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Closes #6705
172 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
172 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
*if_lua.txt* Nvim
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VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Luis Carvalho
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Lua Interface to Nvim *lua* *Lua*
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Type <M-]> to see the table of contents.
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==============================================================================
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1. Commands *lua-commands*
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*:lua*
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:[range]lua {chunk}
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Execute Lua chunk {chunk}.
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Examples:
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>
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:lua vim.api.nvim_command('echo "Hello, Neovim!"')
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<
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:[range]lua << {endmarker}
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{script}
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{endmarker}
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Execute Lua script {script}.
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Note: This command doesn't work when the Lua
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feature wasn't compiled in. To avoid errors, see
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|script-here|.
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{endmarker} must NOT be preceded by any white space. If {endmarker} is
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omitted from after the "<<", a dot '.' must be used after {script}, like
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for the |:append| and |:insert| commands.
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This form of the |:lua| command is mainly useful for including Lua code
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in Vim scripts.
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Example:
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>
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function! CurrentLineInfo()
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lua << EOF
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local linenr = vim.api.nvim_win_get_cursor(0)[1]
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local curline = vim.api.nvim_buf_get_lines(
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0, linenr, linenr + 1, false)[1]
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print(string.format("Current line [%d] has %d bytes",
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linenr, #curline))
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EOF
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endfunction
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Note that the variables are prefixed with `local`: they will disappear when
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block finishes. This is not the case for globals.
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To see what version of Lua you have: >
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:lua print(_VERSION)
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If you use LuaJIT you can also use this: >
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:lua print(jit.version)
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<
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*:luado*
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:[range]luado {body} Execute Lua function "function (line, linenr) {body}
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end" for each line in the [range], with the function
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argument being set to the text of each line in turn,
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without a trailing <EOL>, and the current line number.
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If the value returned by the function is a string it
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becomes the text of the line in the current turn. The
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default for [range] is the whole file: "1,$".
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Examples:
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>
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:luado return string.format("%s\t%d", line:reverse(), #line)
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:lua require"lpeg"
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:lua -- balanced parenthesis grammar:
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:lua bp = lpeg.P{ "(" * ((1 - lpeg.S"()") + lpeg.V(1))^0 * ")" }
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:luado if bp:match(line) then return "-->\t" .. line end
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<
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*:luafile*
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:[range]luafile {file}
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Execute Lua script in {file}.
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The whole argument is used as a single file name.
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Examples:
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>
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:luafile script.lua
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:luafile %
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<
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All these commands execute a Lua chunk from either the command line (:lua and
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:luado) or a file (:luafile) with the given line [range]. Similarly to the Lua
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interpreter, each chunk has its own scope and so only global variables are
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shared between command calls. All Lua default libraries are available. In
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addition, Lua "print" function has its output redirected to the Vim message
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area, with arguments separated by a white space instead of a tab.
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Lua uses the "vim" module (see |lua-vim|) to issue commands to Neovim
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and manage buffers (|lua-buffer|) and windows (|lua-window|). However,
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procedures that alter buffer content, open new buffers, and change cursor
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position are restricted when the command is executed in the |sandbox|.
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==============================================================================
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2. The vim module *lua-vim*
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Lua interfaces Vim through the "vim" module. Currently it only has `api`
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submodule which is a table with all API functions. Descriptions of these
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functions may be found in |api.txt|.
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==============================================================================
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3. The luaeval function *lua-luaeval* *lua-eval*
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*luaeval()*
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The (dual) equivalent of "vim.eval" for passing Lua values to Vim is
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"luaeval". "luaeval" takes an expression string and an optional argument used
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for _A inside expression and returns the result of the expression. It is
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semantically equivalent in Lua to:
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>
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local chunkheader = "local _A = select(1, ...) return "
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function luaeval (expstr, arg)
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local chunk = assert(loadstring(chunkheader .. expstr, "luaeval"))
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return chunk(arg) -- return typval
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end
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Note that "_A" receives the argument to "luaeval". Lua nils, numbers, strings,
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tables and booleans are converted to their Vim respective types. An error is
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thrown if conversion of any of the remaining Lua types is attempted.
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Note 2: lua tables are used as both dictionaries and lists, thus making it
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impossible to determine whether empty table is meant to be empty list or empty
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dictionary. Additionally lua does not have integer numbers. To distinguish
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between these cases there is the following agreement:
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0. Empty table is empty list.
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1. Table with N incrementally growing integral numbers, starting from 1 and
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ending with N is considered to be a list.
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2. Table with string keys, none of which contains NUL byte, is considered to
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be a dictionary.
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3. Table with string keys, at least one of which contains NUL byte, is also
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considered to be a dictionary, but this time it is converted to
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a |msgpack-special-map|.
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4. Table with `vim.type_idx` key may be a dictionary, a list or floating-point
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value:
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- `{[vim.type_idx]=vim.types.float, [vim.val_idx]=1}` is converted to
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a floating-point 1.0. Note that by default integral lua numbers are
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converted to |Number|s, non-integral are converted to |Float|s. This
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variant allows integral |Float|s.
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- `{[vim.type_idx]=vim.types.dictionary}` is converted to an empty
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dictionary, `{[vim.type_idx]=vim.types.dictionary, [42]=1, a=2}` is
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converted to a dictionary `{'a': 42}`: non-string keys are ignored.
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Without `vim.type_idx` key tables with keys not fitting in 1., 2. or 3.
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are errors.
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- `{[vim.type_idx]=vim.types.list}` is converted to an empty list. As well
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as `{[vim.type_idx]=vim.types.list, [42]=1}`: integral keys that do not
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form a 1-step sequence from 1 to N are ignored, as well as all
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non-integral keys.
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Examples: >
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:echo luaeval('math.pi')
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:function Rand(x,y) " random uniform between x and y
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: return luaeval('(_A.y-_A.x)*math.random()+_A.x', {'x':a:x,'y':a:y})
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: endfunction
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:echo Rand(1,10)
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Note that currently second argument to `luaeval` undergoes VimL to lua
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conversion, so changing containers in lua do not affect values in VimL. Return
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value is also always converted. When converting, |msgpack-special-dict|s are
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treated specially.
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==============================================================================
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vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
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