Fennel Nvim Save

running fennel-lang natively in neovim

Project README

fennel-nvim [WIP]

Experimental plugin adding native fennel support to nvim by utilizing neovim's native Lua support. No RPC necessary!

I will likely extend this in the future, but for now I'm just testing out the idea. It should be possible reach seamless integration with a little extra work.

Currently bundled with Fennel 0.4.0-dev, from the current master branch as of this commit.

This is basically just 0.3.0 with an extra docstring or two and better readline completion from the repl (which requires readline.lua to be installed and present on package.path). In the future, I will switch this over to only bundling a full release, and allowing an option to easily supply a custom version.

Install

The usual, either clone this repository to the plugin directory (or in nvim, somewhere on your runtimepath) or a plugin manager of your choice.

Plug 'jaawerth/fennel-nvim' " using vim-plug

Fennel Environment

This plugin runs your Fennel code under a custom environment which you can alter by passing, as a second argument to the functions below, an env table. It inherits from nvim's _G, so you will have access to all normal globals, including neovim's Lua API.

In addition to the above, for convenient it exposes the fennelview function/module as view for easy access.

Usage

The following allows you to run fennel code via Lua in neovim. For the Lua API to manipulate neovim from Lua/Fennel, see :help lua-vim, :help lua, and :help api.

init.fnl

See :help init.fnl. This plugin, when installed on your runtimepath, will automatically look for an init.fnl file in your neovim configuration directories (see :help xdg and :help stdpath). On Linux, this defaults to $HOME/.config/nvim/.

You can disable this behavior as follows in your init.vim:

let g:fennel_nvim_auto_init = v:false

Commands

Eval some Fennel: Fnl

:Fnl (doc doc)
" Output:
" (doc x)
"   Print the docstring and arglist for a function, macro, or special form.

Note: Unlike :lua, this will not work with heredoc (<<) syntax, as that is only available to built-in commands. This behavior may become available in the future when neovim implements :here (per this issue).

Using the fnl#eval(code[, arg][, compileOpts]) function - like luaeval(), you can pass an argument, which will be bound to the magic global _A in the running environment.

:call fnl#eval('(print (.. "Hello, " _A "!"))', 'World')
" outputs: Hello, World!

Run a file: FnlFile

With :FnlFile path/to/file.fnl or simply use FnlFile to source .fnl files from init.vim

For example, if editing some fennel code you want to test in neovim itself,

:FnlFile %

Similarly, you can use fnl#eval(filepath[, compileOpts]).

Execute Fennel on a range of lines: FnlDo

Fennel analog to luado (see :help luado). Select/enter a range of lines (defaults to every line in the buffer) and the expressions you give it will be wrapped in a function, which is executed for every line, with line, linenr passed as named arguments.

" print first 5 lines preceded by line #
:1,5FnlDo (print linenr line)
" print the width of every line in file
:FnlDo (print (string.format "line %d is %d chars wide" linenr (# line)))

Can be invoked as a range function with <range>call fnl#do(exprStr) (see :help call).

Also available from Lua: require('fennel-nvim').dolines(exprStr, firstline, lastline)

Completion

For convenience, this module comes with a couple of functions that can be used with omnifunc. See :help fennel-completion. Note that this will only complete on globals and specials/macros currently, using Neovim's internal Lua/Fennel environment.

Configuration

g:fennel_nvim_auto_init

See :help g:fennel_nvim_auto_init for disabling auto-source of init.fnl

Disable automatic patching of package.loaders

To make require correctly find Fennel modules using fennel.path, package.loaders (or package.searchers in Lua 5.3 environments) is patched to include fennel.searcher. This also makes it possible to require Fennel modules from Lua (it will first look for a Lua module of the same name when requiring from Lua).

This is automatic, but can be disabled by setting g:fennel_nvim_patch_searchers to 0 or v:false before any Fennel is invoked.

From init.vim:

let g:fennel_nvim_patch_searchers = v:false

Lua API

TODO: Further document this API The fennel-nvim Lua module offers an API you can use to eval/load/compile Lua.

local fnl = require('fennel-nvim')

fnl.dofile('path/to/file.fnl')

-- compile some Fennel into Lua for writing
local compiledLua = fnl.compile('path/to/file.fnl')

Automatic package.path --> fennel.path sync

Because neovim sets package.path dynamically on the Lua side based on changes to the runtimepath setting, I've implemented some code that syncs these changes over to fennel.path, replacing ?.lua with ?.fnl, /lua/?/init.lua with /fnl/?/init.fnl, etc.

This behavior can be disabled before running any of the Fennel-executing Vim commands as follows:

local fnlNvim = require('fennel-nvim')
fnlNvim.syncFennelPath = false -- disabling syncing
fnlNvim.resetFennelPath() -- restore to state before sync
Open Source Agenda is not affiliated with "Fennel Nvim" Project. README Source: jaawerth/fennel-nvim
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