*nvim.txt* Nvim NVIM REFERENCE MANUAL Nvim *nvim* *neovim* *nvim-intro* Nvim is based on Vim by Bram Moolenaar. Nvim is emphatically a fork of Vim, not a clone: compatibility with Vim (especially editor and Vimscript features, except |Vim9script|) is maintained where possible. See |vim-differences| for the complete reference. If you already use Vim, see |nvim-from-vim| for a quickstart. If you just installed Nvim and have never used it before, watch this 10-minute video: https://youtu.be/TQn2hJeHQbM . To learn how to use Vim in 30 minutes, try the tutorial: >vim :Tutor < Type |gO| to see the table of contents. ============================================================================== Transitioning from Vim *nvim-from-vim* 1. To start the transition, create your |init.vim| (user config) file: >vim :exe 'edit '.stdpath('config').'/init.vim' :write ++p 2. Add these contents to the file: >vim set runtimepath^=~/.vim runtimepath+=~/.vim/after let &packpath = &runtimepath source ~/.vimrc 3. Restart Nvim, your existing Vim config will be loaded. See |provider-python| and |provider-clipboard| for additional software you might need to use some features. Your Vim configuration might not be entirely Nvim-compatible (see |vim-differences|). For example the |'ttymouse'| option was removed from Nvim, because mouse support is always enabled if possible. If you use the same |vimrc| for Vim and Nvim you could guard |'ttymouse'| in your configuration like so: >vim if !has('nvim') set ttymouse=xterm2 endif And for Nvim-specific configuration, you can do this: >vim if has('nvim') tnoremap endif For a more granular approach use |exists()|: >vim if exists(':tnoremap') tnoremap endif Now you should be able to explore Nvim more comfortably. Check |nvim-features| for more information. *portable-config* Because Nvim follows the XDG |base-directories| standard, configuration on Windows is stored in ~/AppData instead of ~/.config. But you can still share the same Nvim configuration on all of your machines, by creating ~/AppData/Local/nvim/init.vim containing just this line: >vim source ~/.config/nvim/init.vim ============================================================================== What next? *nvim-quickstart* If you are just trying out Nvim for a few minutes, and want to see the extremes of what it can do, try one of these popular "extension packs" or "distributions" (Note: Nvim is not affiliated with these projects, and does not support them): - *kickstart* https://github.com/nvim-lua/kickstart.nvim - *lazyvim* https://www.lazyvim.org/ - *nvchad* https://nvchad.com/ However, in general, we recommend (eventually) taking time to learn Nvim from its stock configuration, and incrementally setting options and adding plugins to your |config| as you find an explicit need to do so. ============================================================================== vim:tw=78:ts=8:et:ft=help:norl: