| *lua-guide.txt* Nvim | |
| NVIM REFERENCE MANUAL | |
| Guide to using Lua in Nvim | |
| Type |gO| to see the table of contents. | |
| ============================================================================== | |
| Introduction *lua-guide* | |
| This guide will go through the basics of using Lua in Nvim. It is not meant | |
| to be a comprehensive encyclopedia of all available features, nor will it | |
| detail all intricacies. Think of it as a survival kit -- the bare minimum | |
| needed to know to comfortably get started on using Lua in Nvim. | |
| An important thing to note is that this isn't a guide to the Lua language | |
| itself. Rather, this is a guide on how to configure and modify Nvim through | |
| the Lua language and the functions we provide to help with this. Take a look | |
| at |luaref| and |lua-concepts| if you'd like to learn more about Lua itself. | |
| Similarly, this guide assumes some familiarity with the basics of Nvim | |
| (commands, options, mappings, autocommands), which are covered in the | |
| |user-manual|. | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Some words on the API *lua-guide-api* | |
| The purpose of this guide is to introduce the different ways of interacting | |
| with Nvim through Lua (the "API"). This API consists of three different | |
| layers: | |
| 1. The "Vim API" inherited from Vim: |Ex-commands| and |builtin-functions| as | |
| well as |user-function|s in Vimscript. These are accessed through |vim.cmd()| | |
| and |vim.fn| respectively, which are discussed under |lua-guide-vimscript| | |
| below. | |
| 2. The "Nvim API" written in C for use in remote plugins and GUIs; see |api|. | |
| These functions are accessed through |vim.api|. | |
| 3. The "Lua API" written in and specifically for Lua. These are any other | |
| functions accessible through `vim.*` not mentioned already; see |lua-stdlib|. | |
| This distinction is important, as API functions inherit behavior from their | |
| original layer: For example, Nvim API functions always need all arguments to | |
| be specified even if Lua itself allows omitting arguments (which are then | |
| passed as `nil`); and Vim API functions can use 0-based indexing even if Lua | |
| arrays are 1-indexed by default. | |
| Through this, any possible interaction can be done through Lua without writing | |
| a complete new API from scratch. For this reason, functions are usually not | |
| duplicated between layers unless there is a significant benefit in | |
| functionality or performance (e.g., you can map Lua functions directly through | |
| |nvim_create_autocmd()| but not through |:autocmd|). In case there are multiple | |
| ways of achieving the same thing, this guide will only cover what is most | |
| convenient to use from Lua. | |
| ============================================================================== | |
| Using Lua *lua-guide-using-Lua* | |
| To run Lua code from the Nvim command line, use the |:lua| command: | |
| >vim | |
| :lua print("Hello!") | |
| < | |
| Note: each |:lua| command has its own scope and variables declared with the | |
| local keyword are not accessible outside of the command. This won't work: | |
| >vim | |
| :lua local foo = 1 | |
| :lua print(foo) | |
| " prints "nil" instead of "1" | |
| < | |
| You can also use `:lua=`, which is equivalent to `:lua vim.print(...)`, to | |
| conveniently check the value of a variable or a table: | |
| >vim | |
| :lua =package | |
| < | |
| To run a Lua script in an external file, you can use the |:source| command | |
| exactly like for a Vimscript file: | |
| >vim | |
| :source ~/programs/baz/myluafile.lua | |
| < | |
| Finally, you can include Lua code in a Vimscript file by putting it inside a | |
| |:lua-heredoc| block: | |
| >vim | |
| lua << EOF | |
| local tbl = {1, 2, 3} | |
| for k, v in ipairs(tbl) do | |
| print(v) | |
| end | |
| EOF | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Using Lua files on startup *lua-guide-config* | |
| Nvim supports using `init.vim` or `init.lua` as the configuration file, but | |
| not both at the same time. This should be placed in your |config| directory | |
| (run `:echo stdpath('config')` to see where it is). Note that you can also use | |
| Lua in `init.vim` and Vimscript in `init.lua`, which will be covered below. | |
| If you'd like to run any other Lua script on |startup| automatically, then you | |
| can simply put it in `plugin/` in your |'runtimepath'|. | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Lua modules *lua-guide-modules* | |
| If you want to load Lua files on demand, you can place them in the `lua/` | |
| directory in your |'runtimepath'| and load them with `require`. (This is the | |
| Lua equivalent of Vimscript's |autoload| mechanism.) | |
| Let's assume you have the following directory structure: | |
| > | |
| ~/.config/nvim | |
| |-- after/ | |
| |-- ftplugin/ | |
| |-- lua/ | |
| | |-- myluamodule.lua | |
| | |-- other_modules/ | |
| | |-- anothermodule.lua | |
| | |-- init.lua | |
| |-- plugin/ | |
| |-- syntax/ | |
| |-- init.vim | |
| < | |
| Then the following Lua code will load `myluamodule.lua`: | |
| >lua | |
| require("myluamodule") | |
| < | |
| Note the absence of a `.lua` extension. | |
| Similarly, loading `other_modules/anothermodule.lua` is done via | |
| >lua | |
| require('other_modules/anothermodule') | |
| -- or | |
| require('other_modules.anothermodule') | |
| < | |
| Note how "submodules" are just subdirectories; the `.` is equivalent to the | |
| path separator `/` (even on Windows). | |
| A folder containing an |init.lua| file can be required directly, without | |
| having to specify the name of the file: | |
| >lua | |
| require('other_modules') -- loads other_modules/init.lua | |
| < | |
| Requiring a nonexistent module or a module which contains syntax errors aborts | |
| the currently executing script. `pcall()` may be used to catch such errors. The | |
| following example tries to load the `module_with_error` and only calls one of | |
| its functions if this succeeds and prints an error message otherwise: | |
| >lua | |
| local ok, mymod = pcall(require, 'module_with_error') | |
| if not ok then | |
| print("Module had an error") | |
| else | |
| mymod.func() | |
| end | |
| < | |
| In contrast to |:source|, |require()| not only searches through all `lua/` directories | |
| under |'runtimepath'|, it also caches the module on first use. Calling | |
| `require()` a second time will therefore _not_ execute the script again and | |
| instead return the cached file. To rerun the file, you need to remove it from | |
| the cache manually first: | |
| >lua | |
| package.loaded['myluamodule'] = nil | |
| require('myluamodule') -- read and execute the module again from disk | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| See also: | |
| • |lua-module-load| | |
| • |pcall()| | |
| ============================================================================== | |
| Using Vim commands and functions from Lua *lua-guide-vimscript* | |
| All Vim commands and functions are accessible from Lua. | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Vim commands *lua-guide-vim-commands* | |
| To run an arbitrary Vim command from Lua, pass it as a string to |vim.cmd()|: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.cmd("colorscheme habamax") | |
| < | |
| Note that special characters will need to be escaped with backslashes: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.cmd("%s/\\Vfoo/bar/g") | |
| < | |
| An alternative is to use a literal string (see |lua-literal|) delimited by | |
| double brackets `[[ ]]` as in | |
| >lua | |
| vim.cmd([[%s/\Vfoo/bar/g]]) | |
| < | |
| Another benefit of using literal strings is that they can be multiple lines; | |
| this allows you to pass multiple commands to a single call of |vim.cmd()|: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.cmd([[ | |
| highlight Error guibg=red | |
| highlight link Warning Error | |
| ]]) | |
| < | |
| This is the converse of |:lua-heredoc| and allows you to include Vimscript | |
| code in your `init.lua`. | |
| If you want to build your Vim command programmatically, the following form can | |
| be useful (all these are equivalent to the corresponding line above): | |
| >lua | |
| vim.cmd.colorscheme("habamax") | |
| vim.cmd.highlight({ "Error", "guibg=red" }) | |
| vim.cmd.highlight({ "link", "Warning", "Error" }) | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Vimscript functions *lua-guide-vim-functions* | |
| Use |vim.fn| to call Vimscript functions from Lua. Data types between Lua and | |
| Vimscript are automatically converted: | |
| >lua | |
| print(vim.fn.printf('Hello from %s', 'Lua')) | |
| local reversed_list = vim.fn.reverse({ 'a', 'b', 'c' }) | |
| vim.print(reversed_list) -- { "c", "b", "a" } | |
| local function print_stdout(chan_id, data, name) | |
| print(data[1]) | |
| end | |
| vim.fn.jobstart('ls', { on_stdout = print_stdout }) | |
| < | |
| This works for both |builtin-functions| and |user-function|s. | |
| Note that hashes (`#`) are not valid characters for identifiers in Lua, so, | |
| e.g., |autoload| functions have to be called with this syntax: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.fn['my#autoload#function']() | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| See also: | |
| • |builtin-functions|: alphabetic list of all Vimscript functions | |
| • |function-list|: list of all Vimscript functions grouped by topic | |
| • |:runtime|: run all Lua scripts matching a pattern in |'runtimepath'| | |
| • |package.path|: list of all paths searched by `require()` | |
| ============================================================================== | |
| Variables *lua-guide-variables* | |
| Variables can be set and read using the following wrappers, which directly | |
| correspond to their |variable-scope|: | |
| • |vim.g|: global variables (|g:|) | |
| • |vim.b|: variables for the current buffer (|b:|) | |
| • |vim.w|: variables for the current window (|w:|) | |
| • |vim.t|: variables for the current tabpage (|t:|) | |
| • |vim.v|: predefined Vim variables (|v:|) | |
| • |vim.env|: environment variables defined in the editor session | |
| Data types are converted automatically. For example: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.g.some_global_variable = { | |
| key1 = "value", | |
| key2 = 300 | |
| } | |
| vim.print(vim.g.some_global_variable) | |
| --> { key1 = "value", key2 = 300 } | |
| < | |
| You can target specific buffers (via number), windows (via |window-ID|), or | |
| tabpages by indexing the wrappers: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.b[2].myvar = 1 -- set myvar for buffer number 2 | |
| vim.w[1005].myothervar = true -- set myothervar for window ID 1005 | |
| < | |
| Some variable names may contain characters that cannot be used for identifiers | |
| in Lua. You can still manipulate these variables by using the syntax | |
| >lua | |
| vim.g['my#variable'] = 1 | |
| < | |
| Note that you cannot directly change fields of array variables. This won't | |
| work: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.g.some_global_variable.key2 = 400 | |
| vim.print(vim.g.some_global_variable) | |
| --> { key1 = "value", key2 = 300 } | |
| < | |
| Instead, you need to create an intermediate Lua table and change this: | |
| >lua | |
| local temp_table = vim.g.some_global_variable | |
| temp_table.key2 = 400 | |
| vim.g.some_global_variable = temp_table | |
| vim.print(vim.g.some_global_variable) | |
| --> { key1 = "value", key2 = 400 } | |
| < | |
| To delete a variable, simply set it to `nil`: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.g.myvar = nil | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| See also: | |
| • |lua-vim-variables| | |
| ============================================================================== | |
| Options *lua-guide-options* | |
| There are two complementary ways of setting |options| via Lua. | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| vim.opt | |
| The most convenient way for setting global and local options, e.g., in `init.lua`, | |
| is through `vim.opt` and friends: | |
| • |vim.opt|: behaves like |:set| | |
| • |vim.opt_global|: behaves like |:setglobal| | |
| • |vim.opt_local|: behaves like |:setlocal| | |
| For example, the Vimscript commands | |
| >vim | |
| set smarttab | |
| set nosmarttab | |
| < | |
| are equivalent to | |
| >lua | |
| vim.opt.smarttab = true | |
| vim.opt.smarttab = false | |
| < | |
| In particular, they allow an easy way to working with list-like, map-like, and | |
| set-like options through Lua tables: Instead of | |
| >vim | |
| set wildignore=*.o,*.a,__pycache__ | |
| set listchars=space:_,tab:>~ | |
| set formatoptions=njt | |
| < | |
| you can use | |
| >lua | |
| vim.opt.wildignore = { '*.o', '*.a', '__pycache__' } | |
| vim.opt.listchars = { space = '_', tab = '>~' } | |
| vim.opt.formatoptions = { n = true, j = true, t = true } | |
| < | |
| These wrappers also come with methods that work similarly to their |:set+=|, | |
| |:set^=| and |:set-=| counterparts in Vimscript: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.opt.shortmess:append({ I = true }) | |
| vim.opt.wildignore:prepend('*.o') | |
| vim.opt.whichwrap:remove({ 'b', 's' }) | |
| < | |
| The price to pay is that you cannot access the option values directly but must | |
| use |vim.opt:get()|: | |
| >lua | |
| print(vim.opt.smarttab) | |
| --> {...} (big table) | |
| print(vim.opt.smarttab:get()) | |
| --> false | |
| vim.print(vim.opt.listchars:get()) | |
| --> { space = '_', tab = '>~' } | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| vim.o | |
| For this reason, there exists a more direct variable-like access using `vim.o` | |
| and friends, similarly to how you can get and set options via `:echo &number` | |
| and `:let &listchars='space:_,tab:>~'`: | |
| • |vim.o|: behaves like |:set| | |
| • |vim.go|: behaves like |:setglobal| | |
| • |vim.bo|: for buffer-scoped options | |
| • |vim.wo|: for window-scoped options (can be double indexed) | |
| For example: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.o.smarttab = false -- :set nosmarttab | |
| print(vim.o.smarttab) | |
| --> false | |
| vim.o.listchars = 'space:_,tab:>~' -- :set listchars='space:_,tab:>~' | |
| print(vim.o.listchars) | |
| --> 'space:_,tab:>~' | |
| vim.o.isfname = vim.o.isfname .. ',@-@' -- :set isfname+=@-@ | |
| print(vim.o.isfname) | |
| --> '@,48-57,/,.,-,_,+,,,#,$,%,~,=,@-@' | |
| vim.bo.shiftwidth = 4 -- :setlocal shiftwidth=4 | |
| print(vim.bo.shiftwidth) | |
| --> 4 | |
| < | |
| Just like variables, you can specify a buffer number or |window-ID| for buffer | |
| and window options, respectively. If no number is given, the current buffer or | |
| window is used: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.bo[4].expandtab = true -- sets expandtab to true in buffer 4 | |
| vim.wo.number = true -- sets number to true in current window | |
| vim.wo[0].number = true -- same as above | |
| vim.wo[0][0].number = true -- sets number to true in current buffer | |
| -- in current window only | |
| print(vim.wo[0].number) --> true | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| See also: | |
| • |lua-options| | |
| ============================================================================== | |
| Mappings *lua-guide-mappings* | |
| You can map either Vim commands or Lua functions to key sequences. | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Creating mappings *lua-guide-mappings-set* | |
| Mappings can be created using |vim.keymap.set()|. This function takes three | |
| mandatory arguments: | |
| • {mode} is a string or a table of strings containing the mode | |
| prefix for which the mapping will take effect. The prefixes are the ones | |
| listed in |:map-modes|, or "!" for |:map!|, or empty string for |:map|. | |
| • {lhs} is a string with the key sequences that should trigger the mapping. | |
| • {rhs} is either a string with a Vim command or a Lua function that should | |
| be executed when the {lhs} is entered. | |
| An empty string is equivalent to |<Nop>|, which disables a key. | |
| Examples: | |
| >lua | |
| -- Normal mode mapping for Vim command | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '<Leader>ex1', '<cmd>echo "Example 1"<cr>') | |
| -- Normal and Command-line mode mapping for Vim command | |
| vim.keymap.set({'n', 'c'}, '<Leader>ex2', '<cmd>echo "Example 2"<cr>') | |
| -- Normal mode mapping for Lua function | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '<Leader>ex3', vim.treesitter.start) | |
| -- Normal mode mapping for Lua function with arguments | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '<Leader>ex4', function() print('Example 4') end) | |
| < | |
| You can map functions from Lua modules via | |
| >lua | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '<Leader>pl1', require('plugin').action) | |
| < | |
| Note that this loads the plugin at the time the mapping is defined. If you | |
| want to defer the loading to the time when the mapping is executed (as for | |
| |autoload| functions), wrap it in `function() end`: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '<Leader>pl2', function() require('plugin').action() end) | |
| < | |
| The fourth, optional, argument is a table with keys that modify the behavior | |
| of the mapping such as those from |:map-arguments|. The following are the most | |
| useful options: | |
| • `buffer`: If given, only set the mapping for the buffer with the specified | |
| number; `0` or `true` means the current buffer. >lua | |
| -- set mapping for the current buffer | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '<Leader>pl1', require('plugin').action, { buffer = true }) | |
| -- set mapping for the buffer number 4 | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '<Leader>pl1', require('plugin').action, { buffer = 4 }) | |
| < | |
| • `silent`: If set to `true`, suppress output such as error messages. >lua | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '<Leader>pl1', require('plugin').action, { silent = true }) | |
| < | |
| • `expr`: If set to `true`, do not execute the {rhs} but use the return value | |
| as input. Special |keycodes| are converted automatically. For example, the following | |
| mapping replaces <down> with <c-n> in the popupmenu only: >lua | |
| vim.keymap.set('c', '<down>', function() | |
| if vim.fn.pumvisible() == 1 then return '<c-n>' end | |
| return '<down>' | |
| end, { expr = true }) | |
| < | |
| • `desc`: A string that is shown when listing mappings with, e.g., |:map|. | |
| This is useful since Lua functions as {rhs} are otherwise only listed as | |
| `Lua: <number> <source file>:<line>`. Plugins should therefore always use this | |
| for mappings they create. >lua | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '<Leader>pl1', require('plugin').action, | |
| { desc = 'Execute action from plugin' }) | |
| < | |
| • `remap`: By default, all mappings are nonrecursive (i.e., |vim.keymap.set()| | |
| behaves like |:noremap|). If the {rhs} is itself a mapping that should be | |
| executed, set `remap = true`: >lua | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '<Leader>ex1', '<cmd>echo "Example 1"<cr>') | |
| -- add a shorter mapping | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', 'e', '<Leader>ex1', { remap = true }) | |
| < | |
| Note: |<Plug>| mappings are always expanded even with the default `remap = false`: >lua | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', '[%', '<Plug>(MatchitNormalMultiBackward)') | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Removing mappings *lua-guide-mappings-del* | |
| A specific mapping can be removed with |vim.keymap.del()|: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.keymap.del('n', '<Leader>ex1') | |
| vim.keymap.del({'n', 'c'}, '<Leader>ex2', {buffer = true}) | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| See also: | |
| • `vim.api.`|nvim_get_keymap()|: return all global mapping | |
| • `vim.api.`|nvim_buf_get_keymap()|: return all mappings for buffer | |
| ============================================================================== | |
| Autocommands *lua-guide-autocommands* | |
| An |autocommand| is a Vim command or a Lua function that is automatically | |
| executed whenever one or more |events| are triggered, e.g., when a file is | |
| read or written, or when a window is created. These are accessible from Lua | |
| through the Nvim API. | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Creating autocommands *lua-guide-autocommand-create* | |
| Autocommands are created using `vim.api.`|nvim_create_autocmd()|, which takes | |
| two mandatory arguments: | |
| • {event}: a string or table of strings containing the event(s) which should | |
| trigger the command or function. | |
| • {opts}: a table with keys that control what should happen when the event(s) | |
| are triggered. | |
| The most important options are: | |
| • `pattern`: A string or table of strings containing the |autocmd-pattern|. | |
| Note: Environment variable like `$HOME` and `~` are not automatically | |
| expanded; you need to explicitly use `vim.fn.`|expand()| for this. | |
| • `command`: A string containing a Vim command. | |
| • `callback`: A Lua function. | |
| You must specify one and only one of `command` and `callback`. If `pattern` is | |
| omitted, it defaults to `pattern = '*'`. | |
| Examples: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd({"BufEnter", "BufWinEnter"}, { | |
| pattern = {"*.c", "*.h"}, | |
| command = "echo 'Entering a C or C++ file'", | |
| }) | |
| -- Same autocommand written with a Lua function instead | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd({"BufEnter", "BufWinEnter"}, { | |
| pattern = {"*.c", "*.h"}, | |
| callback = function() print("Entering a C or C++ file") end, | |
| }) | |
| -- User event triggered by MyPlugin | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("User", { | |
| pattern = "MyPlugin", | |
| callback = function() print("My Plugin Works!") end, | |
| }) | |
| < | |
| Nvim will always call a Lua function with a single table containing information | |
| about the triggered autocommand. The most useful keys are | |
| • `match`: a string that matched the `pattern` (see |<amatch>|) | |
| • `buf`: the number of the buffer the event was triggered in (see |<abuf>|) | |
| • `file`: the file name of the buffer the event was triggered in (see |<afile>|) | |
| • `data`: a table with other relevant data that is passed for some events | |
| For example, this allows you to set buffer-local mappings for some filetypes: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("FileType", { | |
| pattern = "lua", | |
| callback = function(args) | |
| vim.keymap.set('n', 'K', vim.lsp.buf.hover, { buffer = args.buf }) | |
| end | |
| }) | |
| < | |
| This means that if your callback itself takes an (even optional) argument, you | |
| must wrap it in `function() end` to avoid an error: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd('TextYankPost', { | |
| callback = function() vim.hl.on_yank() end | |
| }) | |
| < | |
| (Since unused arguments can be omitted in Lua function definitions, this is | |
| equivalent to `function(args) ... end`.) | |
| Instead of using a pattern, you can create a buffer-local autocommand (see | |
| |autocmd-buflocal|) with `buffer`; in this case, `pattern` cannot be used: | |
| >lua | |
| -- set autocommand for current buffer | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("CursorHold", { | |
| buffer = 0, | |
| callback = function() print("hold") end, | |
| }) | |
| -- set autocommand for buffer number 33 | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("CursorHold", { | |
| buffer = 33, | |
| callback = function() print("hold") end, | |
| }) | |
| < | |
| Similarly to mappings, you can (and should) add a description using `desc`: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd('TextYankPost', { | |
| callback = function() vim.hl.on_yank() end, | |
| desc = "Briefly highlight yanked text" | |
| }) | |
| < | |
| Finally, you can group autocommands using the `group` key; this will be | |
| covered in detail in the next section. | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Grouping autocommands *lua-guide-autocommands-group* | |
| Autocommand groups can be used to group related autocommands together; see | |
| |autocmd-groups|. This is useful for organizing autocommands and especially | |
| for preventing autocommands to be set multiple times. | |
| Groups can be created with `vim.api.`|nvim_create_augroup()|. This function | |
| takes two mandatory arguments: a string with the name of a group and a table | |
| determining whether the group should be cleared (i.e., all grouped | |
| autocommands removed) if it already exists. The function returns a number that | |
| is the internal identifier of the group. Groups can be specified either by | |
| this identifier or by the name (but only if the group has been created first). | |
| For example, a common Vimscript pattern for autocommands defined in files that | |
| may be reloaded is | |
| >vim | |
| augroup vimrc | |
| " Remove all vimrc autocommands | |
| autocmd! | |
| au BufNewFile,BufRead *.html set shiftwidth=4 | |
| au BufNewFile,BufRead *.html set expandtab | |
| augroup END | |
| < | |
| This is equivalent to the following Lua code: | |
| >lua | |
| local mygroup = vim.api.nvim_create_augroup('vimrc', { clear = true }) | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd({ 'BufNewFile', 'BufRead' }, { | |
| pattern = '*.html', | |
| group = mygroup, | |
| command = 'set shiftwidth=4', | |
| }) | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd({ 'BufNewFile', 'BufRead' }, { | |
| pattern = '*.html', | |
| group = 'vimrc', -- equivalent to group=mygroup | |
| command = 'set expandtab', | |
| }) | |
| < | |
| Autocommand groups are unique for a given name, so you can reuse them, e.g., | |
| in a different file: | |
| >lua | |
| local mygroup = vim.api.nvim_create_augroup('vimrc', { clear = false }) | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd({ 'BufNewFile', 'BufRead' }, { | |
| pattern = '*.c', | |
| group = mygroup, | |
| command = 'set noexpandtab', | |
| }) | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Deleting autocommands *lua-guide-autocommands-delete* | |
| You can use `vim.api.`|nvim_clear_autocmds()| to remove autocommands. This | |
| function takes a single mandatory argument that is a table of keys describing | |
| the autocommands that are to be removed: | |
| >lua | |
| -- Delete all BufEnter and InsertLeave autocommands | |
| vim.api.nvim_clear_autocmds({event = {"BufEnter", "InsertLeave"}}) | |
| -- Delete all autocommands that uses "*.py" pattern | |
| vim.api.nvim_clear_autocmds({pattern = "*.py"}) | |
| -- Delete all autocommands in group "scala" | |
| vim.api.nvim_clear_autocmds({group = "scala"}) | |
| -- Delete all ColorScheme autocommands in current buffer | |
| vim.api.nvim_clear_autocmds({event = "ColorScheme", buffer = 0 }) | |
| < | |
| Note: Autocommands in groups will only be removed if the `group` key is | |
| specified, even if another option matches it. | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| See also | |
| • |nvim_get_autocmds()|: return all matching autocommands | |
| • |nvim_exec_autocmds()|: execute all matching autocommands | |
| ============================================================================== | |
| User commands *lua-guide-commands* | |
| |user-commands| are custom Vim commands that call a Vimscript or Lua function. | |
| Just like built-in commands, they can have arguments, act on ranges, or have | |
| custom completion of arguments. As these are most useful for plugins, we will | |
| cover only the basics of this advanced topic. | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Creating user commands *lua-guide-commands-create* | |
| User commands can be created via |nvim_create_user_command()|. This function | |
| takes three mandatory arguments: | |
| • a string that is the name of the command (which must start with an uppercase | |
| letter to distinguish it from builtin commands); | |
| • a string containing Vim commands or a Lua function that is executed when the | |
| command is invoked; | |
| • a table with |command-attributes|; in addition, it can contain the keys | |
| `desc` (a string describing the command); `force` (set to `false` to avoid | |
| replacing an already existing command with the same name), and `preview` (a | |
| Lua function that is used for |:command-preview|). | |
| Example: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_user_command('Test', 'echo "It works!"', {}) | |
| vim.cmd.Test() | |
| --> It works! | |
| < | |
| (Note that the third argument is mandatory even if no attributes are given.) | |
| Lua functions are called with a single table argument containing arguments and | |
| modifiers. The most important are: | |
| • `name`: a string with the command name | |
| • `fargs`: a table containing the command arguments split by whitespace (see |<f-args>|) | |
| • `bang`: `true` if the command was executed with a `!` modifier (see |<bang>|) | |
| • `line1`: the starting line number of the command range (see |<line1>|) | |
| • `line2`: the final line number of the command range (see |<line2>|) | |
| • `range`: the number of items in the command range: 0, 1, or 2 (see |<range>|) | |
| • `count`: any count supplied (see |<count>|) | |
| • `smods`: a table containing the command modifiers (see |<mods>|) | |
| For example: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_user_command('Upper', | |
| function(opts) | |
| print(string.upper(opts.fargs[1])) | |
| end, | |
| { nargs = 1 }) | |
| vim.cmd.Upper('foo') | |
| --> FOO | |
| < | |
| The `complete` attribute can take a Lua function in addition to the | |
| attributes listed in |:command-complete|. >lua | |
| vim.api.nvim_create_user_command('Upper', | |
| function(opts) | |
| print(string.upper(opts.fargs[1])) | |
| end, | |
| { nargs = 1, | |
| complete = function(ArgLead, CmdLine, CursorPos) | |
| -- return completion candidates as a list-like table | |
| return { "foo", "bar", "baz" } | |
| end, | |
| }) | |
| < | |
| Buffer-local user commands are created with `vim.api.`|nvim_buf_create_user_command()|. | |
| Here the first argument is the buffer number (`0` being the current buffer); | |
| the remaining arguments are the same as for |nvim_create_user_command()|: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.api.nvim_buf_create_user_command(0, 'Upper', | |
| function(opts) | |
| print(string.upper(opts.fargs[1])) | |
| end, | |
| { nargs = 1 }) | |
| < | |
| ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ | |
| Deleting user commands *lua-guide-commands-delete* | |
| User commands can be deleted with `vim.api.`|nvim_del_user_command()|. The only | |
| argument is the name of the command: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.api.nvim_del_user_command('Upper') | |
| < | |
| To delete buffer-local user commands use `vim.api.`|nvim_buf_del_user_command()|. | |
| Here the first argument is the buffer number (`0` being the current buffer), | |
| and second is command name: | |
| >lua | |
| vim.api.nvim_buf_del_user_command(4, 'Upper') | |
| < | |
| ============================================================================== | |
| Credits *lua-guide-credits* | |
| This guide is in large part taken from nanotee's Lua guide: | |
| https://github.com/nanotee/nvim-lua-guide | |
| Thank you @nanotee! | |
| vim:tw=78:ts=8:sw=4:sts=4:et:ft=help:norl: | |