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310 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
310 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
*provider.txt* Nvim
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NVIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Thiago de Arruda
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Providers *provider*
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Nvim delegates some features to dynamic "providers". This document describes
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the providers and how to install them.
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*E319*
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Use of a feature requiring a missing provider is an error: >
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E319: No "foo" provider found. Run ":checkhealth provider"
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Run the |:checkhealth| command, and review the sections below.
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Type |gO| to see the table of contents.
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==============================================================================
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Python integration *provider-python*
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Nvim supports Python |remote-plugin|s and the Vim legacy |python2| and
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|python3| interfaces (which are implemented as remote-plugins).
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Note: Only the Vim 7.3 legacy interface is supported, not later features such
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as |python-bindeval| (Vim 7.4); use the Nvim API instead.
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PYTHON QUICKSTART ~
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To use Python plugins, you need the "pynvim" module. Run |:checkhealth| to see
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if you already have it (some package managers install the module with Nvim
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itself).
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For Python 3 plugins:
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1. Make sure Python 3.4+ is available in your $PATH.
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2. Install the module (try "python" if "python3" is missing): >
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python3 -m pip install --user --upgrade pynvim
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For Python 2 plugins:
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1. Make sure Python 2.7 is available in your $PATH.
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2. Install the module (try "python" if "python2" is missing): >
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python2 -m pip install --user --upgrade pynvim
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The pip `--upgrade` flag ensures that you get the latest version even if
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a previous version was already installed.
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See also |python-virtualenv|.
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Note: The old "neovim" module was renamed to "pynvim".
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https://github.com/neovim/neovim/wiki/Following-HEAD#20181118
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If you run into problems, uninstall _both_ then install "pynvim" again: >
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python -m pip uninstall neovim pynvim
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python -m pip install --user --upgrade pynvim
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PYTHON PROVIDER CONFIGURATION ~
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*g:python_host_prog*
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Command to start Python 2 (executable, not directory). Setting this makes
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startup faster. Useful for working with virtualenvs. Must be set before any
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check for has("python2"). >
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let g:python_host_prog = '/path/to/python'
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<
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*g:python3_host_prog*
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Command to start Python 3 (executable, not directory). Setting this makes
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startup faster. Useful for working with virtualenvs. Must be set before any
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check for has("python3"). >
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let g:python3_host_prog = '/path/to/python3'
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<
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*g:loaded_python_provider*
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To disable Python 2 support: >
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let g:loaded_python_provider = 0
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<
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*g:loaded_python3_provider*
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To disable Python 3 support: >
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let g:loaded_python3_provider = 0
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PYTHON VIRTUALENVS ~
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*python-virtualenv*
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If you plan to use per-project virtualenvs often, you should assign one
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virtualenv for Neovim and hard-code the interpreter path via
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|g:python3_host_prog| (or |g:python_host_prog|) so that the "pynvim" package
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is not required for each virtualenv.
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Example using pyenv: >
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pyenv install 3.4.4
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pyenv virtualenv 3.4.4 py3nvim
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pyenv activate py3nvim
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python3 -m pip install pynvim
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pyenv which python # Note the path
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The last command reports the interpreter path, add it to your init.vim: >
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let g:python3_host_prog = '/path/to/py3nvim/bin/python'
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See also: https://github.com/zchee/deoplete-jedi/wiki/Setting-up-Python-for-Neovim
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==============================================================================
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Ruby integration *provider-ruby*
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Nvim supports Ruby |remote-plugin|s and the Vim legacy |ruby-vim| interface
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(which is itself implemented as a Nvim remote-plugin).
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RUBY QUICKSTART ~
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To use Ruby plugins with Nvim, install the latest "neovim" RubyGem: >
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gem install neovim
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Run |:checkhealth| to see if your system is up-to-date.
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RUBY PROVIDER CONFIGURATION ~
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*g:loaded_ruby_provider*
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To disable Ruby support: >
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let g:loaded_ruby_provider = 0
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<
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*g:ruby_host_prog*
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Command to start the Ruby host. By default this is "neovim-ruby-host". With
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project-local Ruby versions (via tools like RVM or rbenv) setting this can
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avoid the need to install the "neovim" gem in every project.
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To use an absolute path (e.g. to an rbenv installation): >
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let g:ruby_host_prog = '~/.rbenv/versions/2.4.1/bin/neovim-ruby-host'
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To use the RVM "system" Ruby installation: >
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let g:ruby_host_prog = 'rvm system do neovim-ruby-host'
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==============================================================================
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Perl integration *provider-perl*
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Nvim supports Perl |remote-plugin|s on Unix platforms. Support for polling STDIN
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on MS-Windows is currently lacking from all known event loop implementations.
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The Vim legacy |perl-vim| interface is also supported (which is itself
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implemented as a Nvim remote-plugin).
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https://github.com/jacquesg/p5-Neovim-Ext
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Note: Only perl versions from 5.22 onward are supported.
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PERL QUICKSTART~
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To use perl remote-plugins with Nvim, install the "Neovim::Ext" cpan package: >
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cpanm -n Neovim::Ext
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Run |:checkhealth| to see if your system is up-to-date.
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PERL PROVIDER CONFIGURATION~
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*g:loaded_perl_provider*
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To disable Perl support: >
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:let g:loaded_perl_provider = 0
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<
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*g:perl_host_prog*
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Command to start the Perl executable. Must be set before any
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check for has("perl"). >
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let g:perl_host_prog = '/path/to/perl'
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<
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==============================================================================
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Node.js integration *provider-nodejs*
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Nvim supports Node.js |remote-plugin|s.
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https://github.com/neovim/node-client/
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NODEJS QUICKSTART~
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To use javascript remote-plugins with Nvim, install the "neovim" npm package: >
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npm install -g neovim
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Run |:checkhealth| to see if your system is up-to-date.
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NODEJS PROVIDER CONFIGURATION~
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*g:loaded_node_provider*
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To disable Node.js support: >
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:let g:loaded_node_provider = 0
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<
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*g:node_host_prog*
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Command to start the Node.js host. Setting this makes startup faster.
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By default, Nvim searches for "neovim-node-host" using "npm root -g", which
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can be slow. To avoid this, set g:node_host_prog to the host path: >
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let g:node_host_prog = '/usr/local/bin/neovim-node-host'
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<
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==============================================================================
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Clipboard integration *provider-clipboard* *clipboard*
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Nvim has no direct connection to the system clipboard. Instead it depends on
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a |provider| which transparently uses shell commands to communicate with the
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system clipboard or any other clipboard "backend".
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To ALWAYS use the clipboard for ALL operations (instead of interacting with
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the '+' and/or '*' registers explicitly): >
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set clipboard+=unnamedplus
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See 'clipboard' for details and options.
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*clipboard-tool*
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The presence of a working clipboard tool implicitly enables the '+' and '*'
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registers. Nvim looks for these clipboard tools, in order of priority:
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- |g:clipboard|
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- pbcopy, pbpaste (macOS)
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- wl-copy, wl-paste (if $WAYLAND_DISPLAY is set)
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- xclip (if $DISPLAY is set)
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- xsel (if $DISPLAY is set)
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- lemonade (for SSH) https://github.com/pocke/lemonade
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- doitclient (for SSH) http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/doit/
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- win32yank (Windows)
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- termux (via termux-clipboard-set, termux-clipboard-set)
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- tmux (if $TMUX is set)
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*g:clipboard*
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To configure a custom clipboard tool, set g:clipboard to a dictionary.
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For example this configuration integrates the tmux clipboard: >
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let g:clipboard = {
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\ 'name': 'myClipboard',
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\ 'copy': {
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\ '+': ['tmux', 'load-buffer', '-'],
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\ '*': ['tmux', 'load-buffer', '-'],
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\ },
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\ 'paste': {
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\ '+': ['tmux', 'save-buffer', '-'],
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\ '*': ['tmux', 'save-buffer', '-'],
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\ },
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\ 'cache_enabled': 1,
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\ }
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If "cache_enabled" is |TRUE| then when a selection is copied Nvim will cache
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the selection until the copy command process dies. When pasting, if the copy
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process has not died the cached selection is applied.
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g:clipboard can also use functions (see |lambda|) instead of strings.
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For example this configuration uses the g:foo variable as a fake clipboard: >
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let g:clipboard = {
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\ 'name': 'myClipboard',
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\ 'copy': {
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\ '+': {lines, regtype -> extend(g:, {'foo': [lines, regtype]}) },
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\ '*': {lines, regtype -> extend(g:, {'foo': [lines, regtype]}) },
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\ },
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\ 'paste': {
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\ '+': {-> get(g:, 'foo', [])},
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\ '*': {-> get(g:, 'foo', [])},
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\ },
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\ }
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The "copy" function stores a list of lines and the register type. The "paste"
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function returns the clipboard as a `[lines, regtype]` list, where `lines` is
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a list of lines and `regtype` is a register type conforming to |setreg()|.
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==============================================================================
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Paste *provider-paste* *paste*
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"Paste" is a separate concept from |clipboard|: paste means "dump a bunch of
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text to the editor", whereas clipboard provides features like |quote-+| to get
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and set the OS clipboard directly. For example, middle-click or CTRL-SHIFT-v
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(macOS: CMD-v) in your terminal is "paste", not "clipboard": the terminal
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application (Nvim) just gets a stream of text, it does not interact with the
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clipboard directly.
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*bracketed-paste-mode*
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Pasting in the |TUI| depends on the "bracketed paste" terminal capability,
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which allows terminal applications to distinguish between user input and
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pasted text. https://cirw.in/blog/bracketed-paste
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This works automatically if your terminal supports it.
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*ui-paste*
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GUIs can paste by calling |nvim_paste()|.
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PASTE BEHAVIOR ~
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Paste inserts text after the cursor. Lines break at <NL>, <CR>, and <CR><NL>.
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When pasting a huge amount of text, screen-updates are throttled and the
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message area shows a "..." pulse.
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In cmdline-mode only the first line is pasted, to avoid accidentally executing
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many commands. Use the |cmdline-window| if you really want to paste multiple
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lines to the cmdline.
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You can implement a custom paste handler by redefining |vim.paste()|.
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Example: >
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vim.paste = (function(lines, phase)
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vim.api.nvim_put(lines, 'c', true, true)
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end)
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==============================================================================
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X11 selection mechanism *clipboard-x11* *x11-selection*
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X11 clipboard providers store text in "selections". Selections are owned by an
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application, so when the application gets closed, the selection text is lost.
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The contents of selections are held by the originating application (e.g., upon
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a copy), and only passed to another application when that other application
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requests them (e.g., upon a paste).
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*primary-selection* *quotestar* *quoteplus* *quote+*
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There are three documented X11 selections: PRIMARY, SECONDARY, and CLIPBOARD.
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CLIPBOARD is typically used in X11 applications for copy/paste operations
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(CTRL-c/CTRL-v), while PRIMARY is used for the last selected text, which is
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generally inserted with the middle mouse button.
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Nvim's X11 clipboard providers only use the PRIMARY and CLIPBOARD selections,
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for the "*" and "+" registers, respectively.
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==============================================================================
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vim:tw=78:ts=8:noet:ft=help:norl:
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