I was starting to get annoyed by all the spell-checks happening inside
strings and comments that underlined words which are not mistakes but
also not in the dictionary.
I don't like the colors of the gruvbox theme in lightline because errors
and warnings are not highlighted. I could fix the theme, but I've been
using instead wombat for a while and find that it looks perfectly fine.
You're supposed to undo the changes that you made to a buffer's
variables when doing filetype-related settings. The variable
'b:undo_ftplugin' contains the commands necessary to revert any changes
that you have made to accomodate this filetype.
I removed the mappings for left and right in a quickfix windows because
I don't use them, and the 'qf' plug-in already maps those (meaning I had
an error when I tried to unmap them after qf already did so).
It also supports navigating the location list history when inside a
location list.
The autoload plug-in idea was taken from this Vimways article:
<https://vimways.org/2018/colder-quickfix-lists/>
ALE can detect if the file you're currently editing is inside a Pipenv
environment, and use the pyls inside your environment to have access to
module definitions.
This doesn't launch pyls inside Pipenv when there's no environment
active for your file.
I want shellcheck to detect which shell is most appropriate on the `sh`
filetype, but explicitly use the `bash` dialect on `bash` and `zsh`
filetypes.
I also really don't like nullary conditions in shell, so I'll screen for
those too.
I might turn on the 'quote-safe-variables' check too, because I think
quoting variables is a good habit to take.
This introduces the '.vim' folder to my dot-files repository. I'll have
to think about splitting my '.vimrc' file into multiple files inside the
'.vim' folder.
I usually code in C99 and C++17 because that's EPITA's guidelines.
I'll have to check out the new C11/C18 features (notably threading and
type genericity...) someday.
I wanted to try something else, lightline seems more fun than the vanilla
statusline, and easier to modify than airline.
This is the bare minimum of status bar for me, without powerline
separators because I don't like them very much, and with basic
vim-fugitive integration.
I couldn't type most of my two letter leader bindings with such a short
timeout... This makes deletions in visual mode a bit longer, but I don't
think that's a terrible tradeoff.
I have never used `gutentags` or `gutentags_plus`, mostly because the
only project that I have done that could have benefited from it (the
Tiger Compiler) did not play well with `universal-ctags`.
To make navigation inside my configuration file easier, I added a
modeline at the end to enable markers for folding and added the markers
on all levels.