NVIM LUAU

Awesome plugins for Neovim

GitHubAdd Plugin

    Tabline

  • akinsho/bufferline.nvim
    944

    A snazzy bufferline for Neovim

  • crispgm/nvim-tabline
    19

    nvim port of tabline.vim with Lua

  • koenverburg/minimal-tabline.nvim
    2

    A minimal tabline, that's it

  • nanozuki/tabby.nvim
    381

    A declarative, highly configurable, and neovim style tabline plugin. Use your nvim tabs as a workspace multiplexer!

  • noib3/nvim-cokeline
    169

    :nose: A Neovim bufferline for people with addictive personalities

  • romgrk/barbar.nvim
    899

    The neovim tabline plugin.

  • Status Line

  • alvarosevilla95/luatab.nvim
    109

    Tabline lua plugin for neovim

  • b0o/incline.nvim
    105

    🎈 Floating statuslines for Neovim

  • datwaft/bubbly.nvim
    167

    Bubbly statusline for neovim

  • feline-nvim/feline.nvim
    564

    A minimal, stylish and customizable statusline for Neovim written in Lua

  • konapun/vacuumline.nvim
    17

    A prebuilt configuration for galaxyline inspired by airline

  • NTBBloodbath/galaxyline.nvim
    118

    neovim statusline plugin written in lua

  • nvim-lualine/lualine.nvim
    1434

    A blazing fast and easy to configure neovim statusline plugin written in pure lua.

  • rebelot/heirline.nvim
    208

    Heirline.nvim is a no-nonsense Neovim Statusline plugin designed around recursive inheritance to be exceptionally fast and versatile.

  • tamton-aquib/staline.nvim
    138

    A modern lightweight statusline and bufferline for neovim in lua. Mainly uses unicode symbols for showing info.

  • windwp/windline.nvim
    280

    Animation statusline, floating window statusline. Use lua + luv make some wind

  • Keybinding

  • b0o/mapx.nvim
    141

    πŸ—Ί A better way to create key mappings in Neovim.

  • folke/which-key.nvim
    1189

    πŸ’₯ Create key bindings that stick. WhichKey is a lua plugin for Neovim 0.5 that displays a popup with possible keybindings of the command you started typing.

  • mrjones2014/legendary.nvim
    210

    πŸ—ΊοΈ A legend for your keymaps, commands, and autocmds, with which-key.nvim integration (requires Neovim nightly)

  • simrat39/rust-tools.nvim
    684

    Tools for better development in rust using neovim's builtin lsp

  • LSP

  • b0o/SchemaStore.nvim
    159

    πŸ› JSON schemas for Neovim

  • folke/trouble.nvim
    1388

    🚦 A pretty diagnostics, references, telescope results, quickfix and location list to help you solve all the trouble your code is causing.

  • jose-elias-alvarez/nvim-lsp-ts-utils
    373

    Utilities to improve the TypeScript development experience for Neovim's built-in LSP client.

  • neovim/nvim-lspconfig
    3936

    Quickstart configurations for the Nvim LSP client

  • nvim-lua/lsp_extensions.nvim
    193

    Repo to hold a bunch of info & extension callbacks for built-in LSP. Use at your own risk :wink:

  • nvim-lua/lsp-status.nvim
    426

    Utility functions for getting diagnostic status and progress messages from LSP servers, for use in the Neovim statusline

  • ray-x/navigator.lua
    572

    Navigate codes like a breeze🎐. Exploring LSP and 🌲Treesitter symbols a piece of 🍰. Take control like a boss 🦍.

  • williamboman/nvim-lsp-installer
    1157

    Neovim plugin that allows you to seamlessly manage LSP servers with :LspInstall. With full Windows support!

  • Guides

  • bennypowers/nvim-regexplainer
    183

    Describe the regexp under the cursor

  • nvim-lua/kickstart.nvim
    2356

    A launch point for your personal nvim configuration

  • Colorschemes

  • catppuccin/nvim
    546

    🍨 Soothing pastel theme for NeoVim

  • dharmx/nvim-colo
    26

    Theming utlilities for neovim. This is very experimental at the moment.

  • ful1e5/onedark.nvim
    174

    Atom's iconic One Dark theme for Neovim, written in Lua

  • HUAHUAI23/nvim-quietlight
    0

    A theme for Neovim with support for LSP, Treesitter, and more.

  • kvrohit/substrata.nvim
    56

    A cold, dark color scheme for Neovim

  • lalitmee/cobalt2.nvim
    7

    cobalt2 theme for neovim in Lua using colorbuddy

  • luisiacc/gruvbox-baby
    42

    Gruvbox theme for neovim with full πŸŽ„TreeSitter support.

  • mhartington/oceanic-next
    986

    Oceanic Next theme for neovim

  • Mofiqul/adwaita.nvim
    38

    Neovim colorscheme using Gnome Adwaita syntax

  • Mofiqul/dracula.nvim
    123

    Dracula colorscheme for neovim written in Lua

  • mrjones2014/lighthaus.nvim
    40

    A Lua implementation of lighthaus-theme/vim-lighthaus

  • navarasu/onedark.nvim
    270

    One dark and light colorscheme for neovim >= 0.5.0 written in lua based on Atom's One Dark and Light theme. Additionally, it comes with 5 color variant styles

  • NTBBloodbath/doom-one.nvim
    74

    doom-emacs' doom-one Lua port for Neovim

  • rebelot/kanagawa.nvim
    738

    NeoVim dark colorscheme inspired by the colors of the famous painting by Katsushika Hokusai.

  • rose-pine/neovim
    310

    Soho vibes for Neovim

  • RRethy/nvim-base16
    301

    Neovim plugin for building a sync base16 colorscheme. Includes support for Treesitter and LSP highlight groups.

  • sunjon/Shade.nvim
    374

    An Nvim lua plugin that dims your inactive windows

  • themercorp/themer.lua
    130

    A simple, minimal highlighter plugin for neovim

  • zanglg/nova.nvim
    82

    Another color scheme for neovim written in lua, WIP

  • Comment

  • danymat/neogen
    373

    A better annotation generator. Supports multiple languages and annotation conventions.

  • Utility

  • echasnovski/mini.nvim
    405

    Neovim plugin with collection of minimal, independent, and fast Lua modules dedicated to improve Neovim (version 0.5 and higher) experience

  • hood/popui.nvim
    42

    NeoVim UI sweetness powered by popfix.

  • meznaric/conmenu
    21

  • mrjones2014/dash.nvim
    132

    πŸƒπŸ’¨ Search Dash.app from your Neovim fuzzy finder. Built with Rust πŸ¦€ and Lua

  • Cursor Line

  • edluffy/specs.nvim
    233

    πŸ‘“ A fast and lightweight Neovim lua plugin to keep an eye on where your cursor has jumped.

  • mg979/vim-visual-multi
    2046

    Multiple cursors plugin for vim/neovim

  • Code Runner

  • FeiyouG/command_center.nvim
    57

    Create and manage keybindings and commands in a more organized manner, and search them quickly through Telescope

  • Extras

  • folke/zen-mode.nvim
    377

    🧘 Distraction-free coding for Neovim

  • goolord/alpha-nvim
    322

    a lua powered greeter like vim-startify / dashboard-nvim

  • Start Up

  • henriquehbr/nvim-startup.lua
    45

    Displays neovim startup time

  • lewis6991/impatient.nvim
    563

    Improve startup time for Neovim

  • Session

  • HUAHUAI23/telescope-session.nvim
    12

    manage your vim session with telescope πŸ”­

  • Fuzzy Finder

  • ibhagwan/fzf-lua
    418

    Improved fzf.vim written in lua

  • nvim-telescope/telescope.nvim
    5023

    Find, Filter, Preview, Pick. All lua, all the time.

  • vijaymarupudi/nvim-fzf
    223

    A Lua API for using fzf in neovim.

  • Misc

  • iggredible/Learn-Vim
    9061

    Learning Vim and Vimscript doesn't have to be hard. This is the guide that you're looking for πŸ“–

  • m-demare/attempt.nvim
    53

    Manage temporary buffers

  • SmiteshP/nvim-gps
    348

    Simple statusline component that shows what scope you are working inside

  • windwp/nvim-autopairs
    1479

    autopairs for neovim written by lua

  • zegervdv/nrpattern.nvim
    43

    Neovim plugin to expand incrementing/decrementing to more formats.

  • Note Taking

  • jakewvincent/mkdnflow.nvim
    97

    Tools for markdown notebook navigation and management

  • nvim-neorg/neorg
    2078

    Modernity meets insane extensibility. The future of organizing your life in Neovim.

  • Motion

  • jinh0/eyeliner.nvim
    170

    πŸ‘€ Move faster with unique f/F indicators.

  • Terminal Integration

  • jlesquembre/nterm.nvim
    35

    neovim plugin to interact with the terminal

  • Scrolling

  • karb94/neoscroll.nvim
    765

    Smooth scrolling neovim plugin written in lua

  • Git

  • kdheepak/lazygit.nvim
    313

    Plugin for calling lazygit from within neovim.

  • zegervdv/settle.nvim
    0

    Settle your merge conflicts from Neovim

  • File Explorer

  • kevinhwang91/rnvimr
    451

    Make Ranger running in a floating window to communicate with Neovim via RPC

  • kyazdani42/nvim-tree.lua
    2040

    A file explorer tree for neovim written in lua

  • Snippets

  • L3MON4D3/LuaSnip
    692

    Snippet Engine for Neovim written in Lua.

  • Browser Integration

  • lalitmee/browse.nvim
    0

    browse for anything using your choice of method

  • Indent

  • lukas-reineke/indent-blankline.nvim
    1272

    Indent guides for Neovim

  • Formatting

  • lukas-reineke/lsp-format.nvim
    248

    A wrapper around Neovims native LSP formatting.

  • Syntax

  • m-demare/hlargs.nvim/
    30

    Highlight arguments' definitions and usages, using Treesitter

  • Splits and Window

  • mrjones2014/smart-splits.nvim
    83

    🧠 Smart, directional Neovim split resizing and navigation. Think about resizing splits in terms of "move the divider to the left/right/up/down".

  • Completion

  • noib3/nvim-compleet
    413

    :zap: An async autocompletion framework for Neovim

  • zbirenbaum/copilot-cmp
    69

    Lua plugin to turn github copilot into a cmp source

  • zbirenbaum/copilot.lua
    100

    Lua plugin for starting and interacting with github copilot

  • Package Managers

  • NTBBloodbath/cheovim
    145

    Neovim configuration switcher written in Lua. Inspired by chemacs.

  • savq/paq-nvim
    408

    🌚 Neovim package manager

  • wbthomason/packer.nvim
    2321

    A use-package inspired plugin manager for Neovim. Uses native packages, supports Luarocks dependencies, written in Lua, allows for expressive config

  • Game

  • ThePrimeagen/vim-be-good
    619

    vim-be-good is a nvim plugin designed to make you better at Vim Movements.

https://github.com/folke/which-key.nvim

πŸ’₯ Which Key

WhichKey is a lua plugin for Neovim 0.5 that displays a popup with possible key bindings of the command you started typing. Heavily inspired by the original emacs-which-key and vim-which-key.

image

✨ Features

  • for Neovim 0.7 and higher, it uses the desc attributes of your mappings as the default label
  • for Neovim 0.7 and higher, new mappings will be created with a desc attribute
  • opens a popup with suggestions to complete a key binding
  • works with any setting for timeoutlen, including instantly (timeoutlen=0)
  • works correctly with built-in key bindings
  • works correctly with buffer-local mappings
  • extensible plugin architecture
  • built-in plugins:
    • marks: shows your marks when you hit one of the jump keys.
    • registers: shows the contents of your registers
    • presets: built-in key binding help for motions, text-objects, operators, windows, nav, z and g
    • spelling: spelling suggestions inside the which-key popup

⚑️ Requirements

  • Neovim >= 0.5.0

πŸ“¦ Installation

Install the plugin with your preferred package manager:

lazy.nvim

{
  "folke/which-key.nvim",
  event = "VeryLazy",
  init = function()
    vim.o.timeout = true
    vim.o.timeoutlen = 300
  end,
  opts = {
    -- your configuration comes here
    -- or leave it empty to use the default settings
    -- refer to the configuration section below
  }
}

packer

-- Lua
use {
  "folke/which-key.nvim",
  config = function()
    vim.o.timeout = true
    vim.o.timeoutlen = 300
    require("which-key").setup {
      -- your configuration comes here
      -- or leave it empty to use the default settings
      -- refer to the configuration section below
    }
  end
}

βš™οΈ Configuration

❗️ IMPORTANT: the timeout when WhichKey opens is controlled by the vim setting timeoutlen. Please refer to the documentation to properly set it up. Setting it to 0, will effectively always show WhichKey immediately, but a setting of 500 (500ms) is probably more appropriate.

❗️ don't create any keymappings yourself to trigger WhichKey. Unlike with vim-which-key, we do this fully automatically. Please remove any left-over triggers you might have from using vim-which-key.

πŸš‘ You can run :checkhealth which-key to see if there's any conflicting keymaps that will prevent triggering WhichKey

WhichKey comes with the following defaults:

{
  plugins = {
    marks = true, -- shows a list of your marks on ' and `
    registers = true, -- shows your registers on " in NORMAL or <C-r> in INSERT mode
    -- the presets plugin, adds help for a bunch of default keybindings in Neovim
    -- No actual key bindings are created
    spelling = {
      enabled = true, -- enabling this will show WhichKey when pressing z= to select spelling suggestions
      suggestions = 20, -- how many suggestions should be shown in the list?
    },
    presets = {
      operators = true, -- adds help for operators like d, y, ...
      motions = true, -- adds help for motions
      text_objects = true, -- help for text objects triggered after entering an operator
      windows = true, -- default bindings on <c-w>
      nav = true, -- misc bindings to work with windows
      z = true, -- bindings for folds, spelling and others prefixed with z
      g = true, -- bindings for prefixed with g
    },
  },
  -- add operators that will trigger motion and text object completion
  -- to enable all native operators, set the preset / operators plugin above
  operators = { gc = "Comments" },
  key_labels = {
    -- override the label used to display some keys. It doesn't effect WK in any other way.
    -- For example:
    -- ["<space>"] = "SPC",
    -- ["<cr>"] = "RET",
    -- ["<tab>"] = "TAB",
  },
  motions = {
    count = true,
  },
  icons = {
    breadcrumb = "Β»", -- symbol used in the command line area that shows your active key combo
    separator = "➜", -- symbol used between a key and it's label
    group = "+", -- symbol prepended to a group
  },
  popup_mappings = {
    scroll_down = "<c-d>", -- binding to scroll down inside the popup
    scroll_up = "<c-u>", -- binding to scroll up inside the popup
  },
  window = {
    border = "none", -- none, single, double, shadow
    position = "bottom", -- bottom, top
    margin = { 1, 0, 1, 0 }, -- extra window margin [top, right, bottom, left]. When between 0 and 1, will be treated as a percentage of the screen size.
    padding = { 1, 2, 1, 2 }, -- extra window padding [top, right, bottom, left]
    winblend = 0, -- value between 0-100 0 for fully opaque and 100 for fully transparent
    zindex = 1000, -- positive value to position WhichKey above other floating windows.
  },
  layout = {
    height = { min = 4, max = 25 }, -- min and max height of the columns
    width = { min = 20, max = 50 }, -- min and max width of the columns
    spacing = 3, -- spacing between columns
    align = "left", -- align columns left, center or right
  },
  ignore_missing = false, -- enable this to hide mappings for which you didn't specify a label
  hidden = { "<silent>", "<cmd>", "<Cmd>", "<CR>", "^:", "^ ", "^call ", "^lua " }, -- hide mapping boilerplate
  show_help = true, -- show a help message in the command line for using WhichKey
  show_keys = true, -- show the currently pressed key and its label as a message in the command line
  triggers = "auto", -- automatically setup triggers
  -- triggers = {"<leader>"} -- or specifiy a list manually
  -- list of triggers, where WhichKey should not wait for timeoutlen and show immediately
  triggers_nowait = {
    -- marks
    "`",
    "'",
    "g`",
    "g'",
    -- registers
    '"',
    "<c-r>",
    -- spelling
    "z=",
  },
  triggers_blacklist = {
    -- list of mode / prefixes that should never be hooked by WhichKey
    -- this is mostly relevant for keymaps that start with a native binding
    i = { "j", "k" },
    v = { "j", "k" },
  },
  -- disable the WhichKey popup for certain buf types and file types.
  -- Disabled by default for Telescope
  disable = {
    buftypes = {},
    filetypes = {},
  },
}

πŸͺ„ Setup

With the default settings, WhichKey will work out of the box for most builtin keybindings, but the real power comes from documenting and organizing your own keybindings.

To document and/or setup your own mappings, you need to call the register method

local wk = require("which-key")
wk.register(mappings, opts)

Default options for opts

{
  mode = "n", -- NORMAL mode
  -- prefix: use "<leader>f" for example for mapping everything related to finding files
  -- the prefix is prepended to every mapping part of `mappings`
  prefix = "",
  buffer = nil, -- Global mappings. Specify a buffer number for buffer local mappings
  silent = true, -- use `silent` when creating keymaps
  noremap = true, -- use `noremap` when creating keymaps
  nowait = false, -- use `nowait` when creating keymaps
  expr = false, -- use `expr` when creating keymaps
}

❕ When you specify a command in your mapping that starts with <Plug>, then we automatically set noremap=false, since you always want recursive keybindings in this case

⌨️ Mappings

⌨ for Neovim 0.7 and higher, which key will use the desc attribute of existing mappings as the default label

Group names use the special name key in the tables. There's multiple ways to define the mappings. wk.register can be called multiple times from anywhere in your config files.

local wk = require("which-key")
-- As an example, we will create the following mappings:
--  * <leader>ff find files
--  * <leader>fr show recent files
--  * <leader>fb Foobar
-- we'll document:
--  * <leader>fn new file
--  * <leader>fe edit file
-- and hide <leader>1

wk.register({
  f = {
    name = "file", -- optional group name
    f = { "<cmd>Telescope find_files<cr>", "Find File" }, -- create a binding with label
    r = { "<cmd>Telescope oldfiles<cr>", "Open Recent File", noremap=false, buffer = 123 }, -- additional options for creating the keymap
    n = { "New File" }, -- just a label. don't create any mapping
    e = "Edit File", -- same as above
    ["1"] = "which_key_ignore",  -- special label to hide it in the popup
    b = { function() print("bar") end, "Foobar" } -- you can also pass functions!
  },
}, { prefix = "<leader>" })
-- all of the mappings below are equivalent

-- method 2
wk.register({
  ["<leader>"] = {
    f = {
      name = "+file",
      f = { "<cmd>Telescope find_files<cr>", "Find File" },
      r = { "<cmd>Telescope oldfiles<cr>", "Open Recent File" },
      n = { "<cmd>enew<cr>", "New File" },
    },
  },
})

-- method 3
wk.register({
  ["<leader>f"] = {
    name = "+file",
    f = { "<cmd>Telescope find_files<cr>", "Find File" },
    r = { "<cmd>Telescope oldfiles<cr>", "Open Recent File" },
    n = { "<cmd>enew<cr>", "New File" },
  },
})

-- method 4
wk.register({
  ["<leader>f"] = { name = "+file" },
  ["<leader>ff"] = { "<cmd>Telescope find_files<cr>", "Find File" },
  ["<leader>fr"] = { "<cmd>Telescope oldfiles<cr>", "Open Recent File" },
  ["<leader>fn"] = { "<cmd>enew<cr>", "New File" },
})

Tips: The default label is keymap.desc or keymap.rhs or "", :h nvim_set_keymap() to get more details about desc and rhs.

πŸš™ Operators, Motions and Text Objects

WhichKey provides help to work with operators, motions and text objects.

[count]operator[count][text-object]

  • operators can be configured with the operators option
    • set plugins.presets.operators to true to automatically configure vim built-in operators
    • set this to false, to only include the list you configured in the operators option.
    • see here for the full list part of the preset
  • text objects are automatically retrieved from operator pending key maps (omap)
    • set plugins.presets.text_objects to true to configure built-in text objects
    • see here
  • motions are part of the preset plugins.presets.motions setting
    • see here
-- make sure to run this code before calling setup()
-- refer to the full lists at https://github.com/folke/which-key.nvim/blob/main/lua/which-key/plugins/presets/init.lua
local presets = require("which-key.plugins.presets")
presets.operators["v"] = nil

πŸš€ Usage

When the WhichKey popup is open, you can use the following key bindings (they are also displayed at the bottom of the screen):

  • hit one of the keys to open a group or execute a key binding
  • <esc> to cancel and close the popup
  • <bs> go up one level
  • <c-d> scroll down
  • <c-u> scroll up

Apart from the automatic opening, you can also manually open WhichKey for a certain prefix:

❗️ don't create any keymappings yourself to trigger WhichKey. Unlike with vim-which-key, we do this fully automatically. Please remove any left-over triggers you might have from using vim-which-key.

:WhichKey " show all mappings
:WhichKey <leader> " show all <leader> mappings
:WhichKey <leader> v " show all <leader> mappings for VISUAL mode
:WhichKey '' v " show ALL mappings for VISUAL mode

πŸ”₯ Plugins

Four built-in plugins are included with WhichKey.

Marks

Shows a list of your buffer local and global marks when you hit ` or '

image

Registers

Shows a list of your buffer local and global registers when you hit " in NORMAL mode, or <c-r> in INSERT mode.

image

Presets

Built-in key binding help for motions, text-objects, operators, windows, nav, z and g

image

Spelling

When enabled, this plugin hooks into z= and replaces the full-screen spelling suggestions window by a list of suggestions within WhichKey.

image

🎨 Colors

The table below shows all the highlight groups defined for WhichKey with their default link.

| Highlight Group | Defaults to | Description | | ------------------- | ----------- | ------------------------------------------- | | WhichKey | Function | the key | | WhichKeyGroup | Keyword | a group | | WhichKeySeparator | DiffAdd | the separator between the key and its label | | WhichKeyDesc | Identifier | the label of the key | | WhichKeyFloat | NormalFloat | Normal in the popup window | | WhichKeyBorder | FloatBorder | Normal in the popup window | | WhichKeyValue | Comment | used by plugins that provide values |