Hi Nikolas!

Somehow, Codi.vim escaped from my attention, thanks for letting me know. At
first glance, I would name the following differences:
- Codi.vim seems to work on a line-by-line basis. As far as I see, it
doesn't attempt to guess the structure of the document. LitREPL (in theory)
works with valid Markdown/Latex documents. It uses its own express-parsers
to find out the location of multi-line code/result sections, and transforms
the document accordingly, making it possible to emulate a WYSIWY(with a
little delay)G.
- Codi.vim doesn't seem to preserve the state of the interpreter between
editing sessions. LitREPL, in contrast, keeps the interpreter running with
its stdin/stdout connected to pipes which are pinned as files in the
filesystem. It is also possible to get direct access to the interpreter's
shell. As a possible downside, LitREPL depends on certain Posix tools to
make things work.
- Codi.vim is implemented mostly in Vimscript, while LitREPL depends only
on a small Vim-script wrapper while most of the work is done by a command
line application written in Python. Probably, porting LitREPL to other
editors should be an easier task.
- There are probably other minor differences like the support of ASCII '\r'
symbol required for libraries like tqdm of Python (I see the support of
Preprocessors in Codi.vim, so may be it does have the required support),
the status of Ctrl+C support (LitREPL should support breaking the infinite
loop), other behaviour on long-running commands (I plan to support the
incremental output in LitREPL via files), etc.

BR,
Sergei



пт, 2 сент. 2022 г. в 14:11, N V <nivaem...@gmail.com>:

> Hi Sergei,
>
> Do you know codi.vim ?
> https://github.com/metakirby5/codi.vim
>
> What's the main difference with your plugin ?
> Thank you
> Nicolas
>
> Le jeudi 25 août 2022 à 13:43:07 UTC+2, grr...@gmail.com a écrit :
>
>> Hello. I'm glad to announce a (yet another) plugin for literate
>> programming, for now in Python. Briefly, it aims to get a Jupyter-notebook
>> look-and-feel while editing Markdown or Latex documents in Vim.
>>
>> https://github.com/grwlf/litrepl.vim
>>
>> The plugin detects code/result blocks, pipes their content through the
>> persistently running interpreter and pastes the result back into the file.
>> Python and IPython are currently supported, other languages don't seem to
>> be a problem.
>>
>> Currently, the plugin comes with an application of nearly 500 lines of
>> code and takes less than 100 lines of code itself at the cost of being
>> dependent on Posix APIs like pipes or shell utils.
>>
>> The project is less than a month old, some troubles are possible. Brave
>> testers are welcome, as well as comments.
>>
>> BR,
>> Sergei
>>
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