I’m using NvChad and in ~/.config/nvim/lua/core/mappings.lua
there is a keybinding for LSP code action:
["<leader>ca"] = {
function()
vim.lsp.buf.code_action()
-- TODO: write buffer to file
end,
"LSP code action",
},
this keybinding applies the code action, but does not write to file. I want to write changes to file as soon as I’ve applied the code action.
How can I use the documentation at https://neovim.io/doc/ to find the correct function? I’ve tried looking for a write()
function but I could not find anything I can call from lua.
You can call commands and vim functions from lua. To write the current buffer you can: vim.cmd.write()
. Vim functions can be called with vim.fn
.
It is completely fine to use vim functiona and not just pure lua, afaik some vim functions are not ever gonna get a lua alternative cause there is no need.
Thanks for the function signature, but how do I find the documentation for it? Searching for vim.cmd.write()
on the website does not return anything. Maybe it takes in optional arguments or returns some sort of error.
vim.cmd.<command>
calls a command. So vim.cmd.write
is effectively the same as :write
, the arguments passed to the function are the same that the command would take. Check :h vim.cmd()
and for a specific command, e.g. write, you can check :h :write
.
Ok, I found it. list of all vim functions are here :h builtin-function-list
and all commands are here: :h ex-cmd-index
.
From using other programming languages, I’m always looking for a list of functions with a complete function signature, “gotcha” notes, when errors can occur and so on. But vim.cmd()
does not mention anything about if the command that is being passed in will succeed or fail. Nor does it mention anything about a return value. :h :write
mentions that a write might fail, but how could that be detected if it’s being called as vim.cmd.write()
?