Great video. I've spent the last three days watching youtube videos on this concept, trying to find somebody who can explain, step by step, what we are trying to do and why. This was superb. IMO, the best video on this topic.
This is great. Getting nvim setup is a bit of faff compared to vim, mainly because of all the vim tutorials making it confusing. Thanks for doing this at a steady pace. Clear and very informative. Cheers!
There is a great starter guide. Type 'vimtutor' and it will open a file up with a bunch of lessons. I like it because if you already know things you can breeze through it (self-paced), but you might find new and useful commands along the way
Hi great tutorial! I'm very new to git and vim I somehow messed up the push to GitLab & have the plugged directory there... I did add it to the. gitignore file. Is there a way to remove it from GitLab & keep local? Also what files should be on remote as I think the autoload folder is there as well Cheers
Great to hear! To remove files from git, I usually temporarily edit the .gitignore, remove the file, then add the .gitignore line back. If you are feeling more comfortable, you could try 'git clean -xdn' then 'git clean -xdf' which will do a dry-run, then full removal, of unmanaged files (which includes those that match gitignore)
Great video. I've spent the last three days watching youtube videos on this concept, trying to find somebody who can explain, step by step, what we are trying to do and why. This was superb. IMO, the best video on this topic.
This is great. Getting nvim setup is a bit of faff compared to vim, mainly because of all the vim tutorials making it confusing. Thanks for doing this at a steady pace. Clear and very informative. Cheers!
This is the only resource I could ever managed to find. Can be simply called as perfect. Thank you.
Do you realize how awesome you are for doing this video? I don't think you realize just how helpful this is... Liked and subscribed for life. THANKS!
Thanks so much for this! I'm rockin nvim now on all my linux boxes!
im glad that i found this channel
Great setup, and was easy to generalize to my personal setup seeing how you did yours. Thank you.
Excellent video, good to follow through. Thank you!
Thanks for your tutorial, it is great, even more when you talk about coc. 25:30
Excellent tutorial. Working through this and your video was the perfect help
Thanks man! I'm done with your tutorial!
Absolutely amazing tutorial. Brilliant explanation and presentation! Thank you!
Great Video, very informative and beginner friendly!
Cheers! Very good tutorial... I'm still new to Vim do you have any beginner tuts on learning commands etc?
There is a great starter guide. Type 'vimtutor' and it will open a file up with a bunch of lessons. I like it because if you already know things you can breeze through it (self-paced), but you might find new and useful commands along the way
@@LinuxBTW cheers !
Thank you so much for the tutorial! Really useful. Cheers!!!
what are your PS1 settings to get your shell prompt looking like that? Very cool
Thanks so much
Very helpful, thanks!
Great tutorial! Thanks alot.
Thank you very much i've learned a lot in this video
The yellow autocomplete box that pops up...what is that? Why doesn't one pop up in my editor?
You saved my life man
Hi great tutorial! I'm very new to git and vim
I somehow messed up the push to GitLab & have the plugged directory there... I did add it to the. gitignore file. Is there a way to remove it from GitLab & keep local?
Also what files should be on remote as I think the autoload folder is there as well
Cheers
Great to hear! To remove files from git, I usually temporarily edit the .gitignore, remove the file, then add the .gitignore line back. If you are feeling more comfortable, you could try 'git clean -xdn' then 'git clean -xdf' which will do a dry-run, then full removal, of unmanaged files (which includes those that match gitignore)
Great tutorial, thanks
thanks for do this tutorial
Thanks!
Thank you
thanks bro
great video.
Great! Tutorial
great
noice vid lad
100th Liker 😎
So, brad pitt is a programmer