Infer parentheses for Clojure, Lisp and Scheme.
https://github.com/eraserhd/parinfer-rust
A full-featured, super fast implementation of Shaun Lebron's parinfer. This repo comes with Vim plugin files that work with Vim8 and Neovim. The Rust library can be called from other editors that can load dynamic libraries.
This plugin, unlike others available for Vim, implements "smart" mode. Rather than switching between "paren" mode and "indent" mode, parinfer uses information about how the user is changing the file to decide what to do.
You need to have rust installed.
If you are using Tim Pope's pathogen
:
$ cd ~/.vim/bundle
$ git clone git@github.com:eraserhd/parinfer-rust.git
$ cd ~/.vim/bundle/parinfer-rust
$ cargo build --release
Plug 'eraserhd/parinfer-rust'
Then, build project using cargo:
$ cd /path/to/parinfer-rust
$ cargo build --release
Or, with optional automatic recompilation on update:
Plug 'eraserhd/parinfer-rust', {'do':
\ 'cargo build --release'}
Add this to your kakrc
plug "eraserhd/parinfer-rust" do %{
cargo build --release
cargo install
}
Re-source your kakrc
or restart Kakoune. Then run :plug-install
. plug.kak
will download, build and install plugin for you.
$ cd ~/my-projects
$ git clone git@github.com:eraserhd/parinfer-rust.git
$ cd parinfer-rust
$ make install
$ cargo build --release
$ cargo install
This links
WebAssembly currently needs the "nigthly" toolchain:
$ rustup update
$ rustup install nightly
$ rustup target add wasm32-unknown-unknown --toolchain nightly
$ cargo +nightly install cargo-web
It can then be built with:
$ cargo +nightly web build --release
You can run tests like so:
$ cargo test # Run the native tests
$ cargo +nightly web test # Test the WebAssembly version
$ vim --clean -u tests/run.vim # Integration tests
Tests are in a nice, readable format in tests/test_*.vim
. Please add tests
for any new features (or even old ones!). You can set the VIM_TO_TEST
environment variable to Vim's path to test weird or different builds.
This wouldn't be possible without the work of others:
- Shaun Lebron - Inventing parinfer and doing the math.
- Case Nelson - Writing the nvim-parinfer, from which VimL code and some inspiration was stolen.