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4443 lines
165 KiB
Plaintext
4443 lines
165 KiB
Plaintext
*lua.txt* Nvim
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NVIM REFERENCE MANUAL
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Lua engine *lua* *Lua*
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Type |gO| to see the table of contents.
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==============================================================================
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INTRODUCTION *lua-intro*
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The Lua 5.1 script engine is builtin and always available. Try this command to
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get an idea of what lurks beneath: >vim
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:lua vim.print(package.loaded)
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Nvim includes a "standard library" |lua-stdlib| for Lua. It complements the
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"editor stdlib" (|builtin-functions| and |Ex-commands|) and the |API|, all of
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which can be used from Lua code (|lua-vimscript| |vim.api|). Together these
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"namespaces" form the Nvim programming interface.
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Lua plugins and user config are automatically discovered and loaded, just like
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Vimscript. See |lua-guide| for practical guidance.
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You can also run Lua scripts from your shell using the |-l| argument: >
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nvim -l foo.lua [args...]
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<
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*lua-compat*
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Lua 5.1 is the permanent interface for Nvim Lua. Plugins need only consider
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Lua 5.1, not worry about forward-compatibility with future Lua versions. If
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Nvim ever ships with Lua 5.4+, a Lua 5.1 compatibility shim will be provided
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so that old plugins continue to work transparently.
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*lua-luajit*
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On supported platforms, Nvim is built with LuaJIT, which provides extra
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functionality (compared to PUC Lua) such as "bit" and various utilities (see
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|lua-profile|). Lua code in |init.lua| and plugins can assume its presence on
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many platforms, but for maximum compatibility should check the `jit` global
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variable: >lua
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if jit then
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-- code for luajit
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else
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-- code for plain lua 5.1
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end
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<
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*lua-bit*
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The LuaJIT "bit" extension module is _always_ available: when built with PUC
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Lua, Nvim includes a fallback implementation which provides `require("bit")`.
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*lua-profile*
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To profile Lua code (with LuaJIT-enabled Nvim), the basic steps are: >lua
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-- Start a profiling session:
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require('jit.p').start('ri1', '/tmp/profile')
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-- Perform arbitrary tasks (use plugins, scripts, etc.) ...
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-- Stop the session. Profile is written to /tmp/profile.
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require('jit.p').stop()
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See https://luajit.org/ext_profiler.html or the "p.lua" source for details: >
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:lua vim.cmd.edit(package.searchpath('jit.p', package.path))
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==============================================================================
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LUA CONCEPTS AND IDIOMS *lua-concepts*
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Lua is very simple: this means that, while there are some quirks, once you
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internalize those quirks, everything works the same everywhere. Scopes
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(closures) in particular are very consistent, unlike JavaScript or most other
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languages.
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Lua has three fundamental mechanisms—one for "each major aspect of
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programming": tables, closures, and coroutines.
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https://www.lua.org/doc/cacm2018.pdf
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- Tables are the "object" or container datastructure: they represent both
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lists and maps, you can extend them to represent your own datatypes and
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change their behavior using |metatable|s (like Python's "datamodel").
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- EVERY scope in Lua is a closure: a function is a closure, a module is
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a closure, a `do` block (|lua-do|) is a closure--and they all work the same.
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A Lua module is literally just a big closure discovered on the "path"
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(where your modules are found: |package.cpath|).
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- Stackful coroutines enable cooperative multithreading, generators, and
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versatile control for both Lua and its host (Nvim).
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*iterator*
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An iterator is just a function that can be called repeatedly to get the "next"
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value of a collection (or any other |iterable|). This interface is expected by
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|for-in| loops, produced by |pairs()|, supported by |vim.iter|, etc.
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https://www.lua.org/pil/7.1.html
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*iterable*
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An "iterable" is anything that |vim.iter()| can consume: tables, dicts, lists,
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iterator functions, tables implementing the |__call()| metamethod, and
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|vim.iter()| objects.
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*list-iterator*
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Iterators on |lua-list| tables have a "middle" and "end", whereas iterators in
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general may be logically infinite. Therefore some |vim.iter| operations (e.g.
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|Iter:rev()|) make sense only on list-like tables (which are finite by
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definition).
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*lua-function-call*
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Lua functions can be called in multiple ways. Consider the function: >lua
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local foo = function(a, b)
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print("A: ", a)
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print("B: ", b)
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end
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The first way to call this function is: >lua
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foo(1, 2)
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-- ==== Result ====
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-- A: 1
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-- B: 2
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This way of calling a function is familiar from most scripting languages. In
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Lua, any missing arguments are passed as `nil`, and extra parameters are
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silently discarded. Example: >lua
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foo(1)
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-- ==== Result ====
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-- A: 1
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-- B: nil
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<
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*kwargs*
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When calling a function, you can omit the parentheses if the function takes
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exactly one string literal (`"foo"`) or table literal (`{1,2,3}`). The latter
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is often used to mimic "named parameters" ("kwargs" or "keyword args") as in
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languages like Python and C#. Example: >lua
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local func_with_opts = function(opts)
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local will_do_foo = opts.foo
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local filename = opts.filename
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...
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end
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func_with_opts { foo = true, filename = "hello.world" }
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<
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There's nothing special going on here except that parentheses are implicitly
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added. But visually, this small bit of sugar gets reasonably close to a
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"keyword args" interface.
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*lua-regex*
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Lua intentionally does not support regular expressions, instead it has limited
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|lua-patterns| which avoid the performance pitfalls of extended regex. Lua
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scripts can also use Vim regex via |vim.regex()|.
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Examples: >lua
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print(string.match("foo123bar123", "%d+"))
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-- 123
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print(string.match("foo123bar123", "[^%d]+"))
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-- foo
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print(string.match("foo123bar123", "[abc]+"))
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-- ba
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print(string.match("foo.bar", "%.bar"))
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-- .bar
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==============================================================================
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IMPORTING LUA MODULES *lua-module-load*
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Modules are searched for under the directories specified in 'runtimepath', in
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the order they appear. Any "." in the module name is treated as a directory
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separator when searching. For a module `foo.bar`, each directory is searched
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for `lua/foo/bar.lua`, then `lua/foo/bar/init.lua`. If no files are found,
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the directories are searched again for a shared library with a name matching
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`lua/foo/bar.?`, where `?` is a list of suffixes (such as `so` or `dll`) derived from
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the initial value of |package.cpath|. If still no files are found, Nvim falls
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back to Lua's default search mechanism. The first script found is run and
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`require()` returns the value returned by the script if any, else `true`.
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The return value is cached after the first call to `require()` for each module,
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with subsequent calls returning the cached value without searching for, or
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executing any script. For further details see |require()|.
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For example, if 'runtimepath' is `foo,bar` and |package.cpath| was
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`./?.so;./?.dll` at startup, `require('mod')` searches these paths in order
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and loads the first module found ("first wins"): >
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foo/lua/mod.lua
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foo/lua/mod/init.lua
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bar/lua/mod.lua
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bar/lua/mod/init.lua
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foo/lua/mod.so
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foo/lua/mod.dll
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bar/lua/mod.so
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bar/lua/mod.dll
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<
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*lua-package-path*
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Nvim automatically adjusts |package.path| and |package.cpath| according to the
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effective 'runtimepath' value. Adjustment happens whenever 'runtimepath' is
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changed. `package.path` is adjusted by simply appending `/lua/?.lua` and
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`/lua/?/init.lua` to each directory from 'runtimepath' (`/` is actually the
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first character of `package.config`).
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Similarly to |package.path|, modified directories from 'runtimepath' are also
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added to |package.cpath|. In this case, instead of appending `/lua/?.lua` and
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`/lua/?/init.lua` to each runtimepath, all unique `?`-containing suffixes of
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the existing |package.cpath| are used. Example:
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- 1. Given that
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- 'runtimepath' contains `/foo/bar,/xxx;yyy/baz,/abc`;
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- initial |package.cpath| (defined at compile-time or derived from
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`$LUA_CPATH` / `$LUA_INIT`) contains `./?.so;/def/ghi/a?d/j/g.elf;/def/?.so`.
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- 2. It finds `?`-containing suffixes `/?.so`, `/a?d/j/g.elf` and `/?.so`, in
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order: parts of the path starting from the first path component containing
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question mark and preceding path separator.
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- 3. The suffix of `/def/?.so`, namely `/?.so` is not unique, as it’s the same
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as the suffix of the first path from |package.path| (i.e. `./?.so`). Which
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leaves `/?.so` and `/a?d/j/g.elf`, in this order.
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- 4. 'runtimepath' has three paths: `/foo/bar`, `/xxx;yyy/baz` and `/abc`. The
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second one contains a semicolon which is a paths separator so it is out,
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leaving only `/foo/bar` and `/abc`, in order.
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- 5. The cartesian product of paths from 4. and suffixes from 3. is taken,
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giving four variants. In each variant a `/lua` path segment is inserted
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between path and suffix, leaving:
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- `/foo/bar/lua/?.so`
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- `/foo/bar/lua/a?d/j/g.elf`
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- `/abc/lua/?.so`
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- `/abc/lua/a?d/j/g.elf`
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- 6. New paths are prepended to the original |package.cpath|.
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The result will look like this: >
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/foo/bar,/xxx;yyy/baz,/abc ('runtimepath')
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× ./?.so;/def/ghi/a?d/j/g.elf;/def/?.so (package.cpath)
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= /foo/bar/lua/?.so;/foo/bar/lua/a?d/j/g.elf;/abc/lua/?.so;/abc/lua/a?d/j/g.elf;./?.so;/def/ghi/a?d/j/g.elf;/def/?.so
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Note:
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- To track 'runtimepath' updates, paths added at previous update are
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remembered and removed at the next update, while all paths derived from the
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new 'runtimepath' are prepended as described above. This allows removing
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paths when path is removed from 'runtimepath', adding paths when they are
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added and reordering |package.path|/|package.cpath| content if 'runtimepath'
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was reordered.
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- Although adjustments happen automatically, Nvim does not track current
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values of |package.path| or |package.cpath|. If you happen to delete some
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paths from there you can set 'runtimepath' to trigger an update: >vim
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let &runtimepath = &runtimepath
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- Skipping paths from 'runtimepath' which contain semicolons applies both to
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|package.path| and |package.cpath|. Given that there are some badly written
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plugins using shell, which will not work with paths containing semicolons,
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it is better to not have them in 'runtimepath' at all.
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==============================================================================
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COMMANDS *lua-commands*
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These commands execute a Lua chunk from either the command line (:lua, :luado)
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or a file (:luafile) on the given line [range]. As always in Lua, each chunk
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has its own scope (closure), so only global variables are shared between
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command calls. The |lua-stdlib| modules, user modules, and anything else on
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|package.path| are available.
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The Lua print() function redirects its output to the Nvim message area, with
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arguments separated by " " (space) instead of "\t" (tab).
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*:lua=* *:lua*
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:lua {chunk}
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Executes Lua chunk {chunk}. If {chunk} starts with "=" the rest of the
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chunk is evaluated as an expression and printed. `:lua =expr` and `:=expr`
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are equivalent to `:lua vim.print(expr)`.
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Examples: >vim
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:lua vim.api.nvim_command('echo "Hello, Nvim!"')
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< To see the Lua version: >vim
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:lua print(_VERSION)
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< To see the LuaJIT version: >vim
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:lua =jit.version
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<
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:{range}lua
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Executes buffer lines in {range} as Lua code. Unlike |:source|, this
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always treats the lines as Lua code.
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Example: select the following code and type ":lua<Enter>" to execute it: >lua
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print(string.format(
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'unix time: %s', os.time()))
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<
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*:lua-heredoc*
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:lua << [trim] [{endmarker}]
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{script}
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{endmarker}
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Executes Lua script {script} from within Vimscript. You can omit
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[endmarker] after the "<<" and use a dot "." after {script} (similar to
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|:append|, |:insert|). Refer to |:let-heredoc| for more information.
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Example: >vim
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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(0, linenr - 1, linenr, false)[1]
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print(string.format('Line [%d] has %d bytes', linenr, #curline))
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EOF
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endfunction
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<
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Note that the `local` variables will disappear when the block finishes.
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But not globals.
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*:luado*
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:[range]luado {body}
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Executes Lua chunk "function(line, linenr) {body} end" for each buffer
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line in [range], where `line` is the current line text (without <EOL>),
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and `linenr` is the current line number. If the function returns a string
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that becomes the text of the corresponding buffer line. Default [range] is
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the whole file: "1,$".
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Examples: >vim
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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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:luafile {file}
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Execute Lua script in {file}.
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The whole argument is used as the filename (like |:edit|), spaces do not
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need to be escaped. Alternatively you can |:source| Lua files.
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Examples: >vim
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:luafile script.lua
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:luafile %
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<
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==============================================================================
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luaeval() *lua-eval*
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The (dual) equivalent of "vim.eval" for passing Lua values to Nvim 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: >lua
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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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<
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Lua nils, numbers, strings, tables and booleans are converted to their
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respective Vimscript types. If a Lua string contains a NUL byte, it will be
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converted to a |Blob|. Conversion of other Lua types is an error.
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The magic global "_A" contains the second argument to luaeval().
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Example: >vim
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:echo luaeval('_A[1] + _A[2]', [40, 2])
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" 42
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:echo luaeval('string.match(_A, "[a-z]+")', 'XYXfoo123')
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" foo
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<
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*lua-table-ambiguous*
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Lua tables are used as both dictionaries and lists, so it is impossible to
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determine whether empty table is meant to be empty list or empty dictionary.
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Additionally Lua does not have integer numbers. To distinguish between these
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cases there is the following agreement:
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*lua-list*
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0. Empty table is empty list.
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1. Table with N consecutive integer indices starting from 1 and ending with
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N is considered a list. See also |list-iterator|.
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*lua-dict*
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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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*lua-special-tbl*
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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.array}` is converted to an empty list. As well
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as `{[vim.type_idx]=vim.types.array, [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: >vim
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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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<
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Note: Second argument to `luaeval` is converted ("marshalled") from Vimscript
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to Lua, so changes to Lua containers do not affect values in Vimscript. 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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Vimscript v:lua interface *v:lua-call*
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From Vimscript the special `v:lua` prefix can be used to call Lua functions
|
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which are global or accessible from global tables. The expression >vim
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call v:lua.func(arg1, arg2)
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is equivalent to the Lua chunk >lua
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return func(...)
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where the args are converted to Lua values. The expression >vim
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call v:lua.somemod.func(args)
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is equivalent to the Lua chunk >lua
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return somemod.func(...)
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In addition, functions of packages can be accessed like >vim
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call v:lua.require'mypack'.func(arg1, arg2)
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call v:lua.require'mypack.submod'.func(arg1, arg2)
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Note: Only single quote form without parens is allowed. Using
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`require"mypack"` or `require('mypack')` as prefixes do NOT work (the latter
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is still valid as a function call of itself, in case require returns a useful
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||
value).
|
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The `v:lua` prefix may be used to call Lua functions as |method|s. For
|
||
example: >vim
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||
:eval arg1->v:lua.somemod.func(arg2)
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<
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You can use `v:lua` in "func" options like 'tagfunc', 'omnifunc', etc.
|
||
For example consider the following Lua omnifunc handler: >lua
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||
function mymod.omnifunc(findstart, base)
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if findstart == 1 then
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return 0
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else
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return {'stuff', 'steam', 'strange things'}
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end
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end
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vim.bo[buf].omnifunc = 'v:lua.mymod.omnifunc'
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||
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||
Note: The module ("mymod" in the above example) must either be a Lua global,
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||
or use require() as shown above to access it from a package.
|
||
|
||
Note: `v:lua` without a call is not allowed in a Vimscript expression:
|
||
|Funcref|s cannot represent Lua functions. The following are errors: >vim
|
||
|
||
let g:Myvar = v:lua.myfunc " Error
|
||
call SomeFunc(v:lua.mycallback) " Error
|
||
let g:foo = v:lua " Error
|
||
let g:foo = v:['lua'] " Error
|
||
<
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua standard modules *lua-stdlib*
|
||
|
||
The Nvim Lua "standard library" (stdlib) is the `vim` module, which exposes
|
||
various functions and sub-modules. It is always loaded, thus `require("vim")`
|
||
is unnecessary.
|
||
|
||
You can peek at the module properties: >vim
|
||
|
||
:lua vim.print(vim)
|
||
|
||
Result is something like this: >
|
||
|
||
{
|
||
_os_proc_children = <function 1>,
|
||
_os_proc_info = <function 2>,
|
||
...
|
||
api = {
|
||
nvim__id = <function 5>,
|
||
nvim__id_array = <function 6>,
|
||
...
|
||
},
|
||
deepcopy = <function 106>,
|
||
gsplit = <function 107>,
|
||
...
|
||
}
|
||
|
||
To find documentation on e.g. the "deepcopy" function: >vim
|
||
|
||
:help vim.deepcopy()
|
||
|
||
Note that underscore-prefixed functions (e.g. "_os_proc_children") are
|
||
internal/private and must not be used by plugins.
|
||
|
||
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
VIM.UV *lua-loop* *vim.uv*
|
||
|
||
`vim.uv` exposes the "luv" Lua bindings for the libUV library that Nvim uses
|
||
for networking, filesystem, and process management, see |luvref.txt|.
|
||
In particular, it allows interacting with the main Nvim |luv-event-loop|.
|
||
|
||
*E5560* *lua-loop-callbacks*
|
||
It is an error to directly invoke `vim.api` functions (except |api-fast|) in
|
||
`vim.uv` callbacks. For example, this is an error: >lua
|
||
|
||
local timer = vim.uv.new_timer()
|
||
timer:start(1000, 0, function()
|
||
vim.api.nvim_command('echomsg "test"')
|
||
end)
|
||
<
|
||
To avoid the error use |vim.schedule_wrap()| to defer the callback: >lua
|
||
|
||
local timer = vim.uv.new_timer()
|
||
timer:start(1000, 0, vim.schedule_wrap(function()
|
||
vim.api.nvim_command('echomsg "test"')
|
||
end))
|
||
<
|
||
(For one-shot timers, see |vim.defer_fn()|, which automatically adds the
|
||
wrapping.)
|
||
|
||
Example: repeating timer
|
||
1. Save this code to a file.
|
||
2. Execute it with ":luafile %". >lua
|
||
|
||
-- Create a timer handle (implementation detail: uv_timer_t).
|
||
local timer = vim.uv.new_timer()
|
||
local i = 0
|
||
-- Waits 1000ms, then repeats every 750ms until timer:close().
|
||
timer:start(1000, 750, function()
|
||
print('timer invoked! i='..tostring(i))
|
||
if i > 4 then
|
||
timer:close() -- Always close handles to avoid leaks.
|
||
end
|
||
i = i + 1
|
||
end)
|
||
print('sleeping');
|
||
<
|
||
Example: File-change detection *watch-file*
|
||
1. Save this code to a file.
|
||
2. Execute it with ":luafile %".
|
||
3. Use ":Watch %" to watch any file.
|
||
4. Try editing the file from another text editor.
|
||
5. Observe that the file reloads in Nvim (because on_change() calls
|
||
|:checktime|). >lua
|
||
|
||
local w = vim.uv.new_fs_event()
|
||
local function on_change(err, fname, status)
|
||
-- Do work...
|
||
vim.api.nvim_command('checktime')
|
||
-- Debounce: stop/start.
|
||
w:stop()
|
||
watch_file(fname)
|
||
end
|
||
function watch_file(fname)
|
||
local fullpath = vim.api.nvim_call_function(
|
||
'fnamemodify', {fname, ':p'})
|
||
w:start(fullpath, {}, vim.schedule_wrap(function(...)
|
||
on_change(...) end))
|
||
end
|
||
vim.api.nvim_command(
|
||
"command! -nargs=1 Watch call luaeval('watch_file(_A)', expand('<args>'))")
|
||
<
|
||
*fswatch-limitations*
|
||
When on Linux and using fswatch, you may need to increase the maximum number
|
||
of `inotify` watches and queued events as the default limit can be too low. To
|
||
increase the limit, run: >sh
|
||
sysctl fs.inotify.max_user_watches=100000
|
||
sysctl fs.inotify.max_queued_events=100000
|
||
<
|
||
This will increase the limit to 100000 watches and queued events. These lines
|
||
can be added to `/etc/sysctl.conf` to make the changes persistent.
|
||
|
||
Example: TCP echo-server *tcp-server*
|
||
1. Save this code to a file.
|
||
2. Execute it with ":luafile %".
|
||
3. Note the port number.
|
||
4. Connect from any TCP client (e.g. "nc 0.0.0.0 36795"): >lua
|
||
|
||
local function create_server(host, port, on_connect)
|
||
local server = vim.uv.new_tcp()
|
||
server:bind(host, port)
|
||
server:listen(128, function(err)
|
||
assert(not err, err) -- Check for errors.
|
||
local sock = vim.uv.new_tcp()
|
||
server:accept(sock) -- Accept client connection.
|
||
on_connect(sock) -- Start reading messages.
|
||
end)
|
||
return server
|
||
end
|
||
local server = create_server('0.0.0.0', 0, function(sock)
|
||
sock:read_start(function(err, chunk)
|
||
assert(not err, err) -- Check for errors.
|
||
if chunk then
|
||
sock:write(chunk) -- Echo received messages to the channel.
|
||
else -- EOF (stream closed).
|
||
sock:close() -- Always close handles to avoid leaks.
|
||
end
|
||
end)
|
||
end)
|
||
print('TCP echo-server listening on port: '..server:getsockname().port)
|
||
<
|
||
Multithreading *lua-loop-threading*
|
||
|
||
Plugins can perform work in separate (os-level) threads using the threading
|
||
APIs in luv, for instance `vim.uv.new_thread`. Note that every thread
|
||
gets its own separate Lua interpreter state, with no access to Lua globals
|
||
in the main thread. Neither can the state of the editor (buffers, windows,
|
||
etc) be directly accessed from threads.
|
||
|
||
A subset of the `vim.*` API is available in threads. This includes:
|
||
|
||
- `vim.uv` with a separate event loop per thread.
|
||
- `vim.mpack` and `vim.json` (useful for serializing messages between threads)
|
||
- `require` in threads can use Lua packages from the global |package.path|
|
||
- `print()` and `vim.inspect`
|
||
- `vim.diff`
|
||
- most utility functions in `vim.*` for working with pure Lua values
|
||
like `vim.split`, `vim.tbl_*`, `vim.list_*`, and so on.
|
||
- `vim.is_thread()` returns true from a non-main thread.
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
VIM.HIGHLIGHT *vim.highlight*
|
||
|
||
vim.highlight.on_yank({opts}) *vim.highlight.on_yank()*
|
||
Highlight the yanked text during a |TextYankPost| event.
|
||
|
||
Add the following to your `init.vim`: >vim
|
||
autocmd TextYankPost * silent! lua vim.highlight.on_yank {higroup='Visual', timeout=300}
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Optional parameters
|
||
• higroup highlight group for yanked region (default
|
||
"IncSearch")
|
||
• timeout time in ms before highlight is cleared (default 150)
|
||
• on_macro highlight when executing macro (default false)
|
||
• on_visual highlight when yanking visual selection (default
|
||
true)
|
||
• event event structure (default vim.v.event)
|
||
• priority integer priority (default
|
||
|vim.highlight.priorities|`.user`)
|
||
|
||
vim.highlight.priorities *vim.highlight.priorities*
|
||
Table with default priorities used for highlighting:
|
||
• `syntax`: `50`, used for standard syntax highlighting
|
||
• `treesitter`: `100`, used for treesitter-based highlighting
|
||
• `semantic_tokens`: `125`, used for LSP semantic token highlighting
|
||
• `diagnostics`: `150`, used for code analysis such as diagnostics
|
||
• `user`: `200`, used for user-triggered highlights such as LSP document
|
||
symbols or `on_yank` autocommands
|
||
|
||
*vim.highlight.range()*
|
||
vim.highlight.range({bufnr}, {ns}, {higroup}, {start}, {finish}, {opts})
|
||
Apply highlight group to range of text.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {bufnr} (`integer`) Buffer number to apply highlighting to
|
||
• {ns} (`integer`) Namespace to add highlight to
|
||
• {higroup} (`string`) Highlight group to use for highlighting
|
||
• {start} (`integer[]|string`) Start of region as a (line, column)
|
||
tuple or string accepted by |getpos()|
|
||
• {finish} (`integer[]|string`) End of region as a (line, column)
|
||
tuple or string accepted by |getpos()|
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) A table with the following fields:
|
||
• {regtype}? (`string`, default: `'charwise'`) Type of
|
||
range. See |setreg()|
|
||
• {inclusive}? (`boolean`, default: `false`) Indicates
|
||
whether the range is end-inclusive
|
||
• {priority}? (`integer`, default:
|
||
`vim.highlight.priorities.user`) Indicates priority of
|
||
highlight
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
VIM.DIFF *vim.diff*
|
||
|
||
vim.diff({a}, {b}, {opts}) *vim.diff()*
|
||
Run diff on strings {a} and {b}. Any indices returned by this function,
|
||
either directly or via callback arguments, are 1-based.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
vim.diff('a\n', 'b\nc\n')
|
||
-- =>
|
||
-- @@ -1 +1,2 @@
|
||
-- -a
|
||
-- +b
|
||
-- +c
|
||
|
||
vim.diff('a\n', 'b\nc\n', {result_type = 'indices'})
|
||
-- =>
|
||
-- {
|
||
-- {1, 1, 1, 2}
|
||
-- }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {a} (`string`) First string to compare
|
||
• {b} (`string`) Second string to compare
|
||
• {opts} (`table`) Optional parameters:
|
||
• {on_hunk}
|
||
(`fun(start_a: integer, count_a: integer, start_b: integer, count_b: integer): integer`)
|
||
Invoked for each hunk in the diff. Return a negative number
|
||
to cancel the callback for any remaining hunks. Arguments:
|
||
• `start_a` (`integer`): Start line of hunk in {a}.
|
||
• `count_a` (`integer`): Hunk size in {a}.
|
||
• `start_b` (`integer`): Start line of hunk in {b}.
|
||
• `count_b` (`integer`): Hunk size in {b}.
|
||
• {result_type} (`'unified'|'indices'`, default: `'unified'`)
|
||
Form of the returned diff:
|
||
• `unified`: String in unified format.
|
||
• `indices`: Array of hunk locations. Note: This option is
|
||
ignored if `on_hunk` is used.
|
||
• {linematch} (`boolean|integer`) Run linematch on the
|
||
resulting hunks from xdiff. When integer, only hunks upto
|
||
this size in lines are run through linematch. Requires
|
||
`result_type = indices`, ignored otherwise.
|
||
• {algorithm} (`'myers'|'minimal'|'patience'|'histogram'`,
|
||
default: `'myers'`) Diff algorithm to use. Values:
|
||
• `myers`: the default algorithm
|
||
• `minimal`: spend extra time to generate the smallest
|
||
possible diff
|
||
• `patience`: patience diff algorithm
|
||
• `histogram`: histogram diff algorithm
|
||
• {ctxlen} (`integer`) Context length
|
||
• {interhunkctxlen} (`integer`) Inter hunk context length
|
||
• {ignore_whitespace} (`boolean`) Ignore whitespace
|
||
• {ignore_whitespace_change} (`boolean`) Ignore whitespace
|
||
change
|
||
• {ignore_whitespace_change_at_eol} (`boolean`) Ignore
|
||
whitespace change at end-of-line.
|
||
• {ignore_cr_at_eol} (`boolean`) Ignore carriage return at
|
||
end-of-line
|
||
• {ignore_blank_lines} (`boolean`) Ignore blank lines
|
||
• {indent_heuristic} (`boolean`) Use the indent heuristic for
|
||
the internal diff library.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string|integer[]`) See {opts.result_type}. `nil` if {opts.on_hunk}
|
||
is given.
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
VIM.MPACK *vim.mpack*
|
||
|
||
This module provides encoding and decoding of Lua objects to and from
|
||
msgpack-encoded strings. Supports |vim.NIL| and |vim.empty_dict()|.
|
||
|
||
|
||
vim.mpack.decode({str}) *vim.mpack.decode()*
|
||
Decodes (or "unpacks") the msgpack-encoded {str} to a Lua object.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
vim.mpack.encode({obj}) *vim.mpack.encode()*
|
||
Encodes (or "packs") Lua object {obj} as msgpack in a Lua string.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {obj} (`any`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`)
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
VIM.JSON *vim.json*
|
||
|
||
This module provides encoding and decoding of Lua objects to and from
|
||
JSON-encoded strings. Supports |vim.NIL| and |vim.empty_dict()|.
|
||
|
||
|
||
vim.json.decode({str}, {opts}) *vim.json.decode()*
|
||
Decodes (or "unpacks") the JSON-encoded {str} to a Lua object.
|
||
• Decodes JSON "null" as |vim.NIL| (controllable by {opts}, see below).
|
||
• Decodes empty object as |vim.empty_dict()|.
|
||
• Decodes empty array as `{}` (empty Lua table).
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.print(vim.json.decode('{"bar":[],"foo":{},"zub":null}'))
|
||
-- { bar = {}, foo = vim.empty_dict(), zub = vim.NIL }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`) Stringified JSON data.
|
||
• {opts} (`table<string,any>?`) Options table with keys:
|
||
• luanil: (table) Table with keys:
|
||
• object: (boolean) When true, converts `null` in JSON
|
||
objects to Lua `nil` instead of |vim.NIL|.
|
||
• array: (boolean) When true, converts `null` in JSON arrays
|
||
to Lua `nil` instead of |vim.NIL|.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
vim.json.encode({obj}) *vim.json.encode()*
|
||
Encodes (or "packs") Lua object {obj} as JSON in a Lua string.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {obj} (`any`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`)
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
VIM.BASE64 *vim.base64*
|
||
|
||
vim.base64.decode({str}) *vim.base64.decode()*
|
||
Decode a Base64 encoded string.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`) Base64 encoded string
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) Decoded string
|
||
|
||
vim.base64.encode({str}) *vim.base64.encode()*
|
||
Encode {str} using Base64.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`) String to encode
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) Encoded string
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
VIM.SPELL *vim.spell*
|
||
|
||
vim.spell.check({str}) *vim.spell.check()*
|
||
Check {str} for spelling errors. Similar to the Vimscript function
|
||
|spellbadword()|.
|
||
|
||
Note: The behaviour of this function is dependent on: 'spelllang',
|
||
'spellfile', 'spellcapcheck' and 'spelloptions' which can all be local to
|
||
the buffer. Consider calling this with |nvim_buf_call()|.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.spell.check("the quik brown fox")
|
||
-- =>
|
||
-- {
|
||
-- {'quik', 'bad', 5}
|
||
-- }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`{[1]: string, [2]: 'bad'|'rare'|'local'|'caps', [3]: integer}[]`)
|
||
List of tuples with three items:
|
||
• The badly spelled word.
|
||
• The type of the spelling error: "bad" spelling mistake "rare" rare
|
||
word "local" word only valid in another region "caps" word should
|
||
start with Capital
|
||
• The position in {str} where the word begins.
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
VIM *vim.builtin*
|
||
|
||
|
||
vim.api.{func}({...}) *vim.api*
|
||
Invokes Nvim |API| function {func} with arguments {...}.
|
||
Example: call the "nvim_get_current_line()" API function: >lua
|
||
print(tostring(vim.api.nvim_get_current_line()))
|
||
|
||
vim.NIL *vim.NIL*
|
||
Special value representing NIL in |RPC| and |v:null| in Vimscript
|
||
conversion, and similar cases. Lua `nil` cannot be used as part of a Lua
|
||
table representing a Dictionary or Array, because it is treated as
|
||
missing: `{"foo", nil}` is the same as `{"foo"}`.
|
||
|
||
vim.type_idx *vim.type_idx*
|
||
Type index for use in |lua-special-tbl|. Specifying one of the values from
|
||
|vim.types| allows typing the empty table (it is unclear whether empty Lua
|
||
table represents empty list or empty array) and forcing integral numbers
|
||
to be |Float|. See |lua-special-tbl| for more details.
|
||
|
||
vim.val_idx *vim.val_idx*
|
||
Value index for tables representing |Float|s. A table representing
|
||
floating-point value 1.0 looks like this: >lua
|
||
{
|
||
[vim.type_idx] = vim.types.float,
|
||
[vim.val_idx] = 1.0,
|
||
}
|
||
< See also |vim.type_idx| and |lua-special-tbl|.
|
||
|
||
vim.types *vim.types*
|
||
Table with possible values for |vim.type_idx|. Contains two sets of
|
||
key-value pairs: first maps possible values for |vim.type_idx| to
|
||
human-readable strings, second maps human-readable type names to values
|
||
for |vim.type_idx|. Currently contains pairs for `float`, `array` and
|
||
`dictionary` types.
|
||
|
||
Note: One must expect that values corresponding to `vim.types.float`,
|
||
`vim.types.array` and `vim.types.dictionary` fall under only two following
|
||
assumptions:
|
||
1. Value may serve both as a key and as a value in a table. Given the
|
||
properties of Lua tables this basically means “value is not `nil`”.
|
||
2. For each value in `vim.types` table `vim.types[vim.types[value]]` is the
|
||
same as `value`.
|
||
No other restrictions are put on types, and it is not guaranteed that
|
||
values corresponding to `vim.types.float`, `vim.types.array` and
|
||
`vim.types.dictionary` will not change or that `vim.types` table will only
|
||
contain values for these three types.
|
||
|
||
*log_levels* *vim.log.levels*
|
||
Log levels are one of the values defined in `vim.log.levels`:
|
||
|
||
vim.log.levels.DEBUG
|
||
vim.log.levels.ERROR
|
||
vim.log.levels.INFO
|
||
vim.log.levels.TRACE
|
||
vim.log.levels.WARN
|
||
vim.log.levels.OFF
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
vim.empty_dict() *vim.empty_dict()*
|
||
Creates a special empty table (marked with a metatable), which Nvim
|
||
converts to an empty dictionary when translating Lua values to Vimscript
|
||
or API types. Nvim by default converts an empty table `{}` without this
|
||
metatable to an list/array.
|
||
|
||
Note: If numeric keys are present in the table, Nvim ignores the metatable
|
||
marker and converts the dict to a list/array anyway.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`)
|
||
|
||
vim.iconv({str}, {from}, {to}) *vim.iconv()*
|
||
The result is a String, which is the text {str} converted from encoding
|
||
{from} to encoding {to}. When the conversion fails `nil` is returned. When
|
||
some characters could not be converted they are replaced with "?". The
|
||
encoding names are whatever the iconv() library function can accept, see
|
||
":Man 3 iconv".
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`) Text to convert
|
||
• {from} (`string`) Encoding of {str}
|
||
• {to} (`string`) Target encoding
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string?`) Converted string if conversion succeeds, `nil` otherwise.
|
||
|
||
vim.in_fast_event() *vim.in_fast_event()*
|
||
Returns true if the code is executing as part of a "fast" event handler,
|
||
where most of the API is disabled. These are low-level events (e.g.
|
||
|lua-loop-callbacks|) which can be invoked whenever Nvim polls for input.
|
||
When this is `false` most API functions are callable (but may be subject
|
||
to other restrictions such as |textlock|).
|
||
|
||
vim.rpcnotify({channel}, {method}, {...}) *vim.rpcnotify()*
|
||
Sends {event} to {channel} via |RPC| and returns immediately. If {channel}
|
||
is 0, the event is broadcast to all channels.
|
||
|
||
This function also works in a fast callback |lua-loop-callbacks|.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {channel} (`integer`)
|
||
• {method} (`string`)
|
||
• {...} (`any?`)
|
||
|
||
vim.rpcrequest({channel}, {method}, {...}) *vim.rpcrequest()*
|
||
Sends a request to {channel} to invoke {method} via |RPC| and blocks until
|
||
a response is received.
|
||
|
||
Note: NIL values as part of the return value is represented as |vim.NIL|
|
||
special value
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {channel} (`integer`)
|
||
• {method} (`string`)
|
||
• {...} (`any?`)
|
||
|
||
vim.schedule({fn}) *vim.schedule()*
|
||
Schedules {fn} to be invoked soon by the main event-loop. Useful to avoid
|
||
|textlock| or other temporary restrictions.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {fn} (`fun()`)
|
||
|
||
vim.str_byteindex({str}, {index}, {use_utf16}) *vim.str_byteindex()*
|
||
Convert UTF-32 or UTF-16 {index} to byte index. If {use_utf16} is not
|
||
supplied, it defaults to false (use UTF-32). Returns the byte index.
|
||
|
||
Invalid UTF-8 and NUL is treated like in |vim.str_utfindex()|. An {index}
|
||
in the middle of a UTF-16 sequence is rounded upwards to the end of that
|
||
sequence.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`)
|
||
• {index} (`integer`)
|
||
• {use_utf16} (`boolean?`)
|
||
|
||
vim.str_utf_end({str}, {index}) *vim.str_utf_end()*
|
||
Gets the distance (in bytes) from the last byte of the codepoint
|
||
(character) that {index} points to.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
-- The character 'æ' is stored as the bytes '\xc3\xa6' (using UTF-8)
|
||
|
||
-- Returns 0 because the index is pointing at the last byte of a character
|
||
vim.str_utf_end('æ', 2)
|
||
|
||
-- Returns 1 because the index is pointing at the penultimate byte of a character
|
||
vim.str_utf_end('æ', 1)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`)
|
||
• {index} (`integer`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`integer`)
|
||
|
||
vim.str_utf_pos({str}) *vim.str_utf_pos()*
|
||
Gets a list of the starting byte positions of each UTF-8 codepoint in the
|
||
given string.
|
||
|
||
Embedded NUL bytes are treated as terminating the string.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`integer[]`)
|
||
|
||
vim.str_utf_start({str}, {index}) *vim.str_utf_start()*
|
||
Gets the distance (in bytes) from the starting byte of the codepoint
|
||
(character) that {index} points to.
|
||
|
||
The result can be added to {index} to get the starting byte of a
|
||
character.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
-- The character 'æ' is stored as the bytes '\xc3\xa6' (using UTF-8)
|
||
|
||
-- Returns 0 because the index is pointing at the first byte of a character
|
||
vim.str_utf_start('æ', 1)
|
||
|
||
-- Returns -1 because the index is pointing at the second byte of a character
|
||
vim.str_utf_start('æ', 2)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`)
|
||
• {index} (`integer`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`integer`)
|
||
|
||
vim.str_utfindex({str}, {index}) *vim.str_utfindex()*
|
||
Convert byte index to UTF-32 and UTF-16 indices. If {index} is not
|
||
supplied, the length of the string is used. All indices are zero-based.
|
||
|
||
Embedded NUL bytes are treated as terminating the string. Invalid UTF-8
|
||
bytes, and embedded surrogates are counted as one code point each. An
|
||
{index} in the middle of a UTF-8 sequence is rounded upwards to the end of
|
||
that sequence.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`)
|
||
• {index} (`integer?`)
|
||
|
||
Return (multiple): ~
|
||
(`integer`) UTF-32 index
|
||
(`integer`) UTF-16 index
|
||
|
||
vim.stricmp({a}, {b}) *vim.stricmp()*
|
||
Compares strings case-insensitively.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {a} (`string`)
|
||
• {b} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`0|1|-1`) if strings are equal, {a} is greater than {b} or {a} is
|
||
lesser than {b}, respectively.
|
||
|
||
vim.ui_attach({ns}, {options}, {callback}) *vim.ui_attach()*
|
||
Attach to ui events, similar to |nvim_ui_attach()| but receive events as
|
||
Lua callback. Can be used to implement screen elements like popupmenu or
|
||
message handling in Lua.
|
||
|
||
{options} should be a dictionary-like table, where `ext_...` options
|
||
should be set to true to receive events for the respective external
|
||
element.
|
||
|
||
{callback} receives event name plus additional parameters. See
|
||
|ui-popupmenu| and the sections below for event format for respective
|
||
events.
|
||
|
||
WARNING: This api is considered experimental. Usability will vary for
|
||
different screen elements. In particular `ext_messages` behavior is
|
||
subject to further changes and usability improvements. This is expected to
|
||
be used to handle messages when setting 'cmdheight' to zero (which is
|
||
likewise experimental).
|
||
|
||
Example (stub for a |ui-popupmenu| implementation): >lua
|
||
ns = vim.api.nvim_create_namespace('my_fancy_pum')
|
||
|
||
vim.ui_attach(ns, {ext_popupmenu=true}, function(event, ...)
|
||
if event == "popupmenu_show" then
|
||
local items, selected, row, col, grid = ...
|
||
print("display pum ", #items)
|
||
elseif event == "popupmenu_select" then
|
||
local selected = ...
|
||
print("selected", selected)
|
||
elseif event == "popupmenu_hide" then
|
||
print("FIN")
|
||
end
|
||
end)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {ns} (`integer`)
|
||
• {options} (`table<string, any>`)
|
||
• {callback} (`fun()`)
|
||
|
||
vim.ui_detach({ns}) *vim.ui_detach()*
|
||
Detach a callback previously attached with |vim.ui_attach()| for the given
|
||
namespace {ns}.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {ns} (`integer`)
|
||
|
||
vim.wait({time}, {callback}, {interval}, {fast_only}) *vim.wait()*
|
||
Wait for {time} in milliseconds until {callback} returns `true`.
|
||
|
||
Executes {callback} immediately and at approximately {interval}
|
||
milliseconds (default 200). Nvim still processes other events during this
|
||
time.
|
||
|
||
Cannot be called while in an |api-fast| event.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
---
|
||
-- Wait for 100 ms, allowing other events to process
|
||
vim.wait(100, function() end)
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
-- Wait for 100 ms or until global variable set.
|
||
vim.wait(100, function() return vim.g.waiting_for_var end)
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
-- Wait for 1 second or until global variable set, checking every ~500 ms
|
||
vim.wait(1000, function() return vim.g.waiting_for_var end, 500)
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
-- Schedule a function to set a value in 100ms
|
||
vim.defer_fn(function() vim.g.timer_result = true end, 100)
|
||
|
||
-- Would wait ten seconds if results blocked. Actually only waits 100 ms
|
||
if vim.wait(10000, function() return vim.g.timer_result end) then
|
||
print('Only waiting a little bit of time!')
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {time} (`integer`) Number of milliseconds to wait
|
||
• {callback} (`fun(): boolean?`) Optional callback. Waits until
|
||
{callback} returns true
|
||
• {interval} (`integer?`) (Approximate) number of milliseconds to wait
|
||
between polls
|
||
• {fast_only} (`boolean?`) If true, only |api-fast| events will be
|
||
processed.
|
||
|
||
Return (multiple): ~
|
||
(`boolean`)
|
||
(`-1|-2?`)
|
||
• If {callback} returns `true` during the {time}: `true, nil`
|
||
• If {callback} never returns `true` during the {time}: `false, -1`
|
||
• If {callback} is interrupted during the {time}: `false, -2`
|
||
• If {callback} errors, the error is raised.
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
LUA-VIMSCRIPT BRIDGE *lua-vimscript*
|
||
|
||
Nvim Lua provides an interface or "bridge" to Vimscript variables and
|
||
functions, and editor commands and options.
|
||
|
||
Objects passed over this bridge are COPIED (marshalled): there are no
|
||
"references". |lua-guide-variables| For example, using `vim.fn.remove()` on a
|
||
Lua list copies the list object to Vimscript and does NOT modify the Lua list: >lua
|
||
local list = { 1, 2, 3 }
|
||
vim.fn.remove(list, 0)
|
||
vim.print(list) --> "{ 1, 2, 3 }"
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
|
||
vim.call({func}, {...}) *vim.call()*
|
||
Invokes |vim-function| or |user-function| {func} with arguments {...}.
|
||
See also |vim.fn|.
|
||
Equivalent to: >lua
|
||
vim.fn[func]({...})
|
||
<
|
||
vim.cmd({command})
|
||
See |vim.cmd()|.
|
||
|
||
vim.fn.{func}({...}) *vim.fn*
|
||
Invokes |vim-function| or |user-function| {func} with arguments {...}.
|
||
To call autoload functions, use the syntax: >lua
|
||
vim.fn['some#function']({...})
|
||
<
|
||
Unlike vim.api.|nvim_call_function()| this converts directly between Vim
|
||
objects and Lua objects. If the Vim function returns a float, it will be
|
||
represented directly as a Lua number. Empty lists and dictionaries both
|
||
are represented by an empty table.
|
||
|
||
Note: |v:null| values as part of the return value is represented as
|
||
|vim.NIL| special value
|
||
|
||
Note: vim.fn keys are generated lazily, thus `pairs(vim.fn)` only
|
||
enumerates functions that were called at least once.
|
||
|
||
Note: The majority of functions cannot run in |api-fast| callbacks with some
|
||
undocumented exceptions which are allowed.
|
||
|
||
*lua-vim-variables*
|
||
The Vim editor global dictionaries |g:| |w:| |b:| |t:| |v:| can be accessed
|
||
from Lua conveniently and idiomatically by referencing the `vim.*` Lua tables
|
||
described below. In this way you can easily read and modify global Vimscript
|
||
variables from Lua.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
|
||
vim.g.foo = 5 -- Set the g:foo Vimscript variable.
|
||
print(vim.g.foo) -- Get and print the g:foo Vimscript variable.
|
||
vim.g.foo = nil -- Delete (:unlet) the Vimscript variable.
|
||
vim.b[2].foo = 6 -- Set b:foo for buffer 2
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Note that setting dictionary fields directly will not write them back into
|
||
Nvim. This is because the index into the namespace simply returns a copy.
|
||
Instead the whole dictionary must be written as one. This can be achieved by
|
||
creating a short-lived temporary.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
|
||
vim.g.my_dict.field1 = 'value' -- Does not work
|
||
|
||
local my_dict = vim.g.my_dict --
|
||
my_dict.field1 = 'value' -- Instead do
|
||
vim.g.my_dict = my_dict --
|
||
|
||
vim.g *vim.g*
|
||
Global (|g:|) editor variables.
|
||
Key with no value returns `nil`.
|
||
|
||
vim.b *vim.b*
|
||
Buffer-scoped (|b:|) variables for the current buffer.
|
||
Invalid or unset key returns `nil`. Can be indexed with
|
||
an integer to access variables for a specific buffer.
|
||
|
||
vim.w *vim.w*
|
||
Window-scoped (|w:|) variables for the current window.
|
||
Invalid or unset key returns `nil`. Can be indexed with
|
||
an integer to access variables for a specific window.
|
||
|
||
vim.t *vim.t*
|
||
Tabpage-scoped (|t:|) variables for the current tabpage.
|
||
Invalid or unset key returns `nil`. Can be indexed with
|
||
an integer to access variables for a specific tabpage.
|
||
|
||
vim.v *vim.v*
|
||
|v:| variables.
|
||
Invalid or unset key returns `nil`.
|
||
|
||
|
||
*lua-options*
|
||
*lua-vim-options*
|
||
*lua-vim-set*
|
||
*lua-vim-setlocal*
|
||
|
||
Vim options can be accessed through |vim.o|, which behaves like Vimscript
|
||
|:set|.
|
||
|
||
Examples: ~
|
||
|
||
To set a boolean toggle:
|
||
Vimscript: `set number`
|
||
Lua: `vim.o.number = true`
|
||
|
||
To set a string value:
|
||
Vimscript: `set wildignore=*.o,*.a,__pycache__`
|
||
Lua: `vim.o.wildignore = '*.o,*.a,__pycache__'`
|
||
|
||
Similarly, there is |vim.bo| and |vim.wo| for setting buffer-scoped and
|
||
window-scoped options. Note that this must NOT be confused with
|
||
|local-options| and |:setlocal|. There is also |vim.go| that only accesses the
|
||
global value of a |global-local| option, see |:setglobal|.
|
||
|
||
|
||
*vim.opt_local*
|
||
*vim.opt_global*
|
||
*vim.opt*
|
||
|
||
|
||
A special interface |vim.opt| exists for conveniently interacting with list-
|
||
and map-style option from Lua: It allows accessing them as Lua tables and
|
||
offers object-oriented method for adding and removing entries.
|
||
|
||
Examples: ~
|
||
|
||
The following methods of setting a list-style option are equivalent:
|
||
In Vimscript: >vim
|
||
set wildignore=*.o,*.a,__pycache__
|
||
<
|
||
In Lua using `vim.o`: >lua
|
||
vim.o.wildignore = '*.o,*.a,__pycache__'
|
||
<
|
||
In Lua using `vim.opt`: >lua
|
||
vim.opt.wildignore = { '*.o', '*.a', '__pycache__' }
|
||
<
|
||
To replicate the behavior of |:set+=|, use: >lua
|
||
|
||
vim.opt.wildignore:append { "*.pyc", "node_modules" }
|
||
<
|
||
To replicate the behavior of |:set^=|, use: >lua
|
||
|
||
vim.opt.wildignore:prepend { "new_first_value" }
|
||
<
|
||
To replicate the behavior of |:set-=|, use: >lua
|
||
|
||
vim.opt.wildignore:remove { "node_modules" }
|
||
<
|
||
The following methods of setting a map-style option are equivalent:
|
||
In Vimscript: >vim
|
||
set listchars=space:_,tab:>~
|
||
<
|
||
In Lua using `vim.o`: >lua
|
||
vim.o.listchars = 'space:_,tab:>~'
|
||
<
|
||
In Lua using `vim.opt`: >lua
|
||
vim.opt.listchars = { space = '_', tab = '>~' }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Note that |vim.opt| returns an `Option` object, not the value of the option,
|
||
which is accessed through |vim.opt:get()|:
|
||
|
||
Examples: ~
|
||
|
||
The following methods of getting a list-style option are equivalent:
|
||
In Vimscript: >vim
|
||
echo wildignore
|
||
<
|
||
In Lua using `vim.o`: >lua
|
||
print(vim.o.wildignore)
|
||
<
|
||
In Lua using `vim.opt`: >lua
|
||
vim.print(vim.opt.wildignore:get())
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
In any of the above examples, to replicate the behavior |:setlocal|, use
|
||
`vim.opt_local`. Additionally, to replicate the behavior of |:setglobal|, use
|
||
`vim.opt_global`.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Option:append({value}) *vim.opt:append()*
|
||
Append a value to string-style options. See |:set+=|
|
||
|
||
These are equivalent: >lua
|
||
vim.opt.formatoptions:append('j')
|
||
vim.opt.formatoptions = vim.opt.formatoptions + 'j'
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {value} (`string`) Value to append
|
||
|
||
Option:get() *vim.opt:get()*
|
||
Returns a Lua-representation of the option. Boolean, number and string
|
||
values will be returned in exactly the same fashion.
|
||
|
||
For values that are comma-separated lists, an array will be returned with
|
||
the values as entries in the array: >lua
|
||
vim.cmd [[set wildignore=*.pyc,*.o]]
|
||
|
||
vim.print(vim.opt.wildignore:get())
|
||
-- { "*.pyc", "*.o", }
|
||
|
||
for _, ignore_pattern in ipairs(vim.opt.wildignore:get()) do
|
||
print("Will ignore:", ignore_pattern)
|
||
end
|
||
-- Will ignore: *.pyc
|
||
-- Will ignore: *.o
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
For values that are comma-separated maps, a table will be returned with
|
||
the names as keys and the values as entries: >lua
|
||
vim.cmd [[set listchars=space:_,tab:>~]]
|
||
|
||
vim.print(vim.opt.listchars:get())
|
||
-- { space = "_", tab = ">~", }
|
||
|
||
for char, representation in pairs(vim.opt.listchars:get()) do
|
||
print(char, "=>", representation)
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
For values that are lists of flags, a set will be returned with the flags
|
||
as keys and `true` as entries. >lua
|
||
vim.cmd [[set formatoptions=njtcroql]]
|
||
|
||
vim.print(vim.opt.formatoptions:get())
|
||
-- { n = true, j = true, c = true, ... }
|
||
|
||
local format_opts = vim.opt.formatoptions:get()
|
||
if format_opts.j then
|
||
print("J is enabled!")
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string|integer|boolean?`) value of option
|
||
|
||
Option:prepend({value}) *vim.opt:prepend()*
|
||
Prepend a value to string-style options. See |:set^=|
|
||
|
||
These are equivalent: >lua
|
||
vim.opt.wildignore:prepend('*.o')
|
||
vim.opt.wildignore = vim.opt.wildignore ^ '*.o'
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {value} (`string`) Value to prepend
|
||
|
||
Option:remove({value}) *vim.opt:remove()*
|
||
Remove a value from string-style options. See |:set-=|
|
||
|
||
These are equivalent: >lua
|
||
vim.opt.wildignore:remove('*.pyc')
|
||
vim.opt.wildignore = vim.opt.wildignore - '*.pyc'
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {value} (`string`) Value to remove
|
||
|
||
vim.bo[{bufnr}] *vim.bo*
|
||
Get or set buffer-scoped |options| for the buffer with number {bufnr}. If
|
||
{bufnr} is omitted then the current buffer is used. Invalid {bufnr} or key
|
||
is an error.
|
||
|
||
Note: this is equivalent to `:setlocal` for |global-local| options and
|
||
`:set` otherwise.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local bufnr = vim.api.nvim_get_current_buf()
|
||
vim.bo[bufnr].buflisted = true -- same as vim.bo.buflisted = true
|
||
print(vim.bo.comments)
|
||
print(vim.bo.baz) -- error: invalid key
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
vim.env *vim.env*
|
||
Environment variables defined in the editor session. See |expand-env| and
|
||
|:let-environment| for the Vimscript behavior. Invalid or unset key
|
||
returns `nil`.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.env.FOO = 'bar'
|
||
print(vim.env.TERM)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
vim.go *vim.go*
|
||
Get or set global |options|. Like `:setglobal`. Invalid key is an error.
|
||
|
||
Note: this is different from |vim.o| because this accesses the global
|
||
option value and thus is mostly useful for use with |global-local|
|
||
options.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.go.cmdheight = 4
|
||
print(vim.go.columns)
|
||
print(vim.go.bar) -- error: invalid key
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
vim.o *vim.o*
|
||
Get or set |options|. Like `:set`. Invalid key is an error.
|
||
|
||
Note: this works on both buffer-scoped and window-scoped options using the
|
||
current buffer and window.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.o.cmdheight = 4
|
||
print(vim.o.columns)
|
||
print(vim.o.foo) -- error: invalid key
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
vim.wo[{winid}][{bufnr}] *vim.wo*
|
||
Get or set window-scoped |options| for the window with handle {winid} and
|
||
buffer with number {bufnr}. Like `:setlocal` if setting a |global-local|
|
||
option or if {bufnr} is provided, like `:set` otherwise. If {winid} is
|
||
omitted then the current window is used. Invalid {winid}, {bufnr} or key
|
||
is an error.
|
||
|
||
Note: only {bufnr} with value `0` (the current buffer in the window) is
|
||
supported.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local winid = vim.api.nvim_get_current_win()
|
||
vim.wo[winid].number = true -- same as vim.wo.number = true
|
||
print(vim.wo.foldmarker)
|
||
print(vim.wo.quux) -- error: invalid key
|
||
vim.wo[winid][0].spell = false -- like ':setlocal nospell'
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim *lua-vim*
|
||
|
||
vim.cmd({command}) *vim.cmd()*
|
||
Executes Vim script commands.
|
||
|
||
Note that `vim.cmd` can be indexed with a command name to return a
|
||
callable function to the command.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.cmd('echo 42')
|
||
vim.cmd([[
|
||
augroup My_group
|
||
autocmd!
|
||
autocmd FileType c setlocal cindent
|
||
augroup END
|
||
]])
|
||
|
||
-- Ex command :echo "foo"
|
||
-- Note string literals need to be double quoted.
|
||
vim.cmd('echo "foo"')
|
||
vim.cmd { cmd = 'echo', args = { '"foo"' } }
|
||
vim.cmd.echo({ args = { '"foo"' } })
|
||
vim.cmd.echo('"foo"')
|
||
|
||
-- Ex command :write! myfile.txt
|
||
vim.cmd('write! myfile.txt')
|
||
vim.cmd { cmd = 'write', args = { "myfile.txt" }, bang = true }
|
||
vim.cmd.write { args = { "myfile.txt" }, bang = true }
|
||
vim.cmd.write { "myfile.txt", bang = true }
|
||
|
||
-- Ex command :colorscheme blue
|
||
vim.cmd('colorscheme blue')
|
||
vim.cmd.colorscheme('blue')
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {command} (`string|table`) Command(s) to execute. If a string,
|
||
executes multiple lines of Vim script at once. In this
|
||
case, it is an alias to |nvim_exec2()|, where `opts.output`
|
||
is set to false. Thus it works identical to |:source|. If a
|
||
table, executes a single command. In this case, it is an
|
||
alias to |nvim_cmd()| where `opts` is empty.
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |ex-cmd-index|
|
||
|
||
vim.defer_fn({fn}, {timeout}) *vim.defer_fn()*
|
||
Defers calling {fn} until {timeout} ms passes.
|
||
|
||
Use to do a one-shot timer that calls {fn} Note: The {fn} is
|
||
|vim.schedule_wrap()|ped automatically, so API functions are safe to call.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {fn} (`function`) Callback to call once `timeout` expires
|
||
• {timeout} (`integer`) Number of milliseconds to wait before calling
|
||
`fn`
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`) timer luv timer object
|
||
|
||
*vim.deprecate()*
|
||
vim.deprecate({name}, {alternative}, {version}, {plugin}, {backtrace})
|
||
Shows a deprecation message to the user.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {name} (`string`) Deprecated feature (function, API, etc.).
|
||
• {alternative} (`string?`) Suggested alternative feature.
|
||
• {version} (`string`) Version when the deprecated function will be
|
||
removed.
|
||
• {plugin} (`string?`) Name of the plugin that owns the deprecated
|
||
feature. Defaults to "Nvim".
|
||
• {backtrace} (`boolean?`) Prints backtrace. Defaults to true.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string?`) Deprecated message, or nil if no message was shown.
|
||
|
||
vim.inspect() *vim.inspect()*
|
||
Gets a human-readable representation of the given object.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`)
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |vim.print()|
|
||
• https://github.com/kikito/inspect.lua
|
||
• https://github.com/mpeterv/vinspect
|
||
|
||
vim.keycode({str}) *vim.keycode()*
|
||
Translates keycodes.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local k = vim.keycode
|
||
vim.g.mapleader = k'<bs>'
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`) String to be converted.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`)
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |nvim_replace_termcodes()|
|
||
|
||
vim.lua_omnifunc({find_start}) *vim.lua_omnifunc()*
|
||
Omnifunc for completing Lua values from the runtime Lua interpreter,
|
||
similar to the builtin completion for the `:lua` command.
|
||
|
||
Activate using `set omnifunc=v:lua.vim.lua_omnifunc` in a Lua buffer.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {find_start} (`1|0`)
|
||
|
||
vim.notify({msg}, {level}, {opts}) *vim.notify()*
|
||
Displays a notification to the user.
|
||
|
||
This function can be overridden by plugins to display notifications using
|
||
a custom provider (such as the system notification provider). By default,
|
||
writes to |:messages|.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {msg} (`string`) Content of the notification to show to the user.
|
||
• {level} (`integer?`) One of the values from |vim.log.levels|.
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Optional parameters. Unused by default.
|
||
|
||
vim.notify_once({msg}, {level}, {opts}) *vim.notify_once()*
|
||
Displays a notification only one time.
|
||
|
||
Like |vim.notify()|, but subsequent calls with the same message will not
|
||
display a notification.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {msg} (`string`) Content of the notification to show to the user.
|
||
• {level} (`integer?`) One of the values from |vim.log.levels|.
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Optional parameters. Unused by default.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) true if message was displayed, else false
|
||
|
||
vim.on_key({fn}, {ns_id}) *vim.on_key()*
|
||
Adds Lua function {fn} with namespace id {ns_id} as a listener to every,
|
||
yes every, input key.
|
||
|
||
The Nvim command-line option |-w| is related but does not support
|
||
callbacks and cannot be toggled dynamically.
|
||
|
||
Note: ~
|
||
• {fn} will be removed on error.
|
||
• {fn} will not be cleared by |nvim_buf_clear_namespace()|
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {fn} (`fun(key: string, typed: string)?`) Function invoked on
|
||
every key press. |i_CTRL-V| {key} is the key after mappings
|
||
have been applied, and {typed} is the key(s) before mappings
|
||
are applied, which may be empty if {key} is produced by
|
||
non-typed keys. When {fn} is nil and {ns_id} is specified,
|
||
the callback associated with namespace {ns_id} is removed.
|
||
• {ns_id} (`integer?`) Namespace ID. If nil or 0, generates and returns
|
||
a new |nvim_create_namespace()| id.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`integer`) Namespace id associated with {fn}. Or count of all
|
||
callbacks if on_key() is called without arguments.
|
||
|
||
vim.paste({lines}, {phase}) *vim.paste()*
|
||
Paste handler, invoked by |nvim_paste()| when a conforming UI (such as the
|
||
|TUI|) pastes text into the editor.
|
||
|
||
Example: To remove ANSI color codes when pasting: >lua
|
||
vim.paste = (function(overridden)
|
||
return function(lines, phase)
|
||
for i,line in ipairs(lines) do
|
||
-- Scrub ANSI color codes from paste input.
|
||
lines[i] = line:gsub('\27%[[0-9;mK]+', '')
|
||
end
|
||
overridden(lines, phase)
|
||
end
|
||
end)(vim.paste)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {lines} (`string[]`) |readfile()|-style list of lines to paste.
|
||
|channel-lines|
|
||
• {phase} (`-1|1|2|3`) -1: "non-streaming" paste: the call contains all
|
||
lines. If paste is "streamed", `phase` indicates the stream
|
||
state:
|
||
• 1: starts the paste (exactly once)
|
||
• 2: continues the paste (zero or more times)
|
||
• 3: ends the paste (exactly once)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) result false if client should cancel the paste.
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |paste|
|
||
|
||
vim.print({...}) *vim.print()*
|
||
"Pretty prints" the given arguments and returns them unmodified.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local hl_normal = vim.print(vim.api.nvim_get_hl(0, { name = 'Normal' }))
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {...} (`any`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`) given arguments.
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |vim.inspect()|
|
||
• |:=|
|
||
|
||
*vim.region()*
|
||
vim.region({bufnr}, {pos1}, {pos2}, {regtype}, {inclusive})
|
||
Gets a dict of line segment ("chunk") positions for the region from `pos1`
|
||
to `pos2`.
|
||
|
||
Input and output positions are byte positions, (0,0)-indexed. "End of
|
||
line" column position (for example, |linewise| visual selection) is
|
||
returned as |v:maxcol| (big number).
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {bufnr} (`integer`) Buffer number, or 0 for current buffer
|
||
• {pos1} (`integer[]|string`) Start of region as a (line, column)
|
||
tuple or |getpos()|-compatible string
|
||
• {pos2} (`integer[]|string`) End of region as a (line, column)
|
||
tuple or |getpos()|-compatible string
|
||
• {regtype} (`string`) |setreg()|-style selection type
|
||
• {inclusive} (`boolean`) Controls whether the ending column is
|
||
inclusive (see also 'selection').
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`) region Dict of the form `{linenr = {startcol,endcol}}`.
|
||
`endcol` is exclusive, and whole lines are returned as
|
||
`{startcol,endcol} = {0,-1}`.
|
||
|
||
vim.schedule_wrap({fn}) *vim.schedule_wrap()*
|
||
Returns a function which calls {fn} via |vim.schedule()|.
|
||
|
||
The returned function passes all arguments to {fn}.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
function notify_readable(_err, readable)
|
||
vim.notify("readable? " .. tostring(readable))
|
||
end
|
||
vim.uv.fs_access(vim.fn.stdpath("config"), "R", vim.schedule_wrap(notify_readable))
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {fn} (`function`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`function`)
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |lua-loop-callbacks|
|
||
• |vim.schedule()|
|
||
• |vim.in_fast_event()|
|
||
|
||
vim.system({cmd}, {opts}, {on_exit}) *vim.system()*
|
||
Runs a system command or throws an error if {cmd} cannot be run.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
local on_exit = function(obj)
|
||
print(obj.code)
|
||
print(obj.signal)
|
||
print(obj.stdout)
|
||
print(obj.stderr)
|
||
end
|
||
|
||
-- Runs asynchronously:
|
||
vim.system({'echo', 'hello'}, { text = true }, on_exit)
|
||
|
||
-- Runs synchronously:
|
||
local obj = vim.system({'echo', 'hello'}, { text = true }):wait()
|
||
-- { code = 0, signal = 0, stdout = 'hello', stderr = '' }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
See |uv.spawn()| for more details. Note: unlike |uv.spawn()|, vim.system
|
||
throws an error if {cmd} cannot be run.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {cmd} (`string[]`) Command to execute
|
||
• {opts} (`vim.SystemOpts?`) Options:
|
||
• cwd: (string) Set the current working directory for the
|
||
sub-process.
|
||
• env: table<string,string> Set environment variables for
|
||
the new process. Inherits the current environment with
|
||
`NVIM` set to |v:servername|.
|
||
• clear_env: (boolean) `env` defines the job environment
|
||
exactly, instead of merging current environment.
|
||
• stdin: (string|string[]|boolean) If `true`, then a pipe
|
||
to stdin is opened and can be written to via the
|
||
`write()` method to SystemObj. If string or string[] then
|
||
will be written to stdin and closed. Defaults to `false`.
|
||
• stdout: (boolean|function) Handle output from stdout.
|
||
When passed as a function must have the signature
|
||
`fun(err: string, data: string)`. Defaults to `true`
|
||
• stderr: (boolean|function) Handle output from stderr.
|
||
When passed as a function must have the signature
|
||
`fun(err: string, data: string)`. Defaults to `true`.
|
||
• text: (boolean) Handle stdout and stderr as text.
|
||
Replaces `\r\n` with `\n`.
|
||
• timeout: (integer) Run the command with a time limit.
|
||
Upon timeout the process is sent the TERM signal (15) and
|
||
the exit code is set to 124.
|
||
• detach: (boolean) If true, spawn the child process in a
|
||
detached state - this will make it a process group
|
||
leader, and will effectively enable the child to keep
|
||
running after the parent exits. Note that the child
|
||
process will still keep the parent's event loop alive
|
||
unless the parent process calls |uv.unref()| on the
|
||
child's process handle.
|
||
• {on_exit} (`fun(out: vim.SystemCompleted)?`) Called when subprocess
|
||
exits. When provided, the command runs asynchronously.
|
||
Receives SystemCompleted object, see return of
|
||
SystemObj:wait().
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.SystemObj`) Object with the fields:
|
||
• cmd (string[]) Command name and args
|
||
• pid (integer) Process ID
|
||
• wait (fun(timeout: integer|nil): SystemCompleted) Wait for the
|
||
process to complete. Upon timeout the process is sent the KILL
|
||
signal (9) and the exit code is set to 124. Cannot be called in
|
||
|api-fast|.
|
||
• SystemCompleted is an object with the fields:
|
||
• code: (integer)
|
||
• signal: (integer)
|
||
• stdout: (string), nil if stdout argument is passed
|
||
• stderr: (string), nil if stderr argument is passed
|
||
• kill (fun(signal: integer|string))
|
||
• write (fun(data: string|nil)) Requires `stdin=true`. Pass `nil` to
|
||
close the stream.
|
||
• is_closing (fun(): boolean)
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.inspector *vim.inspector*
|
||
|
||
vim.inspect_pos({bufnr}, {row}, {col}, {filter}) *vim.inspect_pos()*
|
||
Get all the items at a given buffer position.
|
||
|
||
Can also be pretty-printed with `:Inspect!`. *:Inspect!*
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {bufnr} (`integer?`) defaults to the current buffer
|
||
• {row} (`integer?`) row to inspect, 0-based. Defaults to the row of
|
||
the current cursor
|
||
• {col} (`integer?`) col to inspect, 0-based. Defaults to the col of
|
||
the current cursor
|
||
• {filter} (`table?`) Table with key-value pairs to filter the items
|
||
• {syntax} (`boolean`, default: `true`) Include syntax based
|
||
highlight groups.
|
||
• {treesitter} (`boolean`, default: `true`) Include
|
||
treesitter based highlight groups.
|
||
• {extmarks} (`boolean|"all"`, default: true) Include
|
||
extmarks. When `all`, then extmarks without a `hl_group`
|
||
will also be included.
|
||
• {semantic_tokens} (`boolean`, default: true) Include
|
||
semantic token highlights.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`) a table with the following key-value pairs. Items are in
|
||
"traversal order":
|
||
• treesitter: a list of treesitter captures
|
||
• syntax: a list of syntax groups
|
||
• semantic_tokens: a list of semantic tokens
|
||
• extmarks: a list of extmarks
|
||
• buffer: the buffer used to get the items
|
||
• row: the row used to get the items
|
||
• col: the col used to get the items
|
||
|
||
vim.show_pos({bufnr}, {row}, {col}, {filter}) *vim.show_pos()*
|
||
Show all the items at a given buffer position.
|
||
|
||
Can also be shown with `:Inspect`. *:Inspect*
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {bufnr} (`integer?`) defaults to the current buffer
|
||
• {row} (`integer?`) row to inspect, 0-based. Defaults to the row of
|
||
the current cursor
|
||
• {col} (`integer?`) col to inspect, 0-based. Defaults to the col of
|
||
the current cursor
|
||
• {filter} (`table?`) A table with the following fields:
|
||
• {syntax} (`boolean`, default: `true`) Include syntax based
|
||
highlight groups.
|
||
• {treesitter} (`boolean`, default: `true`) Include
|
||
treesitter based highlight groups.
|
||
• {extmarks} (`boolean|"all"`, default: true) Include
|
||
extmarks. When `all`, then extmarks without a `hl_group`
|
||
will also be included.
|
||
• {semantic_tokens} (`boolean`, default: true) Include
|
||
semantic token highlights.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
*vim.Ringbuf*
|
||
|
||
Fields: ~
|
||
• {clear} (`fun()`) Clear all items
|
||
• {push} (`fun(item: T)`) Adds an item, overriding the oldest item if
|
||
the buffer is full.
|
||
• {pop} (`fun(): T?`) Removes and returns the first unread item
|
||
• {peek} (`fun(): T?`) Returns the first unread item without removing
|
||
it
|
||
|
||
|
||
Ringbuf:clear() *Ringbuf:clear()*
|
||
Clear all items
|
||
|
||
Ringbuf:peek() *Ringbuf:peek()*
|
||
Returns the first unread item without removing it
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any?`)
|
||
|
||
Ringbuf:pop() *Ringbuf:pop()*
|
||
Removes and returns the first unread item
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any?`)
|
||
|
||
Ringbuf:push({item}) *Ringbuf:push()*
|
||
Adds an item, overriding the oldest item if the buffer is full.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {item} (`any`)
|
||
|
||
vim.deep_equal({a}, {b}) *vim.deep_equal()*
|
||
Deep compare values for equality
|
||
|
||
Tables are compared recursively unless they both provide the `eq`
|
||
metamethod. All other types are compared using the equality `==` operator.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {a} (`any`) First value
|
||
• {b} (`any`) Second value
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) `true` if values are equals, else `false`
|
||
|
||
vim.deepcopy({orig}, {noref}) *vim.deepcopy()*
|
||
Returns a deep copy of the given object. Non-table objects are copied as
|
||
in a typical Lua assignment, whereas table objects are copied recursively.
|
||
Functions are naively copied, so functions in the copied table point to
|
||
the same functions as those in the input table. Userdata and threads are
|
||
not copied and will throw an error.
|
||
|
||
Note: `noref=true` is much more performant on tables with unique table
|
||
fields, while `noref=false` is more performant on tables that reuse table
|
||
fields.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {orig} (`table`) Table to copy
|
||
• {noref} (`boolean?`) When `false` (default) a contained table is only
|
||
copied once and all references point to this single copy.
|
||
When `true` every occurrence of a table results in a new
|
||
copy. This also means that a cyclic reference can cause
|
||
`deepcopy()` to fail.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`) Table of copied keys and (nested) values.
|
||
|
||
vim.defaulttable({createfn}) *vim.defaulttable()*
|
||
Creates a table whose missing keys are provided by {createfn} (like
|
||
Python's "defaultdict").
|
||
|
||
If {createfn} is `nil` it defaults to defaulttable() itself, so accessing
|
||
nested keys creates nested tables: >lua
|
||
local a = vim.defaulttable()
|
||
a.b.c = 1
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {createfn} (`fun(key:any):any?`) Provides the value for a missing
|
||
`key`.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`) Empty table with `__index` metamethod.
|
||
|
||
vim.endswith({s}, {suffix}) *vim.endswith()*
|
||
Tests if `s` ends with `suffix`.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {s} (`string`) String
|
||
• {suffix} (`string`) Suffix to match
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) `true` if `suffix` is a suffix of `s`
|
||
|
||
vim.gsplit({s}, {sep}, {opts}) *vim.gsplit()*
|
||
Gets an |iterator| that splits a string at each instance of a separator,
|
||
in "lazy" fashion (as opposed to |vim.split()| which is "eager").
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
for s in vim.gsplit(':aa::b:', ':', {plain=true}) do
|
||
print(s)
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
If you want to also inspect the separator itself (instead of discarding
|
||
it), use |string.gmatch()|. Example: >lua
|
||
for word, num in ('foo111bar222'):gmatch('([^0-9]*)(%d*)') do
|
||
print(('word: %s num: %s'):format(word, num))
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {s} (`string`) String to split
|
||
• {sep} (`string`) Separator or pattern
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Keyword arguments |kwargs|:
|
||
• {plain}? (`boolean`) Use `sep` literally (as in
|
||
string.find).
|
||
• {trimempty}? (`boolean`) Discard empty segments at start and
|
||
end of the sequence.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`fun():string?`) Iterator over the split components
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |string.gmatch()|
|
||
• |vim.split()|
|
||
• |lua-patterns|
|
||
• https://www.lua.org/pil/20.2.html
|
||
• http://lua-users.org/wiki/StringLibraryTutorial
|
||
|
||
vim.is_callable({f}) *vim.is_callable()*
|
||
Returns true if object `f` can be called as a function.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {f} (`any`) Any object
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) `true` if `f` is callable, else `false`
|
||
|
||
vim.isarray({t}) *vim.isarray()*
|
||
Tests if `t` is an "array": a table indexed only by integers (potentially
|
||
non-contiguous).
|
||
|
||
If the indexes start from 1 and are contiguous then the array is also a
|
||
list. |vim.islist()|
|
||
|
||
Empty table `{}` is an array, unless it was created by |vim.empty_dict()|
|
||
or returned as a dict-like |API| or Vimscript result, for example from
|
||
|rpcrequest()| or |vim.fn|.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {t} (`table?`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) `true` if array-like table, else `false`.
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• https://github.com/openresty/luajit2#tableisarray
|
||
|
||
vim.islist({t}) *vim.islist()*
|
||
Tests if `t` is a "list": a table indexed only by contiguous integers
|
||
starting from 1 (what |lua-length| calls a "regular array").
|
||
|
||
Empty table `{}` is a list, unless it was created by |vim.empty_dict()| or
|
||
returned as a dict-like |API| or Vimscript result, for example from
|
||
|rpcrequest()| or |vim.fn|.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {t} (`table?`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) `true` if list-like table, else `false`.
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |vim.isarray()|
|
||
|
||
vim.list_contains({t}, {value}) *vim.list_contains()*
|
||
Checks if a list-like table (integer keys without gaps) contains `value`.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {t} (`table`) Table to check (must be list-like, not validated)
|
||
• {value} (`any`) Value to compare
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) `true` if `t` contains `value`
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |vim.tbl_contains()| for checking values in general tables
|
||
|
||
vim.list_extend({dst}, {src}, {start}, {finish}) *vim.list_extend()*
|
||
Extends a list-like table with the values of another list-like table.
|
||
|
||
NOTE: This mutates dst!
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {dst} (`table`) List which will be modified and appended to
|
||
• {src} (`table`) List from which values will be inserted
|
||
• {start} (`integer?`) Start index on src. Defaults to 1
|
||
• {finish} (`integer?`) Final index on src. Defaults to `#src`
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`) dst
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |vim.tbl_extend()|
|
||
|
||
vim.list_slice({list}, {start}, {finish}) *vim.list_slice()*
|
||
Creates a copy of a table containing only elements from start to end
|
||
(inclusive)
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {list} (`any[]`) Table
|
||
• {start} (`integer?`) Start range of slice
|
||
• {finish} (`integer?`) End range of slice
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any[]`) Copy of table sliced from start to finish (inclusive)
|
||
|
||
vim.pesc({s}) *vim.pesc()*
|
||
Escapes magic chars in |lua-patterns|.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {s} (`string`) String to escape
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) %-escaped pattern string
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• https://github.com/rxi/lume
|
||
|
||
vim.ringbuf({size}) *vim.ringbuf()*
|
||
Create a ring buffer limited to a maximal number of items. Once the buffer
|
||
is full, adding a new entry overrides the oldest entry. >lua
|
||
local ringbuf = vim.ringbuf(4)
|
||
ringbuf:push("a")
|
||
ringbuf:push("b")
|
||
ringbuf:push("c")
|
||
ringbuf:push("d")
|
||
ringbuf:push("e") -- overrides "a"
|
||
print(ringbuf:pop()) -- returns "b"
|
||
print(ringbuf:pop()) -- returns "c"
|
||
|
||
-- Can be used as iterator. Pops remaining items:
|
||
for val in ringbuf do
|
||
print(val)
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Returns a Ringbuf instance with the following methods:
|
||
• |Ringbuf:push()|
|
||
• |Ringbuf:pop()|
|
||
• |Ringbuf:peek()|
|
||
• |Ringbuf:clear()|
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {size} (`integer`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.Ringbuf`) ringbuf See |vim.Ringbuf|.
|
||
|
||
vim.spairs({t}) *vim.spairs()*
|
||
Enumerates key-value pairs of a table, ordered by key.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {t} (`table`) Dict-like table
|
||
|
||
Return (multiple): ~
|
||
(`fun(table: table<K, V>, index?: K):K, V`) |for-in| iterator over
|
||
sorted keys and their values
|
||
(`table`)
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• Based on
|
||
https://github.com/premake/premake-core/blob/master/src/base/table.lua
|
||
|
||
vim.split({s}, {sep}, {opts}) *vim.split()*
|
||
Splits a string at each instance of a separator and returns the result as
|
||
a table (unlike |vim.gsplit()|).
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
split(":aa::b:", ":") --> {'','aa','','b',''}
|
||
split("axaby", "ab?") --> {'','x','y'}
|
||
split("x*yz*o", "*", {plain=true}) --> {'x','yz','o'}
|
||
split("|x|y|z|", "|", {trimempty=true}) --> {'x', 'y', 'z'}
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {s} (`string`) String to split
|
||
• {sep} (`string`) Separator or pattern
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Keyword arguments |kwargs|:
|
||
• {plain}? (`boolean`) Use `sep` literally (as in
|
||
string.find).
|
||
• {trimempty}? (`boolean`) Discard empty segments at start and
|
||
end of the sequence.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string[]`) List of split components
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |vim.gsplit()|
|
||
• |string.gmatch()|
|
||
|
||
vim.startswith({s}, {prefix}) *vim.startswith()*
|
||
Tests if `s` starts with `prefix`.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {s} (`string`) String
|
||
• {prefix} (`string`) Prefix to match
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) `true` if `prefix` is a prefix of `s`
|
||
|
||
vim.tbl_contains({t}, {value}, {opts}) *vim.tbl_contains()*
|
||
Checks if a table contains a given value, specified either directly or via
|
||
a predicate that is checked for each value.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.tbl_contains({ 'a', { 'b', 'c' } }, function(v)
|
||
return vim.deep_equal(v, { 'b', 'c' })
|
||
end, { predicate = true })
|
||
-- true
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {t} (`table`) Table to check
|
||
• {value} (`any`) Value to compare or predicate function reference
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Keyword arguments |kwargs|:
|
||
• {predicate}? (`boolean`) `value` is a function reference to
|
||
be checked (default false)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) `true` if `t` contains `value`
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |vim.list_contains()| for checking values in list-like tables
|
||
|
||
vim.tbl_count({t}) *vim.tbl_count()*
|
||
Counts the number of non-nil values in table `t`. >lua
|
||
vim.tbl_count({ a=1, b=2 }) --> 2
|
||
vim.tbl_count({ 1, 2 }) --> 2
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {t} (`table`) Table
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`integer`) Number of non-nil values in table
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• https://github.com/Tieske/Penlight/blob/master/lua/pl/tablex.lua
|
||
|
||
vim.tbl_deep_extend({behavior}, {...}) *vim.tbl_deep_extend()*
|
||
Merges recursively two or more tables.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {behavior} (`'error'|'keep'|'force'`) Decides what to do if a key is
|
||
found in more than one map:
|
||
• "error": raise an error
|
||
• "keep": use value from the leftmost map
|
||
• "force": use value from the rightmost map
|
||
• {...} (`table`) Two or more tables
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`) Merged table
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |vim.tbl_extend()|
|
||
|
||
vim.tbl_extend({behavior}, {...}) *vim.tbl_extend()*
|
||
Merges two or more tables.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {behavior} (`'error'|'keep'|'force'`) Decides what to do if a key is
|
||
found in more than one map:
|
||
• "error": raise an error
|
||
• "keep": use value from the leftmost map
|
||
• "force": use value from the rightmost map
|
||
• {...} (`table`) Two or more tables
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`) Merged table
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |extend()|
|
||
|
||
vim.tbl_filter({func}, {t}) *vim.tbl_filter()*
|
||
Filter a table using a predicate function
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {func} (`function`) Function
|
||
• {t} (`table`) Table
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any[]`) Table of filtered values
|
||
|
||
vim.tbl_get({o}, {...}) *vim.tbl_get()*
|
||
Index into a table (first argument) via string keys passed as subsequent
|
||
arguments. Return `nil` if the key does not exist.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
vim.tbl_get({ key = { nested_key = true }}, 'key', 'nested_key') == true
|
||
vim.tbl_get({ key = {}}, 'key', 'nested_key') == nil
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {o} (`table`) Table to index
|
||
• {...} (`any`) Optional keys (0 or more, variadic) via which to index
|
||
the table
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`) Nested value indexed by key (if it exists), else nil
|
||
|
||
vim.tbl_isempty({t}) *vim.tbl_isempty()*
|
||
Checks if a table is empty.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {t} (`table`) Table to check
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`) `true` if `t` is empty
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• https://github.com/premake/premake-core/blob/master/src/base/table.lua
|
||
|
||
vim.tbl_keys({t}) *vim.tbl_keys()*
|
||
Return a list of all keys used in a table. However, the order of the
|
||
return table of keys is not guaranteed.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {t} (`table`) Table
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any[]`) List of keys
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• From
|
||
https://github.com/premake/premake-core/blob/master/src/base/table.lua
|
||
|
||
vim.tbl_map({func}, {t}) *vim.tbl_map()*
|
||
Apply a function to all values of a table.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {func} (`fun(value: T): any`) Function
|
||
• {t} (`table<any, T>`) Table
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`) Table of transformed values
|
||
|
||
vim.tbl_values({t}) *vim.tbl_values()*
|
||
Return a list of all values used in a table. However, the order of the
|
||
return table of values is not guaranteed.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {t} (`table`) Table
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any[]`) List of values
|
||
|
||
vim.trim({s}) *vim.trim()*
|
||
Trim whitespace (Lua pattern "%s") from both sides of a string.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {s} (`string`) String to trim
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) String with whitespace removed from its beginning and end
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |lua-patterns|
|
||
• https://www.lua.org/pil/20.2.html
|
||
|
||
vim.validate({opt}) *vim.validate()*
|
||
Validates a parameter specification (types and values). Specs are
|
||
evaluated in alphanumeric order, until the first failure.
|
||
|
||
Usage example: >lua
|
||
function user.new(name, age, hobbies)
|
||
vim.validate{
|
||
name={name, 'string'},
|
||
age={age, 'number'},
|
||
hobbies={hobbies, 'table'},
|
||
}
|
||
...
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Examples with explicit argument values (can be run directly): >lua
|
||
vim.validate{arg1={{'foo'}, 'table'}, arg2={'foo', 'string'}}
|
||
--> NOP (success)
|
||
|
||
vim.validate{arg1={1, 'table'}}
|
||
--> error('arg1: expected table, got number')
|
||
|
||
vim.validate{arg1={3, function(a) return (a % 2) == 0 end, 'even number'}}
|
||
--> error('arg1: expected even number, got 3')
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
If multiple types are valid they can be given as a list. >lua
|
||
vim.validate{arg1={{'foo'}, {'table', 'string'}}, arg2={'foo', {'table', 'string'}}}
|
||
-- NOP (success)
|
||
|
||
vim.validate{arg1={1, {'string', 'table'}}}
|
||
-- error('arg1: expected string|table, got number')
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {opt} (`table`) Names of parameters to validate. Each key is a
|
||
parameter name; each value is a tuple in one of these forms:
|
||
1. (arg_value, type_name, optional)
|
||
• arg_value: argument value
|
||
• type_name: string|table type name, one of: ("table", "t",
|
||
"string", "s", "number", "n", "boolean", "b", "function",
|
||
"f", "nil", "thread", "userdata") or list of them.
|
||
• optional: (optional) boolean, if true, `nil` is valid
|
||
2. (arg_value, fn, msg)
|
||
• arg_value: argument value
|
||
• fn: any function accepting one argument, returns true if
|
||
and only if the argument is valid. Can optionally return
|
||
an additional informative error message as the second
|
||
returned value.
|
||
• msg: (optional) error string if validation fails
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.loader *vim.loader*
|
||
|
||
vim.loader.disable() *vim.loader.disable()*
|
||
Disables the experimental Lua module loader:
|
||
• removes the loaders
|
||
• adds the default Nvim loader
|
||
|
||
vim.loader.enable() *vim.loader.enable()*
|
||
Enables the experimental Lua module loader:
|
||
• overrides loadfile
|
||
• adds the Lua loader using the byte-compilation cache
|
||
• adds the libs loader
|
||
• removes the default Nvim loader
|
||
|
||
vim.loader.find({modname}, {opts}) *vim.loader.find()*
|
||
Finds Lua modules for the given module name.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {modname} (`string`) Module name, or `"*"` to find the top-level
|
||
modules instead
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Options for finding a module:
|
||
• {rtp}? (`boolean`, default: `true`) Search for modname in
|
||
the runtime path.
|
||
• {paths}? (`string[]`, default: `{}`) Extra paths to
|
||
search for modname
|
||
• {patterns}? (`string[]`, default:
|
||
`{"/init.lua", ".lua"}`) List of patterns to use when
|
||
searching for modules. A pattern is a string added to the
|
||
basename of the Lua module being searched.
|
||
• {all}? (`boolean`, default: `false`) Search for all
|
||
matches.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table[]`) A list of objects with the following fields:
|
||
• {modpath} (`string`) Path of the module
|
||
• {modname} (`string`) Name of the module
|
||
• {stat}? (`uv.uv_fs_t`) The fs_stat of the module path. Won't be
|
||
returned for `modname="*"`
|
||
|
||
vim.loader.reset({path}) *vim.loader.reset()*
|
||
Resets the cache for the path, or all the paths if path is nil.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {path} (`string?`) path to reset
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.uri *vim.uri*
|
||
|
||
vim.uri_decode({str}) *vim.uri_decode()*
|
||
URI-decodes a string containing percent escapes.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`) string to decode
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) decoded string
|
||
|
||
vim.uri_encode({str}, {rfc}) *vim.uri_encode()*
|
||
URI-encodes a string using percent escapes.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`) string to encode
|
||
• {rfc} (`"rfc2396"|"rfc2732"|"rfc3986"?`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) encoded string
|
||
|
||
vim.uri_from_bufnr({bufnr}) *vim.uri_from_bufnr()*
|
||
Gets a URI from a bufnr.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {bufnr} (`integer`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) URI
|
||
|
||
vim.uri_from_fname({path}) *vim.uri_from_fname()*
|
||
Gets a URI from a file path.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {path} (`string`) Path to file
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) URI
|
||
|
||
vim.uri_to_bufnr({uri}) *vim.uri_to_bufnr()*
|
||
Gets the buffer for a uri. Creates a new unloaded buffer if no buffer for
|
||
the uri already exists.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {uri} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`integer`) bufnr
|
||
|
||
vim.uri_to_fname({uri}) *vim.uri_to_fname()*
|
||
Gets a filename from a URI.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {uri} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) filename or unchanged URI for non-file URIs
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.ui *vim.ui*
|
||
|
||
vim.ui.input({opts}, {on_confirm}) *vim.ui.input()*
|
||
Prompts the user for input, allowing arbitrary (potentially asynchronous)
|
||
work until `on_confirm`.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.ui.input({ prompt = 'Enter value for shiftwidth: ' }, function(input)
|
||
vim.o.shiftwidth = tonumber(input)
|
||
end)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Additional options. See |input()|
|
||
• prompt (string|nil) Text of the prompt
|
||
• default (string|nil) Default reply to the input
|
||
• completion (string|nil) Specifies type of completion
|
||
supported for input. Supported types are the same that
|
||
can be supplied to a user-defined command using the
|
||
"-complete=" argument. See |:command-completion|
|
||
• highlight (function) Function that will be used for
|
||
highlighting user inputs.
|
||
• {on_confirm} (`function`) ((input|nil) -> ()) Called once the user
|
||
confirms or abort the input. `input` is what the user
|
||
typed (it might be an empty string if nothing was
|
||
entered), or `nil` if the user aborted the dialog.
|
||
|
||
vim.ui.open({path}) *vim.ui.open()*
|
||
Opens `path` with the system default handler (macOS `open`, Windows
|
||
`explorer.exe`, Linux `xdg-open`, …), or returns (but does not show) an
|
||
error message on failure.
|
||
|
||
Expands "~/" and environment variables in filesystem paths.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
-- Asynchronous.
|
||
vim.ui.open("https://neovim.io/")
|
||
vim.ui.open("~/path/to/file")
|
||
-- Synchronous (wait until the process exits).
|
||
local cmd, err = vim.ui.open("$VIMRUNTIME")
|
||
if cmd then
|
||
cmd:wait()
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {path} (`string`) Path or URL to open
|
||
|
||
Return (multiple): ~
|
||
(`vim.SystemObj?`) Command object, or nil if not found.
|
||
(`string?`) Error message on failure, or nil on success.
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |vim.system()|
|
||
|
||
vim.ui.select({items}, {opts}, {on_choice}) *vim.ui.select()*
|
||
Prompts the user to pick from a list of items, allowing arbitrary
|
||
(potentially asynchronous) work until `on_choice`.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.ui.select({ 'tabs', 'spaces' }, {
|
||
prompt = 'Select tabs or spaces:',
|
||
format_item = function(item)
|
||
return "I'd like to choose " .. item
|
||
end,
|
||
}, function(choice)
|
||
if choice == 'spaces' then
|
||
vim.o.expandtab = true
|
||
else
|
||
vim.o.expandtab = false
|
||
end
|
||
end)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {items} (`any[]`) Arbitrary items
|
||
• {opts} (`table`) Additional options
|
||
• prompt (string|nil) Text of the prompt. Defaults to
|
||
`Select one of:`
|
||
• format_item (function item -> text) Function to format
|
||
an individual item from `items`. Defaults to
|
||
`tostring`.
|
||
• kind (string|nil) Arbitrary hint string indicating the
|
||
item shape. Plugins reimplementing `vim.ui.select` may
|
||
wish to use this to infer the structure or semantics of
|
||
`items`, or the context in which select() was called.
|
||
• {on_choice} (`fun(item: any?, idx: integer?)`) Called once the user
|
||
made a choice. `idx` is the 1-based index of `item`
|
||
within `items`. `nil` if the user aborted the dialog.
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.filetype *vim.filetype*
|
||
|
||
vim.filetype.add({filetypes}) *vim.filetype.add()*
|
||
Add new filetype mappings.
|
||
|
||
Filetype mappings can be added either by extension or by filename (either
|
||
the "tail" or the full file path). The full file path is checked first,
|
||
followed by the file name. If a match is not found using the filename,
|
||
then the filename is matched against the list of |lua-patterns| (sorted by
|
||
priority) until a match is found. Lastly, if pattern matching does not
|
||
find a filetype, then the file extension is used.
|
||
|
||
The filetype can be either a string (in which case it is used as the
|
||
filetype directly) or a function. If a function, it takes the full path
|
||
and buffer number of the file as arguments (along with captures from the
|
||
matched pattern, if any) and should return a string that will be used as
|
||
the buffer's filetype. Optionally, the function can return a second
|
||
function value which, when called, modifies the state of the buffer. This
|
||
can be used to, for example, set filetype-specific buffer variables. This
|
||
function will be called by Nvim before setting the buffer's filetype.
|
||
|
||
Filename patterns can specify an optional priority to resolve cases when a
|
||
file path matches multiple patterns. Higher priorities are matched first.
|
||
When omitted, the priority defaults to 0. A pattern can contain
|
||
environment variables of the form "${SOME_VAR}" that will be automatically
|
||
expanded. If the environment variable is not set, the pattern won't be
|
||
matched.
|
||
|
||
See $VIMRUNTIME/lua/vim/filetype.lua for more examples.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.filetype.add({
|
||
extension = {
|
||
foo = 'fooscript',
|
||
bar = function(path, bufnr)
|
||
if some_condition() then
|
||
return 'barscript', function(bufnr)
|
||
-- Set a buffer variable
|
||
vim.b[bufnr].barscript_version = 2
|
||
end
|
||
end
|
||
return 'bar'
|
||
end,
|
||
},
|
||
filename = {
|
||
['.foorc'] = 'toml',
|
||
['/etc/foo/config'] = 'toml',
|
||
},
|
||
pattern = {
|
||
['.*/etc/foo/.*'] = 'fooscript',
|
||
-- Using an optional priority
|
||
['.*/etc/foo/.*%.conf'] = { 'dosini', { priority = 10 } },
|
||
-- A pattern containing an environment variable
|
||
['${XDG_CONFIG_HOME}/foo/git'] = 'git',
|
||
['README.(%a+)$'] = function(path, bufnr, ext)
|
||
if ext == 'md' then
|
||
return 'markdown'
|
||
elseif ext == 'rst' then
|
||
return 'rst'
|
||
end
|
||
end,
|
||
},
|
||
})
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
To add a fallback match on contents, use >lua
|
||
vim.filetype.add {
|
||
pattern = {
|
||
['.*'] = {
|
||
function(path, bufnr)
|
||
local content = vim.api.nvim_buf_get_lines(bufnr, 0, 1, false)[1] or ''
|
||
if vim.regex([[^#!.*\\<mine\\>]]):match_str(content) ~= nil then
|
||
return 'mine'
|
||
elseif vim.regex([[\\<drawing\\>]]):match_str(content) ~= nil then
|
||
return 'drawing'
|
||
end
|
||
end,
|
||
{ priority = -math.huge },
|
||
},
|
||
},
|
||
}
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {filetypes} (`table`) A table containing new filetype maps (see
|
||
example).
|
||
• {pattern}? (`vim.filetype.mapping`)
|
||
• {extension}? (`vim.filetype.mapping`)
|
||
• {filename}? (`vim.filetype.mapping`)
|
||
|
||
*vim.filetype.get_option()*
|
||
vim.filetype.get_option({filetype}, {option})
|
||
Get the default option value for a {filetype}.
|
||
|
||
The returned value is what would be set in a new buffer after 'filetype'
|
||
is set, meaning it should respect all FileType autocmds and ftplugin
|
||
files.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
vim.filetype.get_option('vim', 'commentstring')
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Note: this uses |nvim_get_option_value()| but caches the result. This
|
||
means |ftplugin| and |FileType| autocommands are only triggered once and
|
||
may not reflect later changes.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {filetype} (`string`) Filetype
|
||
• {option} (`string`) Option name
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string|boolean|integer`) Option value
|
||
|
||
vim.filetype.match({args}) *vim.filetype.match()*
|
||
Perform filetype detection.
|
||
|
||
The filetype can be detected using one of three methods:
|
||
1. Using an existing buffer
|
||
2. Using only a file name
|
||
3. Using only file contents
|
||
|
||
Of these, option 1 provides the most accurate result as it uses both the
|
||
buffer's filename and (optionally) the buffer contents. Options 2 and 3
|
||
can be used without an existing buffer, but may not always provide a match
|
||
in cases where the filename (or contents) cannot unambiguously determine
|
||
the filetype.
|
||
|
||
Each of the three options is specified using a key to the single argument
|
||
of this function. Example: >lua
|
||
-- Using a buffer number
|
||
vim.filetype.match({ buf = 42 })
|
||
|
||
-- Override the filename of the given buffer
|
||
vim.filetype.match({ buf = 42, filename = 'foo.c' })
|
||
|
||
-- Using a filename without a buffer
|
||
vim.filetype.match({ filename = 'main.lua' })
|
||
|
||
-- Using file contents
|
||
vim.filetype.match({ contents = {'#!/usr/bin/env bash'} })
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {args} (`table`) Table specifying which matching strategy to use.
|
||
Accepted keys are:
|
||
• {buf}? (`integer`) Buffer number to use for matching.
|
||
Mutually exclusive with {contents}
|
||
• {filename}? (`string`) Filename to use for matching. When
|
||
{buf} is given, defaults to the filename of the given buffer
|
||
number. The file need not actually exist in the filesystem.
|
||
When used without {buf} only the name of the file is used
|
||
for filetype matching. This may result in failure to detect
|
||
the filetype in cases where the filename alone is not enough
|
||
to disambiguate the filetype.
|
||
• {contents}? (`string[]`) An array of lines representing file
|
||
contents to use for matching. Can be used with {filename}.
|
||
Mutually exclusive with {buf}.
|
||
|
||
Return (multiple): ~
|
||
(`string?`) If a match was found, the matched filetype.
|
||
(`function?`) A function that modifies buffer state when called (for
|
||
example, to set some filetype specific buffer variables). The function
|
||
accepts a buffer number as its only argument.
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.keymap *vim.keymap*
|
||
|
||
vim.keymap.del({modes}, {lhs}, {opts}) *vim.keymap.del()*
|
||
Remove an existing mapping. Examples: >lua
|
||
vim.keymap.del('n', 'lhs')
|
||
|
||
vim.keymap.del({'n', 'i', 'v'}, '<leader>w', { buffer = 5 })
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {modes} (`string|string[]`)
|
||
• {lhs} (`string`)
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) A table with the following fields:
|
||
• {buffer}? (`integer|boolean`) Remove a mapping from the
|
||
given buffer. When `0` or `true`, use the current buffer.
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |vim.keymap.set()|
|
||
|
||
vim.keymap.set({mode}, {lhs}, {rhs}, {opts}) *vim.keymap.set()*
|
||
Adds a new |mapping|. Examples: >lua
|
||
-- Map to a Lua function:
|
||
vim.keymap.set('n', 'lhs', function() print("real lua function") end)
|
||
-- Map to multiple modes:
|
||
vim.keymap.set({'n', 'v'}, '<leader>lr', vim.lsp.buf.references, { buffer = true })
|
||
-- Buffer-local mapping:
|
||
vim.keymap.set('n', '<leader>w', "<cmd>w<cr>", { silent = true, buffer = 5 })
|
||
-- Expr mapping:
|
||
vim.keymap.set('i', '<Tab>', function()
|
||
return vim.fn.pumvisible() == 1 and "<C-n>" or "<Tab>"
|
||
end, { expr = true })
|
||
-- <Plug> mapping:
|
||
vim.keymap.set('n', '[%%', '<Plug>(MatchitNormalMultiBackward)')
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {mode} (`string|string[]`) Mode short-name, see |nvim_set_keymap()|.
|
||
Can also be list of modes to create mapping on multiple modes.
|
||
• {lhs} (`string`) Left-hand side |{lhs}| of the mapping.
|
||
• {rhs} (`string|function`) Right-hand side |{rhs}| of the mapping,
|
||
can be a Lua function.
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Table of |:map-arguments|. Same as
|
||
|nvim_set_keymap()| {opts}, except:
|
||
• {replace_keycodes} defaults to `true` if "expr" is `true`.
|
||
|
||
Also accepts:
|
||
• {buffer}? (`integer|boolean`) Creates buffer-local mapping,
|
||
`0` or `true` for current buffer.
|
||
• {remap}? (`boolean`, default: `false`) Make the mapping
|
||
recursive. Inverse of {noremap}.
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |nvim_set_keymap()|
|
||
• |maparg()|
|
||
• |mapcheck()|
|
||
• |mapset()|
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.fs *vim.fs*
|
||
|
||
vim.fs.basename({file}) *vim.fs.basename()*
|
||
Return the basename of the given path
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {file} (`string?`) Path
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string?`) Basename of {file}
|
||
|
||
vim.fs.dir({path}, {opts}) *vim.fs.dir()*
|
||
Return an iterator over the items located in {path}
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {path} (`string`) An absolute or relative path to the directory to
|
||
iterate over. The path is first normalized
|
||
|vim.fs.normalize()|.
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Optional keyword arguments:
|
||
• depth: integer|nil How deep the traverse (default 1)
|
||
• skip: (fun(dir_name: string): boolean)|nil Predicate to
|
||
control traversal. Return false to stop searching the
|
||
current directory. Only useful when depth > 1
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`Iterator`) over items in {path}. Each iteration yields two values:
|
||
"name" and "type". "name" is the basename of the item relative to
|
||
{path}. "type" is one of the following: "file", "directory", "link",
|
||
"fifo", "socket", "char", "block", "unknown".
|
||
|
||
vim.fs.dirname({file}) *vim.fs.dirname()*
|
||
Return the parent directory of the given path
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {file} (`string?`) Path
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string?`) Parent directory of {file}
|
||
|
||
vim.fs.find({names}, {opts}) *vim.fs.find()*
|
||
Find files or directories (or other items as specified by `opts.type`) in
|
||
the given path.
|
||
|
||
Finds items given in {names} starting from {path}. If {upward} is "true"
|
||
then the search traverses upward through parent directories; otherwise,
|
||
the search traverses downward. Note that downward searches are recursive
|
||
and may search through many directories! If {stop} is non-nil, then the
|
||
search stops when the directory given in {stop} is reached. The search
|
||
terminates when {limit} (default 1) matches are found. You can set {type}
|
||
to "file", "directory", "link", "socket", "char", "block", or "fifo" to
|
||
narrow the search to find only that type.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
-- list all test directories under the runtime directory
|
||
local test_dirs = vim.fs.find(
|
||
{'test', 'tst', 'testdir'},
|
||
{limit = math.huge, type = 'directory', path = './runtime/'}
|
||
)
|
||
|
||
-- get all files ending with .cpp or .hpp inside lib/
|
||
local cpp_hpp = vim.fs.find(function(name, path)
|
||
return name:match('.*%.[ch]pp$') and path:match('[/\\\\]lib$')
|
||
end, {limit = math.huge, type = 'file'})
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {names} (`string|string[]|fun(name: string, path: string): boolean`)
|
||
Names of the items to find. Must be base names, paths and
|
||
globs are not supported when {names} is a string or a table.
|
||
If {names} is a function, it is called for each traversed
|
||
item with args:
|
||
• name: base name of the current item
|
||
• path: full path of the current item The function should
|
||
return `true` if the given item is considered a match.
|
||
• {opts} (`table`) Optional keyword arguments:
|
||
• {path}? (`string`) Path to begin searching from. If
|
||
omitted, the |current-directory| is used.
|
||
• {upward}? (`boolean`, default: `false`) Search upward
|
||
through parent directories. Otherwise, search through child
|
||
directories (recursively).
|
||
• {stop}? (`string`) Stop searching when this directory is
|
||
reached. The directory itself is not searched.
|
||
• {type}? (`string`) Find only items of the given type. If
|
||
omitted, all items that match {names} are included.
|
||
• {limit}? (`number`, default: `1`) Stop the search after
|
||
finding this many matches. Use `math.huge` to place no
|
||
limit on the number of matches.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string[]`) Normalized paths |vim.fs.normalize()| of all matching
|
||
items
|
||
|
||
vim.fs.joinpath({...}) *vim.fs.joinpath()*
|
||
Concatenate directories and/or file paths into a single path with
|
||
normalization (e.g., `"foo/"` and `"bar"` get joined to `"foo/bar"`)
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {...} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`)
|
||
|
||
vim.fs.normalize({path}, {opts}) *vim.fs.normalize()*
|
||
Normalize a path to a standard format. A tilde (~) character at the
|
||
beginning of the path is expanded to the user's home directory and
|
||
environment variables are also expanded. "." and ".." components are also
|
||
resolved, except when the path is relative and trying to resolve it would
|
||
result in an absolute path.
|
||
• "." as the only part in a relative path:
|
||
• "." => "."
|
||
• "././" => "."
|
||
• ".." when it leads outside the current directory
|
||
• "foo/../../bar" => "../bar"
|
||
• "../../foo" => "../../foo"
|
||
• ".." in the root directory returns the root directory.
|
||
• "/../../" => "/"
|
||
|
||
On Windows, backslash (\) characters are converted to forward slashes (/).
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
[[C:\Users\jdoe]] => "C:/Users/jdoe"
|
||
"~/src/neovim" => "/home/jdoe/src/neovim"
|
||
"$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nvim/init.vim" => "/Users/jdoe/.config/nvim/init.vim"
|
||
"~/src/nvim/api/../tui/./tui.c" => "/home/jdoe/src/nvim/tui/tui.c"
|
||
"./foo/bar" => "foo/bar"
|
||
"foo/../../../bar" => "../../bar"
|
||
"/home/jdoe/../../../bar" => "/bar"
|
||
"C:foo/../../baz" => "C:../baz"
|
||
"C:/foo/../../baz" => "C:/baz"
|
||
[[\\?\UNC\server\share\foo\..\..\..\bar]] => "//?/UNC/server/share/bar"
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {path} (`string`) Path to normalize
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) A table with the following fields:
|
||
• {expand_env}? (`boolean`, default: `true`) Expand
|
||
environment variables.
|
||
• {win}? (`boolean`, default: `true` in Windows, `false`
|
||
otherwise) Path is a Windows path.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) Normalized path
|
||
|
||
vim.fs.parents({start}) *vim.fs.parents()*
|
||
Iterate over all the parents of the given path.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local root_dir
|
||
for dir in vim.fs.parents(vim.api.nvim_buf_get_name(0)) do
|
||
if vim.fn.isdirectory(dir .. "/.git") == 1 then
|
||
root_dir = dir
|
||
break
|
||
end
|
||
end
|
||
|
||
if root_dir then
|
||
print("Found git repository at", root_dir)
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {start} (`string`) Initial path.
|
||
|
||
Return (multiple): ~
|
||
(`fun(_, dir: string): string?`) Iterator
|
||
(`nil`)
|
||
(`string?`)
|
||
|
||
vim.fs.root({source}, {marker}) *vim.fs.root()*
|
||
Find the first parent directory containing a specific "marker", relative
|
||
to a file path or buffer.
|
||
|
||
If the buffer is unnamed (has no backing file) or has a non-empty
|
||
'buftype' then the search begins from Nvim's |current-directory|.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
-- Find the root of a Python project, starting from file 'main.py'
|
||
vim.fs.root(vim.fs.joinpath(vim.env.PWD, 'main.py'), {'pyproject.toml', 'setup.py' })
|
||
|
||
-- Find the root of a git repository
|
||
vim.fs.root(0, '.git')
|
||
|
||
-- Find the parent directory containing any file with a .csproj extension
|
||
vim.fs.root(0, function(name, path)
|
||
return name:match('%.csproj$') ~= nil
|
||
end)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {source} (`integer|string`) Buffer number (0 for current buffer) or
|
||
file path (absolute or relative to the |current-directory|)
|
||
to begin the search from.
|
||
• {marker} (`string|string[]|fun(name: string, path: string): boolean`)
|
||
A marker, or list of markers, to search for. If a function,
|
||
the function is called for each evaluated item and should
|
||
return true if {name} and {path} are a match.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string?`) Directory path containing one of the given markers, or nil
|
||
if no directory was found.
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.glob *vim.glob*
|
||
|
||
vim.glob.to_lpeg({pattern}) *vim.glob.to_lpeg()*
|
||
Parses a raw glob into an |lua-lpeg| pattern.
|
||
|
||
This uses glob semantics from LSP 3.17.0:
|
||
https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specifications/lsp/3.17/specification/#pattern
|
||
|
||
Glob patterns can have the following syntax:
|
||
• `*` to match one or more characters in a path segment
|
||
• `?` to match on one character in a path segment
|
||
• `**` to match any number of path segments, including none
|
||
• `{}` to group conditions (e.g. `*.{ts,js}` matches TypeScript and
|
||
JavaScript files)
|
||
• `[]` to declare a range of characters to match in a path segment (e.g.,
|
||
`example.[0-9]` to match on `example.0`, `example.1`, …)
|
||
• `[!...]` to negate a range of characters to match in a path segment
|
||
(e.g., `example.[!0-9]` to match on `example.a`, `example.b`, but not
|
||
`example.0`)
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {pattern} (`string`) The raw glob pattern
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Pattern`) pattern An |lua-lpeg| representation of the
|
||
pattern
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
VIM.LPEG *vim.lpeg*
|
||
|
||
|
||
LPeg is a pattern-matching library for Lua, based on Parsing Expression
|
||
Grammars (PEGs). https://bford.info/packrat/
|
||
|
||
*lua-lpeg* *vim.lpeg.Pattern*
|
||
The LPeg library for parsing expression grammars is included as `vim.lpeg`
|
||
(https://www.inf.puc-rio.br/~roberto/lpeg/).
|
||
|
||
In addition, its regex-like interface is available as |vim.re|
|
||
(https://www.inf.puc-rio.br/~roberto/lpeg/re.html).
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
Pattern:match({subject}, {init}, {...}) *Pattern:match()*
|
||
Matches the given `pattern` against the `subject` string. If the match
|
||
succeeds, returns the index in the subject of the first character after
|
||
the match, or the captured values (if the pattern captured any value). An
|
||
optional numeric argument `init` makes the match start at that position in
|
||
the subject string. As usual in Lua libraries, a negative value counts
|
||
from the end. Unlike typical pattern-matching functions, `match` works
|
||
only in anchored mode; that is, it tries to match the pattern with a
|
||
prefix of the given subject string (at position `init`), not with an
|
||
arbitrary substring of the subject. So, if we want to find a pattern
|
||
anywhere in a string, we must either write a loop in Lua or write a
|
||
pattern that matches anywhere.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local pattern = lpeg.R('az') ^ 1 * -1
|
||
assert(pattern:match('hello') == 6)
|
||
assert(lpeg.match(pattern, 'hello') == 6)
|
||
assert(pattern:match('1 hello') == nil)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {subject} (`string`)
|
||
• {init} (`integer?`)
|
||
• {...} (`any`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`) ...
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.B({pattern}) *vim.lpeg.B()*
|
||
Returns a pattern that matches only if the input string at the current
|
||
position is preceded by `patt`. Pattern `patt` must match only strings
|
||
with some fixed length, and it cannot contain captures. Like the `and`
|
||
predicate, this pattern never consumes any input, independently of success
|
||
or failure.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {pattern} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string|integer|boolean|table`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Pattern`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.C({patt}) *vim.lpeg.C()*
|
||
Creates a simple capture, which captures the substring of the subject that
|
||
matches `patt`. The captured value is a string. If `patt` has other
|
||
captures, their values are returned after this one.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local function split (s, sep)
|
||
sep = lpeg.P(sep)
|
||
local elem = lpeg.C((1 - sep) ^ 0)
|
||
local p = elem * (sep * elem) ^ 0
|
||
return lpeg.match(p, s)
|
||
end
|
||
local a, b, c = split('a,b,c', ',')
|
||
assert(a == 'a')
|
||
assert(b == 'b')
|
||
assert(c == 'c')
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {patt} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string|integer|boolean|table|function`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Capture`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.Carg({n}) *vim.lpeg.Carg()*
|
||
Creates an argument capture. This pattern matches the empty string and
|
||
produces the value given as the nth extra argument given in the call to
|
||
`lpeg.match`.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {n} (`integer`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Capture`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.Cb({name}) *vim.lpeg.Cb()*
|
||
Creates a back capture. This pattern matches the empty string and produces
|
||
the values produced by the most recent group capture named `name` (where
|
||
`name` can be any Lua value). Most recent means the last complete
|
||
outermost group capture with the given name. A Complete capture means that
|
||
the entire pattern corresponding to the capture has matched. An Outermost
|
||
capture means that the capture is not inside another complete capture. In
|
||
the same way that LPeg does not specify when it evaluates captures, it
|
||
does not specify whether it reuses values previously produced by the group
|
||
or re-evaluates them.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {name} (`any`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Capture`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.Cc({...}) *vim.lpeg.Cc()*
|
||
Creates a constant capture. This pattern matches the empty string and
|
||
produces all given values as its captured values.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {...} (`any`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Capture`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.Cf({patt}, {func}) *vim.lpeg.Cf()*
|
||
Creates a fold capture. If `patt` produces a list of captures C1 C2 ...
|
||
Cn, this capture will produce the value
|
||
`func(...func(func(C1, C2), C3)...,Cn)`, that is, it will fold (or
|
||
accumulate, or reduce) the captures from `patt` using function `func`.
|
||
This capture assumes that `patt` should produce at least one capture with
|
||
at least one value (of any type), which becomes the initial value of an
|
||
accumulator. (If you need a specific initial value, you may prefix a
|
||
constant capture to `patt`.) For each subsequent capture, LPeg calls
|
||
`func` with this accumulator as the first argument and all values produced
|
||
by the capture as extra arguments; the first result from this call becomes
|
||
the new value for the accumulator. The final value of the accumulator
|
||
becomes the captured value.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local number = lpeg.R('09') ^ 1 / tonumber
|
||
local list = number * (',' * number) ^ 0
|
||
local function add(acc, newvalue) return acc + newvalue end
|
||
local sum = lpeg.Cf(list, add)
|
||
assert(sum:match('10,30,43') == 83)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {patt} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string|integer|boolean|table|function`)
|
||
• {func} (`fun(acc, newvalue)`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Capture`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.Cg({patt}, {name}) *vim.lpeg.Cg()*
|
||
Creates a group capture. It groups all values returned by `patt` into a
|
||
single capture. The group may be anonymous (if no name is given) or named
|
||
with the given name (which can be any non-nil Lua value).
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {patt} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string|integer|boolean|table|function`)
|
||
• {name} (`string?`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Capture`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.Cmt({patt}, {fn}) *vim.lpeg.Cmt()*
|
||
Creates a match-time capture. Unlike all other captures, this one is
|
||
evaluated immediately when a match occurs (even if it is part of a larger
|
||
pattern that fails later). It forces the immediate evaluation of all its
|
||
nested captures and then calls `function`. The given function gets as
|
||
arguments the entire subject, the current position (after the match of
|
||
`patt`), plus any capture values produced by `patt`. The first value
|
||
returned by `function` defines how the match happens. If the call returns
|
||
a number, the match succeeds and the returned number becomes the new
|
||
current position. (Assuming a subject sand current position `i`, the
|
||
returned number must be in the range `[i, len(s) + 1]`.) If the call
|
||
returns `true`, the match succeeds without consuming any input (so, to
|
||
return true is equivalent to return `i`). If the call returns `false`,
|
||
`nil`, or no value, the match fails. Any extra values returned by the
|
||
function become the values produced by the capture.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {patt} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string|integer|boolean|table|function`)
|
||
• {fn} (`fun(s: string, i: integer, ...: any)`) (position:
|
||
boolean|integer, ...: any)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Capture`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.Cp() *vim.lpeg.Cp()*
|
||
Creates a position capture. It matches the empty string and captures the
|
||
position in the subject where the match occurs. The captured value is a
|
||
number.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local I = lpeg.Cp()
|
||
local function anywhere(p) return lpeg.P({I * p * I + 1 * lpeg.V(1)}) end
|
||
local match_start, match_end = anywhere('world'):match('hello world!')
|
||
assert(match_start == 7)
|
||
assert(match_end == 12)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Capture`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.Cs({patt}) *vim.lpeg.Cs()*
|
||
Creates a substitution capture. This function creates a substitution
|
||
capture, which captures the substring of the subject that matches `patt`,
|
||
with substitutions. For any capture inside `patt` with a value, the
|
||
substring that matched the capture is replaced by the capture value (which
|
||
should be a string). The final captured value is the string resulting from
|
||
all replacements.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local function gsub (s, patt, repl)
|
||
patt = lpeg.P(patt)
|
||
patt = lpeg.Cs((patt / repl + 1) ^ 0)
|
||
return lpeg.match(patt, s)
|
||
end
|
||
assert(gsub('Hello, xxx!', 'xxx', 'World') == 'Hello, World!')
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {patt} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string|integer|boolean|table|function`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Capture`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.Ct({patt}) *vim.lpeg.Ct()*
|
||
Creates a table capture. This capture returns a table with all values from
|
||
all anonymous captures made by `patt` inside this table in successive
|
||
integer keys, starting at 1. Moreover, for each named capture group
|
||
created by `patt`, the first value of the group is put into the table with
|
||
the group name as its key. The captured value is only the table.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {patt} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string|integer|boolean|table|function`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Capture`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.locale({tab}) *vim.lpeg.locale()*
|
||
Returns a table with patterns for matching some character classes
|
||
according to the current locale. The table has fields named `alnum`,
|
||
`alpha`, `cntrl`, `digit`, `graph`, `lower`, `print`, `punct`, `space`,
|
||
`upper`, and `xdigit`, each one containing a correspondent pattern. Each
|
||
pattern matches any single character that belongs to its class. If called
|
||
with an argument `table`, then it creates those fields inside the given
|
||
table and returns that table.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
lpeg.locale(lpeg)
|
||
local space = lpeg.space ^ 0
|
||
local name = lpeg.C(lpeg.alpha ^ 1) * space
|
||
local sep = lpeg.S(',;') * space
|
||
local pair = lpeg.Cg(name * '=' * space * name) * sep ^ -1
|
||
local list = lpeg.Cf(lpeg.Ct('') * pair ^ 0, rawset)
|
||
local t = list:match('a=b, c = hi; next = pi')
|
||
assert(t.a == 'b')
|
||
assert(t.c == 'hi')
|
||
assert(t.next == 'pi')
|
||
local locale = lpeg.locale()
|
||
assert(type(locale.digit) == 'userdata')
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {tab} (`table?`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Locale`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.match({pattern}, {subject}, {init}, {...}) *vim.lpeg.match()*
|
||
Matches the given `pattern` against the `subject` string. If the match
|
||
succeeds, returns the index in the subject of the first character after
|
||
the match, or the captured values (if the pattern captured any value). An
|
||
optional numeric argument `init` makes the match start at that position in
|
||
the subject string. As usual in Lua libraries, a negative value counts
|
||
from the end. Unlike typical pattern-matching functions, `match` works
|
||
only in anchored mode; that is, it tries to match the pattern with a
|
||
prefix of the given subject string (at position `init`), not with an
|
||
arbitrary substring of the subject. So, if we want to find a pattern
|
||
anywhere in a string, we must either write a loop in Lua or write a
|
||
pattern that matches anywhere.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local pattern = lpeg.R('az') ^ 1 * -1
|
||
assert(pattern:match('hello') == 6)
|
||
assert(lpeg.match(pattern, 'hello') == 6)
|
||
assert(pattern:match('1 hello') == nil)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {pattern} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string|integer|boolean|table|function`)
|
||
• {subject} (`string`)
|
||
• {init} (`integer?`)
|
||
• {...} (`any`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`) ...
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.P({value}) *vim.lpeg.P()*
|
||
Converts the given value into a proper pattern. The following rules are
|
||
applied:
|
||
• If the argument is a pattern, it is returned unmodified.
|
||
• If the argument is a string, it is translated to a pattern that matches
|
||
the string literally.
|
||
• If the argument is a non-negative number `n`, the result is a pattern
|
||
that matches exactly `n` characters.
|
||
• If the argument is a negative number `-n`, the result is a pattern that
|
||
succeeds only if the input string has less than `n` characters left:
|
||
`lpeg.P(-n)` is equivalent to `-lpeg.P(n)` (see the unary minus
|
||
operation).
|
||
• If the argument is a boolean, the result is a pattern that always
|
||
succeeds or always fails (according to the boolean value), without
|
||
consuming any input.
|
||
• If the argument is a table, it is interpreted as a grammar (see
|
||
Grammars).
|
||
• If the argument is a function, returns a pattern equivalent to a
|
||
match-time capture over the empty string.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {value} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string|integer|boolean|table|function`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Pattern`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.R({...}) *vim.lpeg.R()*
|
||
Returns a pattern that matches any single character belonging to one of
|
||
the given ranges. Each `range` is a string `xy` of length 2, representing
|
||
all characters with code between the codes of `x` and `y` (both
|
||
inclusive). As an example, the pattern `lpeg.R('09')` matches any digit,
|
||
and `lpeg.R('az', 'AZ')` matches any ASCII letter.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local pattern = lpeg.R('az') ^ 1 * -1
|
||
assert(pattern:match('hello') == 6)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {...} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Pattern`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.S({string}) *vim.lpeg.S()*
|
||
Returns a pattern that matches any single character that appears in the
|
||
given string (the `S` stands for Set). As an example, the pattern
|
||
`lpeg.S('+-*/')` matches any arithmetic operator. Note that, if `s` is a
|
||
character (that is, a string of length 1), then `lpeg.P(s)` is equivalent
|
||
to `lpeg.S(s)` which is equivalent to `lpeg.R(s..s)`. Note also that both
|
||
`lpeg.S('')` and `lpeg.R()` are patterns that always fail.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {string} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Pattern`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.setmaxstack({max}) *vim.lpeg.setmaxstack()*
|
||
Sets a limit for the size of the backtrack stack used by LPeg to track
|
||
calls and choices. The default limit is `400`. Most well-written patterns
|
||
need little backtrack levels and therefore you seldom need to change this
|
||
limit; before changing it you should try to rewrite your pattern to avoid
|
||
the need for extra space. Nevertheless, a few useful patterns may
|
||
overflow. Also, with recursive grammars, subjects with deep recursion may
|
||
also need larger limits.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {max} (`integer`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.type({value}) *vim.lpeg.type()*
|
||
Returns the string `"pattern"` if the given value is a pattern, otherwise
|
||
`nil`.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {value} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string|integer|boolean|table|function`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`"pattern"?`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.V({v}) *vim.lpeg.V()*
|
||
Creates a non-terminal (a variable) for a grammar. This operation creates
|
||
a non-terminal (a variable) for a grammar. The created non-terminal refers
|
||
to the rule indexed by `v` in the enclosing grammar.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local b = lpeg.P({'(' * ((1 - lpeg.S '()') + lpeg.V(1)) ^ 0 * ')'})
|
||
assert(b:match('((string))') == 11)
|
||
assert(b:match('(') == nil)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {v} (`boolean|string|number|function|table|thread|userdata|lightuserdata`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Pattern`)
|
||
|
||
vim.lpeg.version() *vim.lpeg.version()*
|
||
Returns a string with the running version of LPeg.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`)
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
VIM.RE *vim.re*
|
||
|
||
The `vim.re` module provides a conventional regex-like syntax for pattern
|
||
usage within LPeg |vim.lpeg|. (Unrelated to |vim.regex| which provides Vim
|
||
|regexp| from Lua.)
|
||
|
||
See https://www.inf.puc-rio.br/~roberto/lpeg/re.html for the original
|
||
documentation including regex syntax and examples.
|
||
|
||
|
||
vim.re.compile({string}, {defs}) *vim.re.compile()*
|
||
Compiles the given {string} and returns an equivalent LPeg pattern. The
|
||
given string may define either an expression or a grammar. The optional
|
||
{defs} table provides extra Lua values to be used by the pattern.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {string} (`string`)
|
||
• {defs} (`table?`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.lpeg.Pattern`)
|
||
|
||
vim.re.find({subject}, {pattern}, {init}) *vim.re.find()*
|
||
Searches the given {pattern} in the given {subject}. If it finds a match,
|
||
returns the index where this occurrence starts and the index where it
|
||
ends. Otherwise, returns nil.
|
||
|
||
An optional numeric argument {init} makes the search starts at that
|
||
position in the subject string. As usual in Lua libraries, a negative
|
||
value counts from the end.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {subject} (`string`)
|
||
• {pattern} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string`)
|
||
• {init} (`integer?`)
|
||
|
||
Return (multiple): ~
|
||
(`integer?`) the index where the occurrence starts, nil if no match
|
||
(`integer?`) the index where the occurrence ends, nil if no match
|
||
|
||
vim.re.gsub({subject}, {pattern}, {replacement}) *vim.re.gsub()*
|
||
Does a global substitution, replacing all occurrences of {pattern} in the
|
||
given {subject} by {replacement}.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {subject} (`string`)
|
||
• {pattern} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string`)
|
||
• {replacement} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`)
|
||
|
||
vim.re.match({subject}, {pattern}, {init}) *vim.re.match()*
|
||
Matches the given {pattern} against the given {subject}, returning all
|
||
captures.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {subject} (`string`)
|
||
• {pattern} (`vim.lpeg.Pattern|string`)
|
||
• {init} (`integer?`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`integer|vim.lpeg.Capture?`)
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• vim.lpeg.match()
|
||
|
||
vim.re.updatelocale() *vim.re.updatelocale()*
|
||
Updates the pre-defined character classes to the current locale.
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
VIM.REGEX *vim.regex*
|
||
|
||
Vim regexes can be used directly from Lua. Currently they only allow matching
|
||
within a single line.
|
||
|
||
|
||
*regex:match_line()*
|
||
regex:match_line({bufnr}, {line_idx}, {start}, {end_})
|
||
Match line {line_idx} (zero-based) in buffer {bufnr}. If {start} and {end}
|
||
are supplied, match only this byte index range. Otherwise see
|
||
|regex:match_str()|. If {start} is used, then the returned byte indices
|
||
will be relative {start}.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {bufnr} (`integer`)
|
||
• {line_idx} (`integer`)
|
||
• {start} (`integer?`)
|
||
• {end_} (`integer?`)
|
||
|
||
regex:match_str({str}) *regex:match_str()*
|
||
Match the string against the regex. If the string should match the regex
|
||
precisely, surround the regex with `^` and `$`. If there was a match, the
|
||
byte indices for the beginning and end of the match are returned. When
|
||
there is no match, `nil` is returned. Because any integer is "truthy",
|
||
`regex:match_str()` can be directly used as a condition in an
|
||
if-statement.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
vim.regex({re}) *vim.regex()*
|
||
Parse the Vim regex {re} and return a regex object. Regexes are "magic"
|
||
and case-sensitive by default, regardless of 'magic' and 'ignorecase'.
|
||
They can be controlled with flags, see |/magic| and |/ignorecase|.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {re} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.regex`)
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.secure *vim.secure*
|
||
|
||
vim.secure.read({path}) *vim.secure.read()*
|
||
Attempt to read the file at {path} prompting the user if the file should
|
||
be trusted. The user's choice is persisted in a trust database at
|
||
$XDG_STATE_HOME/nvim/trust.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {path} (`string`) Path to a file to read.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string?`) The contents of the given file if it exists and is
|
||
trusted, or nil otherwise.
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• |:trust|
|
||
|
||
vim.secure.trust({opts}) *vim.secure.trust()*
|
||
Manage the trust database.
|
||
|
||
The trust database is located at |$XDG_STATE_HOME|/nvim/trust.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {opts} (`table`) A table with the following fields:
|
||
• {action} (`'allow'|'deny'|'remove'`) - `'allow'` to add a
|
||
file to the trust database and trust it,
|
||
• `'deny'` to add a file to the trust database and deny it,
|
||
• `'remove'` to remove file from the trust database
|
||
• {path}? (`string`) Path to a file to update. Mutually
|
||
exclusive with {bufnr}. Cannot be used when {action} is
|
||
"allow".
|
||
• {bufnr}? (`integer`) Buffer number to update. Mutually
|
||
exclusive with {path}.
|
||
|
||
Return (multiple): ~
|
||
(`boolean`) success true if operation was successful
|
||
(`string`) msg full path if operation was successful, else error
|
||
message
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.version *vim.version*
|
||
|
||
The `vim.version` module provides functions for comparing versions and ranges
|
||
conforming to the https://semver.org spec. Plugins, and plugin managers, can
|
||
use this to check available tools and dependencies on the current system.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local v = vim.version.parse(vim.fn.system({'tmux', '-V'}), {strict=false})
|
||
if vim.version.gt(v, {3, 2, 0}) then
|
||
-- ...
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
*vim.version()* returns the version of the current Nvim process.
|
||
|
||
VERSION RANGE SPEC *version-range*
|
||
|
||
A version "range spec" defines a semantic version range which can be tested
|
||
against a version, using |vim.version.range()|.
|
||
|
||
Supported range specs are shown in the following table. Note: suffixed
|
||
versions (1.2.3-rc1) are not matched. >
|
||
1.2.3 is 1.2.3
|
||
=1.2.3 is 1.2.3
|
||
>1.2.3 greater than 1.2.3
|
||
<1.2.3 before 1.2.3
|
||
>=1.2.3 at least 1.2.3
|
||
~1.2.3 is >=1.2.3 <1.3.0 "reasonably close to 1.2.3"
|
||
^1.2.3 is >=1.2.3 <2.0.0 "compatible with 1.2.3"
|
||
^0.2.3 is >=0.2.3 <0.3.0 (0.x.x is special)
|
||
^0.0.1 is =0.0.1 (0.0.x is special)
|
||
^1.2 is >=1.2.0 <2.0.0 (like ^1.2.0)
|
||
~1.2 is >=1.2.0 <1.3.0 (like ~1.2.0)
|
||
^1 is >=1.0.0 <2.0.0 "compatible with 1"
|
||
~1 same "reasonably close to 1"
|
||
1.x same
|
||
1.* same
|
||
1 same
|
||
* any version
|
||
x same
|
||
|
||
1.2.3 - 2.3.4 is >=1.2.3 <=2.3.4
|
||
|
||
Partial right: missing pieces treated as x (2.3 => 2.3.x).
|
||
1.2.3 - 2.3 is >=1.2.3 <2.4.0
|
||
1.2.3 - 2 is >=1.2.3 <3.0.0
|
||
|
||
Partial left: missing pieces treated as 0 (1.2 => 1.2.0).
|
||
1.2 - 2.3.0 is 1.2.0 - 2.3.0
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
|
||
vim.version.cmp({v1}, {v2}) *vim.version.cmp()*
|
||
Parses and compares two version objects (the result of
|
||
|vim.version.parse()|, or specified literally as a `{major, minor, patch}`
|
||
tuple, e.g. `{1, 0, 3}`).
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
if vim.version.cmp({1,0,3}, {0,2,1}) == 0 then
|
||
-- ...
|
||
end
|
||
local v1 = vim.version.parse('1.0.3-pre')
|
||
local v2 = vim.version.parse('0.2.1')
|
||
if vim.version.cmp(v1, v2) == 0 then
|
||
-- ...
|
||
end
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Note: ~
|
||
• Per semver, build metadata is ignored when comparing two
|
||
otherwise-equivalent versions.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {v1} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`) Version object.
|
||
• {v2} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`) Version to compare with `v1`.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`integer`) -1 if `v1 < v2`, 0 if `v1 == v2`, 1 if `v1 > v2`.
|
||
|
||
vim.version.eq({v1}, {v2}) *vim.version.eq()*
|
||
Returns `true` if the given versions are equal. See |vim.version.cmp()|
|
||
for usage.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {v1} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`)
|
||
• {v2} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`)
|
||
|
||
vim.version.ge({v1}, {v2}) *vim.version.ge()*
|
||
Returns `true` if `v1 >= v2`. See |vim.version.cmp()| for usage.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {v1} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`)
|
||
• {v2} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`)
|
||
|
||
vim.version.gt({v1}, {v2}) *vim.version.gt()*
|
||
Returns `true` if `v1 > v2`. See |vim.version.cmp()| for usage.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {v1} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`)
|
||
• {v2} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`)
|
||
|
||
vim.version.last({versions}) *vim.version.last()*
|
||
TODO: generalize this, move to func.lua
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {versions} (`vim.Version[]`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.Version?`)
|
||
|
||
vim.version.le({v1}, {v2}) *vim.version.le()*
|
||
Returns `true` if `v1 <= v2`. See |vim.version.cmp()| for usage.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {v1} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`)
|
||
• {v2} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`)
|
||
|
||
vim.version.lt({v1}, {v2}) *vim.version.lt()*
|
||
Returns `true` if `v1 < v2`. See |vim.version.cmp()| for usage.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {v1} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`)
|
||
• {v2} (`vim.Version|number[]|string`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`)
|
||
|
||
vim.version.parse({version}, {opts}) *vim.version.parse()*
|
||
Parses a semantic version string and returns a version object which can be
|
||
used with other `vim.version` functions. For example "1.0.1-rc1+build.2"
|
||
returns: >
|
||
{ major = 1, minor = 0, patch = 1, prerelease = "rc1", build = "build.2" }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {version} (`string`) Version string to parse.
|
||
• {opts} (`table?`) Optional keyword arguments:
|
||
• strict (boolean): Default false. If `true`, no coercion
|
||
is attempted on input not conforming to semver v2.0.0. If
|
||
`false`, `parse()` attempts to coerce input such as
|
||
"1.0", "0-x", "tmux 3.2a" into valid versions.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`vim.Version?`) parsed_version Version object or `nil` if input is
|
||
invalid.
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• https://semver.org/spec/v2.0.0.html
|
||
|
||
vim.version.range({spec}) *vim.version.range()*
|
||
Parses a semver |version-range| "spec" and returns a range object: >
|
||
{
|
||
from: Version
|
||
to: Version
|
||
has(v: string|Version)
|
||
}
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
`:has()` checks if a version is in the range (inclusive `from`, exclusive
|
||
`to`).
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local r = vim.version.range('1.0.0 - 2.0.0')
|
||
print(r:has('1.9.9')) -- true
|
||
print(r:has('2.0.0')) -- false
|
||
print(r:has(vim.version())) -- check against current Nvim version
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Or use cmp(), le(), lt(), ge(), gt(), and/or eq() to compare a version
|
||
against `.to` and `.from` directly: >lua
|
||
local r = vim.version.range('1.0.0 - 2.0.0') -- >=1.0, <2.0
|
||
print(vim.version.ge({1,0,3}, r.from) and vim.version.lt({1,0,3}, r.to))
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {spec} (`string`) Version range "spec"
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table?`) A table with the following fields:
|
||
• {from} (`vim.Version`)
|
||
• {to}? (`vim.Version`)
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• https://github.com/npm/node-semver#ranges
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.iter *vim.iter*
|
||
|
||
*vim.iter()* is an interface for |iterable|s: it wraps a table or function
|
||
argument into an *Iter* object with methods (such as |Iter:filter()| and
|
||
|Iter:map()|) that transform the underlying source data. These methods can be
|
||
chained to create iterator "pipelines": the output of each pipeline stage is
|
||
input to the next stage. The first stage depends on the type passed to
|
||
`vim.iter()`:
|
||
• List tables (arrays, |lua-list|) yield only the value of each element.
|
||
• Use |Iter:enumerate()| to also pass the index to the next stage.
|
||
• Or initialize with ipairs(): `vim.iter(ipairs(…))`.
|
||
• Non-list tables (|lua-dict|) yield both the key and value of each element.
|
||
• Function |iterator|s yield all values returned by the underlying function.
|
||
• Tables with a |__call()| metamethod are treated as function iterators.
|
||
|
||
The iterator pipeline terminates when the underlying |iterable| is exhausted
|
||
(for function iterators this means it returned nil).
|
||
|
||
Note: `vim.iter()` scans table input to decide if it is a list or a dict; to
|
||
avoid this cost you can wrap the table with an iterator e.g.
|
||
`vim.iter(ipairs({…}))`, but that precludes the use of |list-iterator|
|
||
operations such as |Iter:rev()|).
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 })
|
||
it:map(function(v)
|
||
return v * 3
|
||
end)
|
||
it:rev()
|
||
it:skip(2)
|
||
it:totable()
|
||
-- { 9, 6, 3 }
|
||
|
||
-- ipairs() is a function iterator which returns both the index (i) and the value (v)
|
||
vim.iter(ipairs({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 })):map(function(i, v)
|
||
if i > 2 then return v end
|
||
end):totable()
|
||
-- { 3, 4, 5 }
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter(vim.gsplit('1,2,3,4,5', ','))
|
||
it:map(function(s) return tonumber(s) end)
|
||
for i, d in it:enumerate() do
|
||
print(string.format("Column %d is %d", i, d))
|
||
end
|
||
-- Column 1 is 1
|
||
-- Column 2 is 2
|
||
-- Column 3 is 3
|
||
-- Column 4 is 4
|
||
-- Column 5 is 5
|
||
|
||
vim.iter({ a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, z = 26 }):any(function(k, v)
|
||
return k == 'z'
|
||
end)
|
||
-- true
|
||
|
||
local rb = vim.ringbuf(3)
|
||
rb:push("a")
|
||
rb:push("b")
|
||
vim.iter(rb):totable()
|
||
-- { "a", "b" }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
|
||
Iter:all({pred}) *Iter:all()*
|
||
Returns true if all items in the iterator match the given predicate.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {pred} (`fun(...):boolean`) Predicate function. Takes all values
|
||
returned from the previous stage in the pipeline as arguments
|
||
and returns true if the predicate matches.
|
||
|
||
Iter:any({pred}) *Iter:any()*
|
||
Returns true if any of the items in the iterator match the given
|
||
predicate.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {pred} (`fun(...):boolean`) Predicate function. Takes all values
|
||
returned from the previous stage in the pipeline as arguments
|
||
and returns true if the predicate matches.
|
||
|
||
Iter:each({f}) *Iter:each()*
|
||
Calls a function once for each item in the pipeline, draining the
|
||
iterator.
|
||
|
||
For functions with side effects. To modify the values in the iterator, use
|
||
|Iter:map()|.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {f} (`fun(...)`) Function to execute for each item in the pipeline.
|
||
Takes all of the values returned by the previous stage in the
|
||
pipeline as arguments.
|
||
|
||
Iter:enumerate() *Iter:enumerate()*
|
||
Yields the item index (count) and value for each item of an iterator
|
||
pipeline.
|
||
|
||
For list tables, this is more efficient: >lua
|
||
vim.iter(ipairs(t))
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
instead of: >lua
|
||
vim.iter(t):enumerate()
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter(vim.gsplit('abc', '')):enumerate()
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 1 'a'
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 2 'b'
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 3 'c'
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`Iter`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:filter({f}) *Iter:filter()*
|
||
Filters an iterator pipeline.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local bufs = vim.iter(vim.api.nvim_list_bufs()):filter(vim.api.nvim_buf_is_loaded)
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {f} (`fun(...):boolean`) Takes all values returned from the previous
|
||
stage in the pipeline and returns false or nil if the current
|
||
iterator element should be removed.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`Iter`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:find({f}) *Iter:find()*
|
||
Find the first value in the iterator that satisfies the given predicate.
|
||
|
||
Advances the iterator. Returns nil and drains the iterator if no value is
|
||
found.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 3, 6, 9, 12 })
|
||
it:find(12)
|
||
-- 12
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 3, 6, 9, 12 })
|
||
it:find(20)
|
||
-- nil
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 3, 6, 9, 12 })
|
||
it:find(function(v) return v % 4 == 0 end)
|
||
-- 12
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {f} (`any`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:flatten({depth}) *Iter:flatten()*
|
||
Flattens a |list-iterator|, un-nesting nested values up to the given
|
||
{depth}. Errors if it attempts to flatten a dict-like value.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
vim.iter({ 1, { 2 }, { { 3 } } }):flatten():totable()
|
||
-- { 1, 2, { 3 } }
|
||
|
||
vim.iter({1, { { a = 2 } }, { 3 } }):flatten():totable()
|
||
-- { 1, { a = 2 }, 3 }
|
||
|
||
vim.iter({ 1, { { a = 2 } }, { 3 } }):flatten(math.huge):totable()
|
||
-- error: attempt to flatten a dict-like table
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {depth} (`number?`) Depth to which |list-iterator| should be
|
||
flattened (defaults to 1)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`Iter`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:fold({init}, {f}) *Iter:fold()*
|
||
Folds ("reduces") an iterator into a single value. *Iter:reduce()*
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
-- Create a new table with only even values
|
||
vim.iter({ a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4 })
|
||
:filter(function(k, v) return v % 2 == 0 end)
|
||
:fold({}, function(acc, k, v)
|
||
acc[k] = v
|
||
return acc
|
||
end) --> { b = 2, d = 4 }
|
||
|
||
-- Get the "maximum" item of an iterable.
|
||
vim.iter({ -99, -4, 3, 42, 0, 0, 7 })
|
||
:fold({}, function(acc, v)
|
||
acc.max = math.max(v, acc.max or v)
|
||
return acc
|
||
end) --> { max = 42 }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {init} (`any`) Initial value of the accumulator.
|
||
• {f} (`fun(acc:A, ...):A`) Accumulation function.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:join({delim}) *Iter:join()*
|
||
Collect the iterator into a delimited string.
|
||
|
||
Each element in the iterator is joined into a string separated by {delim}.
|
||
|
||
Consumes the iterator.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {delim} (`string`) Delimiter
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:last() *Iter:last()*
|
||
Drains the iterator and returns the last item.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter(vim.gsplit('abcdefg', ''))
|
||
it:last()
|
||
-- 'g'
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 3, 6, 9, 12, 15 })
|
||
it:last()
|
||
-- 15
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• Iter.rpeek
|
||
|
||
Iter:map({f}) *Iter:map()*
|
||
Maps the items of an iterator pipeline to the values returned by `f`.
|
||
|
||
If the map function returns nil, the value is filtered from the iterator.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 1, 2, 3, 4 }):map(function(v)
|
||
if v % 2 == 0 then
|
||
return v * 3
|
||
end
|
||
end)
|
||
it:totable()
|
||
-- { 6, 12 }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {f} (`fun(...):any`) Mapping function. Takes all values returned from
|
||
the previous stage in the pipeline as arguments and returns one
|
||
or more new values, which are used in the next pipeline stage.
|
||
Nil return values are filtered from the output.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`Iter`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:next() *Iter:next()*
|
||
Gets the next value from the iterator.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter(string.gmatch('1 2 3', '%d+')):map(tonumber)
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 1
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 2
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 3
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:nth({n}) *Iter:nth()*
|
||
Gets the nth value of an iterator (and advances to it).
|
||
|
||
If `n` is negative, offsets from the end of a |list-iterator|.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 3, 6, 9, 12 })
|
||
it:nth(2)
|
||
-- 6
|
||
it:nth(2)
|
||
-- 12
|
||
|
||
local it2 = vim.iter({ 3, 6, 9, 12 })
|
||
it2:nth(-2)
|
||
-- 9
|
||
it2:nth(-2)
|
||
-- 3
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {n} (`number`) Index of the value to return. May be negative if the
|
||
source is a |list-iterator|.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:peek() *Iter:peek()*
|
||
Gets the next value in a |list-iterator| without consuming it.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 3, 6, 9, 12 })
|
||
it:peek()
|
||
-- 3
|
||
it:peek()
|
||
-- 3
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 3
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:pop() *Iter:pop()*
|
||
"Pops" a value from a |list-iterator| (gets the last value and decrements
|
||
the tail).
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local it = vim.iter({1, 2, 3, 4})
|
||
it:pop()
|
||
-- 4
|
||
it:pop()
|
||
-- 3
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:rev() *Iter:rev()*
|
||
Reverses a |list-iterator| pipeline.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 3, 6, 9, 12 }):rev()
|
||
it:totable()
|
||
-- { 12, 9, 6, 3 }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`Iter`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:rfind({f}) *Iter:rfind()*
|
||
Gets the first value satisfying a predicate, from the end of a
|
||
|list-iterator|.
|
||
|
||
Advances the iterator. Returns nil and drains the iterator if no value is
|
||
found.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 1, 2, 3, 2, 1 }):enumerate()
|
||
it:rfind(1)
|
||
-- 5 1
|
||
it:rfind(1)
|
||
-- 1 1
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {f} (`any`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• Iter.find
|
||
|
||
Iter:rpeek() *Iter:rpeek()*
|
||
Gets the last value of a |list-iterator| without consuming it.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local it = vim.iter({1, 2, 3, 4})
|
||
it:rpeek()
|
||
-- 4
|
||
it:rpeek()
|
||
-- 4
|
||
it:pop()
|
||
-- 4
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`any`)
|
||
|
||
See also: ~
|
||
• Iter.last
|
||
|
||
Iter:rskip({n}) *Iter:rskip()*
|
||
Discards `n` values from the end of a |list-iterator| pipeline.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 }):rskip(2)
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 1
|
||
it:pop()
|
||
-- 3
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {n} (`number`) Number of values to skip.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`Iter`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:skip({n}) *Iter:skip()*
|
||
Skips `n` values of an iterator pipeline.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 3, 6, 9, 12 }):skip(2)
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 9
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {n} (`number`) Number of values to skip.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`Iter`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:slice({first}, {last}) *Iter:slice()*
|
||
Sets the start and end of a |list-iterator| pipeline.
|
||
|
||
Equivalent to `:skip(first - 1):rskip(len - last + 1)`.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {first} (`number`)
|
||
• {last} (`number`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`Iter`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:take({n}) *Iter:take()*
|
||
Transforms an iterator to yield only the first n values.
|
||
|
||
Example: >lua
|
||
local it = vim.iter({ 1, 2, 3, 4 }):take(2)
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 1
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- 2
|
||
it:next()
|
||
-- nil
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {n} (`integer`)
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`Iter`)
|
||
|
||
Iter:totable() *Iter:totable()*
|
||
Collect the iterator into a table.
|
||
|
||
The resulting table depends on the initial source in the iterator
|
||
pipeline. List-like tables and function iterators will be collected into a
|
||
list-like table. If multiple values are returned from the final stage in
|
||
the iterator pipeline, each value will be included in a table.
|
||
|
||
Examples: >lua
|
||
vim.iter(string.gmatch('100 20 50', '%d+')):map(tonumber):totable()
|
||
-- { 100, 20, 50 }
|
||
|
||
vim.iter({ 1, 2, 3 }):map(function(v) return v, 2 * v end):totable()
|
||
-- { { 1, 2 }, { 2, 4 }, { 3, 6 } }
|
||
|
||
vim.iter({ a = 1, b = 2, c = 3 }):filter(function(k, v) return v % 2 ~= 0 end):totable()
|
||
-- { { 'a', 1 }, { 'c', 3 } }
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
The generated table is a list-like table with consecutive, numeric
|
||
indices. To create a map-like table with arbitrary keys, use
|
||
|Iter:fold()|.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`table`)
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.snippet *vim.snippet*
|
||
|
||
*vim.snippet.ActiveFilter*
|
||
|
||
Fields: ~
|
||
• {direction} (`vim.snippet.Direction`) Navigation direction. -1 for
|
||
previous, 1 for next.
|
||
|
||
|
||
vim.snippet.active({filter}) *vim.snippet.active()*
|
||
Returns `true` if there's an active snippet in the current buffer,
|
||
applying the given filter if provided.
|
||
|
||
You can use this function to navigate a snippet as follows: >lua
|
||
vim.keymap.set({ 'i', 's' }, '<Tab>', function()
|
||
if vim.snippet.active({ direction = 1 }) then
|
||
return '<cmd>lua vim.snippet.jump(1)<cr>'
|
||
else
|
||
return '<Tab>'
|
||
end
|
||
end, { expr = true })
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {filter} (`vim.snippet.ActiveFilter?`) Filter to constrain the search
|
||
with:
|
||
• `direction` (vim.snippet.Direction): Navigation direction.
|
||
Will return `true` if the snippet can be jumped in the
|
||
given direction. See |vim.snippet.ActiveFilter|.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`boolean`)
|
||
|
||
vim.snippet.expand({input}) *vim.snippet.expand()*
|
||
Expands the given snippet text. Refer to
|
||
https://microsoft.github.io/language-server-protocol/specification/#snippet_syntax
|
||
for the specification of valid input.
|
||
|
||
Tabstops are highlighted with |hl-SnippetTabstop|.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {input} (`string`)
|
||
|
||
vim.snippet.jump({direction}) *vim.snippet.jump()*
|
||
Jumps to the next (or previous) placeholder in the current snippet, if
|
||
possible.
|
||
|
||
For example, map `<Tab>` to jump while a snippet is active: >lua
|
||
vim.keymap.set({ 'i', 's' }, '<Tab>', function()
|
||
if vim.snippet.active({ direction = 1 }) then
|
||
return '<cmd>lua vim.snippet.jump(1)<cr>'
|
||
else
|
||
return '<Tab>'
|
||
end
|
||
end, { expr = true })
|
||
<
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {direction} (`vim.snippet.Direction`) Navigation direction. -1 for
|
||
previous, 1 for next.
|
||
|
||
vim.snippet.stop() *vim.snippet.stop()*
|
||
Exits the current snippet.
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: vim.text *vim.text*
|
||
|
||
vim.text.hexdecode({enc}) *vim.text.hexdecode()*
|
||
Hex decode a string.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {enc} (`string`) String to decode
|
||
|
||
Return (multiple): ~
|
||
(`string?`) Decoded string
|
||
(`string?`) Error message, if any
|
||
|
||
vim.text.hexencode({str}) *vim.text.hexencode()*
|
||
Hex encode a string.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {str} (`string`) String to encode
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string`) Hex encoded string
|
||
|
||
|
||
==============================================================================
|
||
Lua module: tohtml *vim.tohtml*
|
||
|
||
|
||
:[range]TOhtml {file} *:TOhtml*
|
||
Converts the buffer shown in the current window to HTML, opens the generated
|
||
HTML in a new split window, and saves its contents to {file}. If {file} is not
|
||
given, a temporary file (created by |tempname()|) is used.
|
||
|
||
|
||
tohtml.tohtml({winid}, {opt}) *tohtml.tohtml.tohtml()*
|
||
Converts the buffer shown in the window {winid} to HTML and returns the
|
||
output as a list of string.
|
||
|
||
Parameters: ~
|
||
• {winid} (`integer?`) Window to convert (defaults to current window)
|
||
• {opt} (`table?`) Optional parameters.
|
||
• {title}? (`string|false`, default: buffer name) Title tag
|
||
to set in the generated HTML code.
|
||
• {number_lines}? (`boolean`, default: `false`) Show line
|
||
numbers.
|
||
• {font}? (`string[]|string`, default: `guifont`) Fonts to
|
||
use.
|
||
• {width}? (`integer`, default: 'textwidth' if non-zero or
|
||
window width otherwise) Width used for items which are
|
||
either right aligned or repeat a character infinitely.
|
||
• {range}? (`integer[]`, default: entire buffer) Range of
|
||
rows to use.
|
||
|
||
Return: ~
|
||
(`string[]`)
|
||
|
||
|
||
vim:tw=78:ts=8:sw=4:sts=4:et:ft=help:norl:
|