Am I the only one who struggle with cmp comparators? I can’t make any setup to work like I want it to work.

Like come on, diagramIds is literally on the line above …

The comparators aren’t even documented: https://github.com/hrsh7th/nvim-cmp/issues/883

This is the closest thing I could find to usefull: https://github.com/hrsh7th/nvim-cmp/issues/183 but it didn’t help either

How did you manage to cope with this? Is there some reasonable setup for cmp comparators?

  • muntoo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Not sure if this helps, but here’s my ordering:

            sorting = {
              priority_weight = 2,
              comparators = {
                require("copilot_cmp.comparators").prioritize,
                compare.offset,
                compare.exact,
                compare.recently_used,
                compare.score,
                compare.scopes,
                compare.locality,
                compare.kind,
                compare.sort_text,
                compare.length,
                compare.order,
              },
            },
    

    …Realistically copilot is so good that it knows what the next word I’m completing is without even typing in a single character, so this doesn’t bother me like it used to.

  • Lemmy@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    1 year ago

    For me the LSP (via lsp-zero) would produce the completion you are looking for in the example. I don’t know how to make that work without lsp.

  • weilbith@discuss.tchncs.de
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    1 year ago

    Unfortunately having similar issues. It is okayish, but sometimes I feel like there must be something smarter and more context aware too. But I would kind of take the language servers into account here. Though, the specification provides no scoring mechanism. Only a preselect flag which nvim-cmp already supports.

    At the same time this feels like a quite complicate topic. How to actually sort/compare them? In our special case above you would add something based on symbol usage/definition close to your cursor. Which might be a relevant factor. It would be interesting if there some knowledge/science about what actually works best for such a problem.