Not sure if I'll settle on that. I'm currently used to mycli and
litecli.
But sounds useful to have it within the editor to not have different
programs with different configuration and behaviour.
Still use menu like default.
Do not show preview as in default.
Do not insert as in default.
Do not select as in default.
This allows me to see suggestions but continue typing to narrow down.
Also allows me to manually select a result.
That way completion is out of my way but there to support me.
Add for PHP via existing phpactor as server.
Use new signature plugin for proper none irritating inline help during
function calls.
TODO: Get rid of preview window showing up …
Remove the paratest detection.
I consider paratest only for CI and executing a huge set of tests.
But I use vim-test only to execute a single test file or single test.
Do not clear cache on exit. I'm working on huge projects and want a fast
file navigation.
Do not limit number of files as default is already way to low for the
large projects I'm working on.
This eases maintenance as I don't need to commit and push one repo, and
update rev and sha in here.
Instead I can just change configuration and run home-manager switch.
I managed my setup manually.
This commit ports the existing setup to home-manager.
The program module is used to install neovim together with plugins.
Custom plugins are now maintained at Gitea / GitHub and loaded via nix as well.
Place ctags configuration in expected location.
It wasn't loaded due to wrong location.
Do not add typescript as I'm not using typescript anymore on a
professional level.
Create dedicated xdg desktopEntries to start web apps.
Use chromium where necessary, e.g. due to audio / video experiences.
Start web apps with dedicated Firefox profiles.
Configure those profiles to hide any UI to have an actual app feeling.
I created a private repository within `registries/customer-projects`.
This holds flakes.
The folder is registered as registry.
That allows to run the following from within a customer project:
nix run cp\#reuter-phpstan
In order to execute the customer specific application from flake.
The phps used via flake for local development of legacy projects
distributed pre build packages via cachix.
Install cachix and add configuration to allow fetching of pre compiled
packages.
My host does no longer provide any node or npm or yarn.
Project are partially migrated to shell.nix already.
I still need to migrate all projects. But I'm not working to much on
frontend and don't need to re compile assets to often, so no worries.
Some stuff will not work anymore, e.g. coc within neovim needs nodejs.
That's broken for now, but I don't care to much, not sure whether I used
it at all.
That will be part of neovim migration to home-manager / nix.
Do not create desktop item in file system, instead use proper xdg
configuration option. That way we do not need to hard code location of
file and can use a proper set with validation from module.
There is a module for htop, so use that one instead of home.file.
The cool thing is: It has "constants" for some strange integer values.
So nix version is actually readable while the generated config is
strange.
That's a cool pro of nix files.
As we add more and more files, move to set with curly braces.
Maybe home-files is a better approach, but not documented and I don't
understand it to well yet. I guess I've to create a derivation which
"builds" all the files. Maybe to complicated right now.
Might also make sense to build modules for such tools in future where I
can configure within nix, just like git.nix, and it will generate the
config. Might be cool for some things where configs might change, but
the actual things to configure might not. The generation of the file can
change within nix, while configuration within nix stays the same?! ;)
Do not hard code all values, instead configure them within home.nix.
This is more for learning purposes.
But port and allow might also be changed more frequently in general.
home-manager doesn't provide a systemd service itself.
That's why we build one ourself.
That also revealed a change in our directory structure.
The structure is now documented within readme.