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

    🗺 A better way to create key mappings in Neovim.

  • folke/which-key.nvim
    1189

    💥 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

    🗺️ 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

    🛍 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 🎄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

    🏃💨 Search Dash.app from your Neovim fuzzy finder. Built with Rust 🦀 and Lua

  • Cursor Line

  • edluffy/specs.nvim
    233

    👓 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 🔭

  • 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 📖

  • 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

    👀 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/nvim-neorg/neorg

Neorg - An Organized Future

Neovim Discord License Usage

Your New Life Organization Tool - All in Lua

Summary • Tutorial • Installation • Setup • Usage Modules • Roadmap • Philosophy • FAQ

Summary

Neorg (Neo - new, org - organization) is a Neovim plugin designed to reimagine organization as you know it. Grab some coffee, start writing some notes, let your editor handle the rest.

What is Neorg?

Neorg is an all-encompassing tool based around structured note taking, project and task management, time tracking, slideshows, writing typeset documents and much more. The premise is that all of these features are built on top of a single base file format (.norg), which the user only has to learn once to gain access to all of Neorg's functionality.

Not only does this yield a low barrier for entry for new users it also ensures that all features are integrated with each other and speak the same underlying language. The file format is built to be expressive and easy to parse, which also makes .norg files easily usable anywhere outside of Neorg itself.

To learn more about the philosophy of the project check the philosophy section.

:exclamation: IMPORTANT: Neorg is young software. We consider it stable however be prepared for occasional breaking workflow changes. Make sure to pin the version of Neorg you'd like to use and only update when you are ready.

🌟 Tutorial

🔧 Installation/Quickstart

Neorg requires at least Neovim 0.8+ to operate.

You can install it through your favorite plugin manager:

  • use {
        "nvim-neorg/neorg",
        config = function()
            require('neorg').setup {
                load = {
                    ["core.defaults"] = {}, -- Loads default behaviour
                    ["core.concealer"] = {}, -- Adds pretty icons to your documents
                    ["core.dirman"] = { -- Manages Neorg workspaces
                        config = {
                            workspaces = {
                                notes = "~/notes",
                            },
                        },
                    },
                },
            }
        end,
        run = ":Neorg sync-parsers",
        requires = "nvim-lua/plenary.nvim",
    }
    

    Every time Neorg hits a new release, a new tag is created by us, so you don't have to worry about all the updates inbetween. That means that adding tag = "*" in Packer will update to latest stable release.

    You can also pin Neorg to one specific version through e.g. tag = "2.0.0".


    Want to lazy load? You can use the ft key to load Neorg only upon entering a .norg file:

    use {
        "nvim-neorg/neorg",
        -- tag = "*",
        ft = "norg",
        after = "nvim-treesitter", -- You may want to specify Telescope here as well
        config = function()
            require('neorg').setup {
                load = {
                    ["core.defaults"] = {}, -- Loads default behaviour
                    ["core.concealer"] = {}, -- Adds pretty icons to your documents
                    ["core.dirman"] = { -- Manages Neorg workspaces
                        config = {
                            workspaces = {
                                notes = "~/notes",
                            },
                        },
                    },
                },
            }
        end
    }
    

    Although it's proven to work for a lot of people, you might need to take some additional steps depending on how your lazyloading system and/or Neovim config is set up.

  • Plug 'nvim-neorg/neorg' | Plug 'nvim-lua/plenary.nvim'
    

    You can then put this initial configuration in your init.vim file:

    lua << EOF
    require('neorg').setup {
        load = {
            ["core.defaults"] = {}, -- Loads default behaviour
            ["core.concealer"] = {}, -- Adds pretty icons to your documents
            ["core.dirman"] = { -- Manages Neorg workspaces
                config = {
                    workspaces = {
                        notes = "~/notes",
                    },
                },
            },
        },
    }
    EOF
    
  • require("lazy").setup({
      {
        "nvim-neorg/neorg",
        build = ":Neorg sync-parsers",
        dependencies = { "nvim-lua/plenary.nvim" },
        config = function()
          require("neorg").setup {
            load = {
              ["core.defaults"] = {}, -- Loads default behaviour
              ["core.concealer"] = {}, -- Adds pretty icons to your documents
              ["core.dirman"] = { -- Manages Neorg workspaces
                config = {
                  workspaces = {
                    notes = "~/notes",
                  },
                },
              },
            },
          }
        end,
      },
    })
    

Treesitter

Be sure to have nvim-treesitter installed on your system for this step!

Neorg will automatically attempt to install the parsers for you upon entering a .norg file if you have core.defaults loaded. A command is also exposed to reinstall and/or update these parsers: :Neorg sync-parsers.

It is important to note that installation via this command isn't reproducible. There are a few ways to make it reproducible, but the recommended way is to set up an update flag for your plugin manager of choice. In packer, your configuration may look something like this:

use {
    "nvim-neorg/neorg",
    run = ":Neorg sync-parsers", -- This is the important bit!
    config = function()
        require("neorg").setup {
            -- configuration here
        }
    end,
}

With the above run key set, every time you update Neorg the internal parsers will also be updated to the correct revision.

📦 Setup

You've got the basic stuff out the way now, but wait! That's not all. You've installed Neorg - great! Now you have to configure it. By default, Neorg does nothing, and gives you nothing. You must tell it what you care about!

Default modules

Neorg runs on modules, which are discussed and explained in more depth later on. Each module provides a single bit of functionality - they can then be stacked together to form the entire Neorg environment.

The most common module you'll find is the core.defaults module, which is basically a "load all features" switch. It gives you the full experience out of the box.

The code snippet to enable all default modules is very straightforward:

require('neorg').setup {
    load = {
        ["core.defaults"] = {}
    }
}

You can see here which modules are automatically required when loading core.defaults.

⚙ Usage

A new and official specification is in the works, we recommend reading it here. You can view a summary directly in your neovim instance by running :h neorg if you don't like reading a lot!

Afterwards it's as simple as hopping into a .norg file and typing away.

A good first step is to require the core.dirman module, it'll help you manage Neorg workspaces. Workspaces are basically isolated directories that you can jump between:

require('neorg').setup {
    load = {
        ["core.defaults"] = {},
        ["core.dirman"] = {
            config = {
                workspaces = {
                    work = "~/notes/work",
                    home = "~/notes/home",
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

Changing workspaces is easy, just do :Neorg workspace work, where work is the name of your workspace. Voila!

It works, cool! What are the next steps?

We recommend you add some core modules that can greatly improve your experience, such as:

  • Using the concealer module to enable icons (core.concealer)
  • Setting up a completion engine (core.completion)

Setting these up is discussed in the wiki, so be sure to check there!

You're now basically set! The rest of this README will be additional information, so keep reading if you care about what makes Neorg tick, or you want to genuinely get good at using it.

🥡 Modules

As you saw previously, we loaded core.defaults and recommended that you load core.dirman. As you probably know those are modules. But what are they, exactly?

Modules are basically isolated bits of code that provide a specific subset of features. They can be docked into the environment at any time and can be essentially stacked together like lego bricks! They can bind themselves to events and callbacks and communicate with each other.

To require a module, just do:

require('neorg').setup {
    load = {
        -- Require the module with the default configurations for it
        ["your.required.module"] = {},

        -- Require the module, and override the configurations (with the "config" table)
        ["your.required.module"] = {
            config = {
                some_option = true
            }
        }
    }
}

As always, for a little more info you can consult the wiki page here. To know which configurations are provided by default for a module, just click on their link: you'll go to the module page in the wiki.

Core Modules

Here is a list of core modules that aren't part of core.defaults and can be added individually by you.

Feel free to try by adding them to your Neorg setup.

External Modules

Users can contribute and create their own modules for Neorg. To use them, just download the plugin with your package manager, for instance with Packer:

use {
    "nvim-neorg/neorg",
    requires = "john-cena/cool-neorg-plugin",
}

After that it's as easy as loading the module it exposes normally:

require('neorg').setup {
    load = {
        ["cool.module"] = {},
    }
}

| Module name | Description | | :-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | :----------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | core.integrations.telescope | Neorg integration with Telescope | | external.integrations.figlet | Neorg integration with Figlet |

If you ever end up making a module for Neorg feel free to make a pull request and add it to this README!

❓ Philosophy

Our goals are fairly simple:

  1. Revise the org format: simple, extensible, unambiguous. Will make you feel right at home. Alternate markup formats have several flaws, but the most notable one is the requirement for complex and slow parsers. What if we told you it's possible to alleviate those problems, all whilst keeping that familiar feel? Enter the .norg file format, whose specification can be found here. The cross between all the best things from org and the best things from markdown, revised and merged into one.

  2. Keybinds that make sense: vim's keybind philosophy is unlike any other, and we want to keep that vibe. Keys form a "language", one that you can speak, not one that you need to learn off by heart.

  3. Infinite extensibility: no, that isn't a hyperbole. We mean it. Neorg is built upon an insanely modular and configurable backend - keep what you need, throw away what you don't care about. Use the defaults or change 'em. You are in control of what code runs and what code doesn't run!

  4. Logic: everything has a reason, everything has logical meaning. If there's a feature, it's there because it's necessary, not because two people asked for it. If something has a more niche use case, it should be documented.

📚 FAQ

The wiki is the go-to place if you need answers to anything Neorg-related. Usage, Keybinds, User Callbacks, Modules, Events? It's all there, so we recommend you seriously go read it!

Troubleshooting

If you feel that you're in trouble or some component like Treesitter is not working check the Dependencies.md file for many common issues unrelated to the Neorg core.

Contributing

Have an idea? An improvement to existing functionality? Feedback in general?

We seriously recommend you join our discord to hang out and chat about your ideas, plus that you read the CONTRIBUTING.md file for more info about developer-related stuff!

Credits

Massive shoutouts go to all the contributors actively working on the project together to form a fantastic integrated workflow:

  • mrossinek - for basically being my second brain when it comes to developing new features and adding new syntax elements
  • danymat - for creating the excellent foundations for the up and coming GTD system

And an extra thank you to:

  • Binx - for making that gorgeous logo for free!
  • bandithedoge - for converting the PNG version of the logo into SVG form

Support

Love what I do? Want to see more get done faster? Want to support future projects? Any sort of support is always heartwarming and fuels the urge to keep going :heart:. You can show support here:

  • Buy me a coffee!
  • Support me via Github Sponsors
  • Support me on LiberaPay
  • Support me on Patreon
  • Donate to my monero wallet: 86CXbnPLa14F458FRQFe26PRfffZTZDbUeb4NzYiHDtzcyaoMnfq1TqVU1EiBFrbKqGshFomDzxWzYX2kMvezcNu9TaKd9t
  • Donate via bitcoin: bc1q4ey43t9hhstzdqh8kqcllxwnqlx9lfxqqh439s