Problem: Not all standard treesitter groups are documented.
Solution: Document them all (without relying on fallback); add default
link for new `*.builtin` groups to `Special` and `@keyword.type` to
`Structure`. Remove `@markup.environment.*` which only made sense for
LaTeX.
Problem: Visual highlight hard to read with 'termguicolors'
(Maxim Kim)
Solution: Set Visual GUI foreground to black (with background=light)
and lightgrey (with background=dark)
(Maxim Kim)
fixes: vim/vim#14024closes: vim/vim#1402534e4a05d02
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
Problem: Visual highlighting can still be improved
Solution: Update Visual highlighting for 8 color terminals,
use uniform grey highlighting for dark and light bg
(Maxim Kim)
Update terminal Visual
1. Use `ctermbg=Grey ctermfg=Black` for both dark and light
This uniforms Visual highlighting between default dark and light colors
And should work for vim usually detecting light background for terminals
with black/dark background colors.
Previously used `ctermfg=White` leaks `cterm=bold` if available colors
are less than 16.
2. Use `term=reverse cterm=reverse ctermbg=NONE ctermfg=NONE`
for terminals reporting less than 8 colors available
If the terminal has less than 8 colors, grey just doesn't work right
closes: vim/vim#1394059bafc8171
Co-authored-by: Maxim Kim <habamax@gmail.com>
Problem: UX of visual highlighting can be improved
Solution: Improve readibility of visual highlighting,
by setting better foreground and background
colors
The default visual highlighting currently is nice in that it overlays
the actual syntax highlighting by using a separate distinct background
color.
However, this can cause hard to read text, because the contrast
between the actual syntax element and the background color is way too
low. That is an issue, that has been bothering colorschemes authors for
quite some time so much, that they are defining the Visual highlighting
group to use a separate foreground and background color, so that the
syntax highlighting vanishes, but the text remains readable (ref:
vim/colorschemesvim/vim#250)
So this is an attempt to perform the same fix for the default Visual
highlighting and just use a default foreground and background color
instead of using reverse.
I also removed the hard-coded changes to the Visual highlighting in
init_highlight. It's not quite clear to me, why those were there and not
added directly to the highlighting_init_<dark|light> struct.
closes: vim/vim#13663
related: vim/colorschemes#250e6d8b4662d
Co-authored-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
Problem: Bundled 'vim' color scheme is written in Vimscript which
implicitly assumes that the file is ported from Vim.
This is not the case, at it is currently the Neovim's way of providing
backward compatibility for color schemes.
Solution: Rewrite it in Lua to indicate that this runtime file comes
from Neovim.