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Thanks @mluts, will take a look shortly. |
mdiin
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I debated two different approaches: 1. Inject a namespace which loads needed dependencies and uses `clojure.repl/apropos` as a fallback 2. Use a custom classloader with the classpath of the repl project and any dependencies Ultimately I decided against option 2 because it has a lot more upkeep with regards to dynamic evaluation in the repl; e.g. user evals a new defn, that won't be picked up (I think?). The other point is that I know too little about how classloaders work to feel comfortable using a custom one. Omnicomplete function requires the plugin to be able to return data to the client. This was not possible with the async implementation of `run-command`, so I renamed that to `run-command-async` and added `run-command` as a sync alternative. NOTE: This requires clojure-vim/neovim-client#4
mdiin
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May 15, 2018
I debated two different approaches: 1. Inject a namespace which loads needed dependencies and uses `clojure.repl/apropos` as a fallback 2. Use a custom classloader with the classpath of the repl project and any dependencies Ultimately I decided against option 2 because it has a lot more upkeep with regards to dynamic evaluation in the repl; e.g. user evals a new defn, that won't be picked up (I think?). The other point is that I know too little about how classloaders work to feel comfortable using a custom one. Omnicomplete function requires the plugin to be able to return data to the client. This was not possible with the async implementation of `run-command`, so I renamed that to `run-command-async` and added `run-command` as a sync alternative. NOTE: This requires clojure-vim/neovim-client#4
mdiin
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May 16, 2018
I debated two different approaches: 1. Inject a namespace which loads needed dependencies and uses `clojure.repl/apropos` as a fallback 2. Use a custom classloader with the classpath of the repl project and any dependencies Ultimately I decided against option 2 because it has a lot more upkeep with regards to dynamic evaluation in the repl; e.g. user evals a new defn, that won't be picked up (I think?). The other point is that I know too little about how classloaders work to feel comfortable using a custom one. Omnicomplete function requires the plugin to be able to return data to the client. This was not possible with the async implementation of `run-command`, so I renamed that to `run-command-async` and added `run-command` as a sync alternative. NOTE: This requires clojure-vim/neovim-client#4
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Hi, thank you for this repo, i'm glad that there is something like that in the wild.
While i was working on my plugin for vim i encountered a problem with messages thread. When i'm in the middle of accepting rpc request from nvim i can't do requests back to nvim because it will block messages thread forever.
So far these changes worked for me.
...And i think those handlers deserve their own functions