/usr/local/share/lua/5.1/neorg/modules/core/norg/qol/toc/module/init.lua'
no file '/usr/local/Cellar/luajit-openresty/2.1-20210510/share/lua/5.1/neorg/modules/core/norg/qol/toc/module.lua'
no file '/usr/local/Cellar/luajit-openresty/2.1-20210510/share/lua/5.1/neorg/modules/core/norg/qol/toc/module/init.lua'
no file './neorg/modules/core/norg/qol/toc/module.so'
no file '/usr/local/lib/lua/5.1/neorg/modules/core/norg/qol/toc/module.so'
no file '/usr/local/Cellar/luajit-openresty/2.1-20210510/lib/lua/5.1/neorg/modules/core/norg/qol/toc/module.so'
no file '/usr/local/lib/lua/5.1/loadall.so'
no file './neorg.so'
no file '/usr/local/lib/lua/5.1/neorg.so'
no file '/usr/local/Cellar/luajit-openresty/2.1-20210510/lib/lua/5.1/neorg.so'
no file '/usr/local/lib/lua/5.1/loadall.so'
unstable
Current configuration:
require('neorg').setup {
load = {
['core.defaults'] = {},
['core.norg.concealer'] = {},
}
}
-- This sets the leader for all Neorg keybinds. It is separate from the regular <Leader>,
-- And allows you to shove every Neorg keybind under one "umbrella".
local neorg_leader = "<Leader>" -- You may also want to set this to <Leader>o for "organization"
-- Require the user callbacks module, which allows us to tap into the core of Neorg
local neorg_callbacks = require('neorg.callbacks')
-- Listen for the enable_keybinds event, which signals a "ready" state meaning we can bind keys.
-- This hook will be called several times, e.g. whenever the Neorg Mode changes or an event that
-- needs to reevaluate all the bound keys is invoked
neorg_callbacks.on_event("core.keybinds.events.enable_keybinds", function(_, keybinds)
-- Map all the below keybinds only when the "norg" mode is active
keybinds.map_event_to_mode("norg", {
n = { -- Bind keys in normal mode
-- Keys for managing TODO items and setting their states
{ "gtd", "core.norg.qol.todo_items.todo.task_done" },
{ "gtu", "core.norg.qol.todo_items.todo.task_undone" },
{ "gtp", "core.norg.qol.todo_items.todo.task_pending" },
{ "<C-Space>", "core.norg.qol.todo_items.todo.task_cycle" }
},
}, { silent = true, noremap = true })
end)
No errors when loading.
Error displayed in command line.
No response
Extracting issue from comment on another issue.
I'm seeing the following message when I open a .norg
file.
[neorg] ^Ino file '/usr/local/lib/lua/5.1/loadall.so'
Screenshot:
So far I'm not sure this is actually causing issues.
No
No response
This is a feature request
One of the interesting idea about note-taking is the way of linking notes together: many note taking apps use a graph-based structure instead of a tree-based structure like files.
This is an insanely powerfull idea, and this is how wikis works.
Org mode has org toam that is doing that with some kind of database as a backend, and I think neorg really needs that. At least someone should be able to create a wiki for himself really easily.
Are there plans to create a backend/integration that could handle that way of linking notes together ?
Hi @vhyrro! Thanks a lot for this project, I'm really intrigued by it and I can't wait to see it grow!
I was trying out the code blocks syntax and it seems the following code doesn't highlight ruby as expected:
@code ruby
def my_method(something)
end
@end
Following #7, here I am reporting it :) Thanks again and keep up the great work!
I've realized that as I use Neorg a lot of times the indentation is simply off. I blame this indentation engine to be so bad because of the TS parser (that is still in very early stage). If the TS parser was good, the indentation engine would use that instead of regex. It works, but it could work better. I also think that adding Control + <CR>
and Alt + <CR>
for special types of indentation would also be pretty cool.
I will probably have to put the current implementation to sleep in a few days' time. It will be reimplemented from scratch and will support more advanced lookback and maybe even lookahead if necessary. The goal is for it to be fairly trivial to set up any kind of new indent for Neorg. I hope I can implement this in the coming week ๐ค
I'm starting a thread where we can talk about how could one use neorg on the go. How could one edit notes and stuff on ones smartphone and keep stuff in sync or in git repo?? How do other people do this?
I am personally quite new to neovim and have never dabbled in syncing stuff etc. but I would like to learn? What would be some recommendations on how to do this with neorg if neorg was my main note taking environment?
I am not sure if this is off topic but I think that it makes sense to think/talk about this since it falls in line with the overall philosphy of neorg. What do you think @vhyrro? Am I being stupid here??
Hey @vhyrro - this looks great! I would love to try it out at some point. However, I have a system in place that I am quite comfortable with. Before I want to dive too much into the documentation of neorg
, would there be any way you could make a high level user overview video showing how the day to day person might use neorg
? Something like this video would be outstanding: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SzA2YODtgK4
Thanks!
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