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059dfda0ca
feat(api): add command name to Lua command callback opts
3533 lines
141 KiB
Plaintext
3533 lines
141 KiB
Plaintext
*api.txt* Nvim
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NVIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Thiago de Arruda
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Nvim API *API* *api*
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Nvim exposes a powerful API that can be used by plugins and external processes
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via |RPC|, |Lua| and VimL (|eval-api|).
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Applications can also embed libnvim to work with the C API directly.
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Type |gO| to see the table of contents.
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==============================================================================
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API Usage *api-rpc* *RPC* *rpc*
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*msgpack-rpc*
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RPC is the typical way to control Nvim programmatically. Nvim implements the
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MessagePack-RPC protocol:
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https://github.com/msgpack-rpc/msgpack-rpc/blob/master/spec.md
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https://github.com/msgpack/msgpack/blob/0b8f5ac/spec.md
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Many clients use the API: user interfaces (GUIs), remote plugins, scripts like
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"nvr" (https://github.com/mhinz/neovim-remote). Even Nvim itself can control
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other Nvim instances. API clients can:
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- Call any API function
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- Listen for events
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- Receive remote calls from Nvim
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The RPC API is like a more powerful version of Vim's "clientserver" feature.
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CONNECTING *rpc-connecting*
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See |channel-intro| for various ways to open a channel. Channel-opening
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functions take an `rpc` key in the options dictionary. RPC channels can also
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be opened by other processes connecting to TCP/IP sockets or named pipes
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listened to by Nvim.
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Nvim creates a default RPC socket at |startup|, given by |v:servername|. To
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start with a TCP/IP socket instead, use |--listen| with a TCP-style address: >
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nvim --listen 127.0.0.1:6666
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More endpoints can be started with |serverstart()|.
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Note that localhost TCP sockets are generally less secure than named pipes,
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and can lead to vulnerabilities like remote code execution.
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Connecting to the socket is the easiest way a programmer can test the API,
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which can be done through any msgpack-rpc client library or full-featured
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|api-client|. Here's a Ruby script that prints "hello world!" in the current
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Nvim instance:
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>
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#!/usr/bin/env ruby
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# Requires msgpack-rpc: gem install msgpack-rpc
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#
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# To run this script, execute it from a running Nvim instance (notice the
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# trailing '&' which is required since Nvim won't process events while
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# running a blocking command):
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#
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# :!./hello.rb &
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#
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# Or from another shell by setting NVIM_LISTEN_ADDRESS:
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# $ NVIM_LISTEN_ADDRESS=[address] ./hello.rb
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require 'msgpack/rpc'
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require 'msgpack/rpc/transport/unix'
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nvim = MessagePack::RPC::Client.new(MessagePack::RPC::UNIXTransport.new, ENV['NVIM_LISTEN_ADDRESS'])
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result = nvim.call(:nvim_command, 'echo "hello world!"')
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<
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A better way is to use the Python REPL with the "pynvim" package, where API
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functions can be called interactively:
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>
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>>> from pynvim import attach
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>>> nvim = attach('socket', path='[address]')
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>>> nvim.command('echo "hello world!"')
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<
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You can also embed Nvim via |jobstart()|, and communicate using |rpcrequest()|
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and |rpcnotify()|:
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>
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let nvim = jobstart(['nvim', '--embed'], {'rpc': v:true})
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echo rpcrequest(nvim, 'nvim_eval', '"Hello " . "world!"')
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call jobstop(nvim)
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<
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==============================================================================
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API Definitions *api-definitions*
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*api-types*
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The Nvim C API defines custom types for all function parameters. Some are just
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typedefs around C99 standard types, others are Nvim-defined data structures.
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Basic types ~
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>
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API Type C type
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Nil
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Boolean bool
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Integer (signed 64-bit integer) int64_t
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Float (IEEE 754 double precision) double
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String {char* data, size_t size} struct
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Array
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Dictionary (msgpack: map)
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Object
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<
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Note: empty Array is accepted as a valid argument for Dictionary parameter.
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Special types (msgpack EXT) ~
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These are integer typedefs discriminated as separate Object subtypes. They
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can be treated as opaque integers, but are mutually incompatible: Buffer may
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be passed as an integer but not as Window or Tabpage.
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The EXT object data is the (integer) object handle. The EXT type codes given
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in the |api-metadata| `types` key are stable: they will not change and are
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thus forward-compatible.
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>
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EXT Type C type Data
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
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Buffer enum value kObjectTypeBuffer |bufnr()|
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Window enum value kObjectTypeWindow |window-ID|
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Tabpage enum value kObjectTypeTabpage internal handle
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<
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*api-indexing*
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Most of the API uses 0-based indices, and ranges are end-exclusive. For the
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end of a range, -1 denotes the last line/column.
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Exception: the following API functions use "mark-like" indexing (1-based
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lines, 0-based columns):
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- |nvim_get_mark()|
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- |nvim_buf_get_mark()|
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- |nvim_buf_set_mark()|
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- |nvim_win_get_cursor()|
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- |nvim_win_set_cursor()|
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Exception: the following API functions use |extmarks| indexing (0-based
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indices, end-inclusive):
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- |nvim_buf_del_extmark()|
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- |nvim_buf_get_extmark_by_id()|
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- |nvim_buf_get_extmarks()|
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- |nvim_buf_set_extmark()|
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*api-fast*
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Most API functions are "deferred": they are queued on the main loop and
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processed sequentially with normal input. So if the editor is waiting for
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user input in a "modal" fashion (e.g. the |hit-enter-prompt|), the request
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will block. Non-deferred (fast) functions such as |nvim_get_mode()| and
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|nvim_input()| are served immediately (i.e. without waiting in the input
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queue). Lua code can use |vim.in_fast_event()| to detect a fast context.
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==============================================================================
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API metadata *api-metadata*
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The Nvim C API is automatically exposed to RPC by the build system, which
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parses headers in src/nvim/api/* and generates dispatch-functions mapping RPC
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API method names to public C API functions, converting/validating arguments
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and return values.
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Nvim exposes its API metadata as a Dictionary with these items:
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- version Nvim version, API level/compatibility
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- version.api_level API version integer *api-level*
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- version.api_compatible API is backwards-compatible with this level
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- version.api_prerelease Declares the API as unstable/unreleased
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`(version.api_prerelease && fn.since == version.api_level)`
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- functions API function signatures, containing |api-types| info
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describing the return value and parameters.
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- ui_events |UI| event signatures
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- ui_options Supported |ui-option|s
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- {fn}.since API level where function {fn} was introduced
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- {fn}.deprecated_since API level where function {fn} was deprecated
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- types Custom handle types defined by Nvim
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- error_types Possible error types returned by API functions
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About the `functions` map:
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- Container types may be decorated with type/size constraints, e.g.
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ArrayOf(Buffer) or ArrayOf(Integer, 2).
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- Functions considered to be methods that operate on instances of Nvim
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special types (msgpack EXT) have the "method=true" flag. The receiver type
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is that of the first argument. Method names are prefixed with `nvim_` plus
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a type name, e.g. `nvim_buf_get_lines` is the `get_lines` method of
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a Buffer instance. |dev-api|
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- Global functions have the "method=false" flag and are prefixed with just
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`nvim_`, e.g. `nvim_list_bufs`.
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*api-mapping*
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External programs (clients) can use the metadata to discover the API, using
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any of these approaches:
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1. Connect to a running Nvim instance and call |nvim_get_api_info()| via
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msgpack-RPC. This is best for clients written in dynamic languages which
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can define functions at runtime.
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2. Start Nvim with |--api-info|. Useful for statically-compiled clients.
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Example (requires Python "pyyaml" and "msgpack-python" modules): >
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nvim --api-info | python -c 'import msgpack, sys, yaml; yaml.dump(msgpack.unpackb(sys.stdin.buffer.read()), sys.stdout)'
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<
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3. Use the |api_info()| Vimscript function. >
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:lua print(vim.inspect(vim.fn.api_info()))
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< Example using |filter()| to exclude non-deprecated API functions: >
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:new|put =map(filter(api_info().functions, '!has_key(v:val,''deprecated_since'')'), 'v:val.name')
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==============================================================================
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API contract *api-contract*
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The Nvim API is composed of functions and events.
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- Clients call functions like those described at |api-global|.
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- Clients can subscribe to |ui-events|, |api-buffer-updates|, etc.
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- API function names are prefixed with "nvim_".
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- API event names are prefixed with "nvim_" and suffixed with "_event".
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As Nvim evolves the API may change in compliance with this CONTRACT:
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- New functions and events may be added.
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- Any such extensions are OPTIONAL: old clients may ignore them.
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- Function signatures will NOT CHANGE (after release).
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- Functions introduced in the development (unreleased) version MAY CHANGE.
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(Clients can dynamically check `api_prerelease`, etc. |api-metadata|)
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- Event parameters will not be removed or reordered (after release).
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- Events may be EXTENDED: new parameters may be added.
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- New items may be ADDED to map/list parameters/results of functions and
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events.
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- Any such new items are OPTIONAL: old clients may ignore them.
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- Existing items will not be removed (after release).
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- Deprecated functions will not be removed until Nvim version 2.0
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"Private" interfaces are NOT covered by this contract:
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- Undocumented (not in :help) functions or events of any kind
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- nvim__x ("double underscore") functions
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The idea is "versionless evolution", in the words of Rich Hickey:
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- Relaxing a requirement should be a compatible change.
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- Strengthening a promise should be a compatible change.
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==============================================================================
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Global events *api-global-events*
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When a client invokes an API request as an async notification, it is not
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possible for Nvim to send an error response. Instead, in case of error, the
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following notification will be sent to the client:
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*nvim_error_event*
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nvim_error_event[{type}, {message}]
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{type} is a numeric id as defined by `api_info().error_types`, and {message} is
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a string with the error message.
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==============================================================================
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Buffer update events *api-buffer-updates*
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API clients can "attach" to Nvim buffers to subscribe to buffer update events.
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This is similar to |TextChanged| but more powerful and granular.
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Call |nvim_buf_attach()| to receive these events on the channel:
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*nvim_buf_lines_event*
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nvim_buf_lines_event[{buf}, {changedtick}, {firstline}, {lastline}, {linedata}, {more}]
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When the buffer text between {firstline} and {lastline} (end-exclusive,
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zero-indexed) were changed to the new text in the {linedata} list. The
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granularity is a line, i.e. if a single character is changed in the
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editor, the entire line is sent.
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When {changedtick} is |v:null| this means the screen lines (display)
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changed but not the buffer contents. {linedata} contains the changed
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screen lines. This happens when 'inccommand' shows a buffer preview.
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Properties:~
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{buf} API buffer handle (buffer number)
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{changedtick} value of |b:changedtick| for the buffer. If you send an
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API command back to nvim you can check the value of |b:changedtick| as
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part of your request to ensure that no other changes have been made.
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{firstline} integer line number of the first line that was replaced.
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Zero-indexed: if line 1 was replaced then {firstline} will be 0, not
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1. {firstline} is always less than or equal to the number of lines
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that were in the buffer before the lines were replaced.
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{lastline} integer line number of the first line that was not replaced
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(i.e. the range {firstline}, {lastline} is end-exclusive).
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Zero-indexed: if line numbers 2 to 5 were replaced, this will be 5
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instead of 6. {lastline} is always be less than or equal to the number
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of lines that were in the buffer before the lines were replaced.
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{lastline} will be -1 if the event is part of the initial update after
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attaching.
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{linedata} list of strings containing the contents of the new buffer
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lines. Newline characters are omitted; empty lines are sent as empty
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strings.
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{more} boolean, true for a "multipart" change notification: the
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current change was chunked into multiple |nvim_buf_lines_event|
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notifications (e.g. because it was too big).
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nvim_buf_changedtick_event[{buf}, {changedtick}] *nvim_buf_changedtick_event*
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When |b:changedtick| was incremented but no text was changed. Relevant for
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undo/redo.
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Properties:~
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{buf} API buffer handle (buffer number)
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{changedtick} new value of |b:changedtick| for the buffer
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nvim_buf_detach_event[{buf}] *nvim_buf_detach_event*
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When buffer is detached (i.e. updates are disabled). Triggered explicitly by
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|nvim_buf_detach()| or implicitly in these cases:
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- Buffer was |abandon|ed and 'hidden' is not set.
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- Buffer was reloaded, e.g. with |:edit| or an external change triggered
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|:checktime| or 'autoread'.
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- Generally: whenever the buffer contents are unloaded from memory.
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Properties:~
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{buf} API buffer handle (buffer number)
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EXAMPLE ~
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Calling |nvim_buf_attach()| with send_buffer=true on an empty buffer, emits: >
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nvim_buf_lines_event[{buf}, {changedtick}, 0, -1, [""], v:false]
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User adds two lines to the buffer, emits: >
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nvim_buf_lines_event[{buf}, {changedtick}, 0, 0, ["line1", "line2"], v:false]
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User moves to a line containing the text "Hello world" and inserts "!", emits: >
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nvim_buf_lines_event[{buf}, {changedtick}, {linenr}, {linenr} + 1,
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["Hello world!"], v:false]
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User moves to line 3 and deletes 20 lines using "20dd", emits: >
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nvim_buf_lines_event[{buf}, {changedtick}, 2, 22, [], v:false]
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User selects lines 3-5 using |linewise-visual| mode and then types "p" to
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paste a block of 6 lines, emits: >
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nvim_buf_lines_event[{buf}, {changedtick}, 2, 5,
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['pasted line 1', 'pasted line 2', 'pasted line 3', 'pasted line 4',
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'pasted line 5', 'pasted line 6'],
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v:false
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]
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User reloads the buffer with ":edit", emits: >
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nvim_buf_detach_event[{buf}]
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<
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LUA ~
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*api-buffer-updates-lua*
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In-process Lua plugins can receive buffer updates in the form of Lua
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callbacks. These callbacks are called frequently in various contexts;
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|textlock| prevents changing buffer contents and window layout (use
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|vim.schedule()| to defer such operations to the main loop instead).
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|nvim_buf_attach()| will take keyword args for the callbacks. "on_lines" will
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receive parameters ("lines", {buf}, {changedtick}, {firstline}, {lastline},
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{new_lastline}, {old_byte_size} [, {old_utf32_size}, {old_utf16_size}]).
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Unlike remote channel events the text contents are not passed. The new text can
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be accessed inside the callback as
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`vim.api.nvim_buf_get_lines(buf, firstline, new_lastline, true)`
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{old_byte_size} is the total size of the replaced region {firstline} to
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{lastline} in bytes, including the final newline after {lastline}. if
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`utf_sizes` is set to true in |nvim_buf_attach()| keyword args, then the
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UTF-32 and UTF-16 sizes of the deleted region is also passed as additional
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arguments {old_utf32_size} and {old_utf16_size}.
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"on_changedtick" is invoked when |b:changedtick| was incremented but no text
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was changed. The parameters received are ("changedtick", {buf}, {changedtick}).
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*api-lua-detach*
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In-process Lua callbacks can detach by returning `true`. This will detach all
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callbacks attached with the same |nvim_buf_attach()| call.
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==============================================================================
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Buffer highlighting *api-highlights*
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Nvim allows plugins to add position-based highlights to buffers. This is
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similar to |matchaddpos()| but with some key differences. The added highlights
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are associated with a buffer and adapts to line insertions and deletions,
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similar to signs. It is also possible to manage a set of highlights as a group
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and delete or replace all at once.
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The intended use case are linter or semantic highlighter plugins that monitor
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a buffer for changes, and in the background compute highlights to the buffer.
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Another use case are plugins that show output in an append-only buffer, and
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want to add highlights to the outputs. Highlight data cannot be preserved
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on writing and loading a buffer to file, nor in undo/redo cycles.
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Highlights are registered using the |nvim_buf_add_highlight()| function. If an
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external highlighter plugin wants to add many highlights in a batch,
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performance can be improved by calling |nvim_buf_add_highlight()| as an
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asynchronous notification, after first (synchronously) requesting a source id.
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Example using the Python API client (|pynvim|):
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>
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src = vim.new_highlight_source()
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buf = vim.current.buffer
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for i in range(5):
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buf.add_highlight("String",i,0,-1,src_id=src)
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# some time later ...
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buf.clear_namespace(src)
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<
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If the highlights don't need to be deleted or updated, just pass -1 as
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src_id (this is the default in python). Use |nvim_buf_clear_namespace()| to
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clear highlights from a specific source, in a specific line range or the
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entire buffer by passing in the line range 0, -1 (the latter is the default in
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python as used above).
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Example using the API from Vimscript: >
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call nvim_buf_set_lines(0, 0, 0, v:true, ["test text"])
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let src = nvim_buf_add_highlight(0, 0, "String", 1, 0, 4)
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call nvim_buf_add_highlight(0, src, "Identifier", 0, 5, -1)
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" some time later ...
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call nvim_buf_clear_namespace(0, src, 0, -1)
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==============================================================================
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Floating windows *api-floatwin*
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Floating windows ("floats") are displayed on top of normal windows. This is
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useful to implement simple widgets, such as tooltips displayed next to the
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cursor. Floats are fully functional windows supporting user editing, common
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|api-window| calls, and most window options (except 'statusline').
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Two ways to create a floating window:
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- |nvim_open_win()| creates a new window (needs a buffer, see |nvim_create_buf()|)
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- |nvim_win_set_config()| reconfigures a normal window into a float
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To close it use |nvim_win_close()| or a command such as |:close|.
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To check whether a window is floating, check whether the `relative` option in
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its config is non-empty: >
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if vim.api.nvim_win_get_config(window_id).relative ~= '' then
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-- window with this window_id is floating
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end
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<
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Buffer text can be highlighted by typical mechanisms (syntax highlighting,
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|api-highlights|). The |hl-NormalFloat| group highlights normal text;
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'winhighlight' can be used as usual to override groups locally. Floats inherit
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|
options from the current window; specify `style=minimal` in |nvim_open_win()|
|
|
to disable various visual features such as the 'number' column.
|
|
|
|
Currently, floating windows don't support some widgets like scrollbar.
|
|
|
|
The output of |:mksession| does not include commands for restoring floating
|
|
windows.
|
|
|
|
Example: create a float with scratch buffer: >
|
|
|
|
let buf = nvim_create_buf(v:false, v:true)
|
|
call nvim_buf_set_lines(buf, 0, -1, v:true, ["test", "text"])
|
|
let opts = {'relative': 'cursor', 'width': 10, 'height': 2, 'col': 0,
|
|
\ 'row': 1, 'anchor': 'NW', 'style': 'minimal'}
|
|
let win = nvim_open_win(buf, 0, opts)
|
|
" optional: change highlight, otherwise Pmenu is used
|
|
call nvim_win_set_option(win, 'winhl', 'Normal:MyHighlight')
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Extended marks *api-extended-marks* *extmarks*
|
|
|
|
Extended marks (extmarks) represent buffer annotations that track text changes
|
|
in the buffer. They can represent cursors, folds, misspelled words, anything
|
|
that needs to track a logical location in the buffer over time. |api-indexing|
|
|
|
|
Extmark position works like "bar" cursor: it exists between characters. Thus,
|
|
the maximum extmark index on a line is 1 more than the character index: >
|
|
|
|
f o o b a r line contents
|
|
0 1 2 3 4 5 character positions (0-based)
|
|
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 extmark positions (0-based)
|
|
|
|
Extmarks have "forward gravity": if you place the cursor directly on an
|
|
extmark position and enter some text, the extmark migrates forward. >
|
|
|
|
f o o|b a r line (| = cursor)
|
|
3 extmark
|
|
|
|
f o o z|b a r line (| = cursor)
|
|
4 extmark (after typing "z")
|
|
|
|
If an extmark is on the last index of a line and you input a newline at that
|
|
point, the extmark will accordingly migrate to the next line: >
|
|
|
|
f o o z b a r| line (| = cursor)
|
|
7 extmark
|
|
|
|
f o o z b a r first line
|
|
extmarks (none present)
|
|
| second line (| = cursor)
|
|
0 extmark (after typing <CR>)
|
|
|
|
|
|
Example:
|
|
|
|
Let's set an extmark at the first row (row=0) and third column (column=2).
|
|
|api-indexing| Passing id=0 creates a new mark and returns the id: >
|
|
|
|
01 2345678
|
|
0 ex|ample..
|
|
^ extmark position
|
|
|
|
let g:mark_ns = nvim_create_namespace('myplugin')
|
|
let g:mark_id = nvim_buf_set_extmark(0, g:mark_ns, 0, 2, {})
|
|
<
|
|
We can get the mark by its id: >
|
|
|
|
echo nvim_buf_get_extmark_by_id(0, g:mark_ns, g:mark_id, {})
|
|
=> [0, 2]
|
|
|
|
We can get all marks in a buffer by |namespace| (or by a range): >
|
|
|
|
echo nvim_buf_get_extmarks(0, g:mark_ns, 0, -1, {})
|
|
=> [[1, 0, 2]]
|
|
|
|
Deleting all surrounding text does NOT remove an extmark! To remove extmarks
|
|
use |nvim_buf_del_extmark()|. Deleting "x" in our example: >
|
|
|
|
0 12345678
|
|
0 e|ample..
|
|
^ extmark position
|
|
|
|
echo nvim_buf_get_extmark_by_id(0, g:mark_ns, g:mark_id, {})
|
|
=> [0, 1]
|
|
<
|
|
Note: Extmark "gravity" decides how it will shift after a text edit.
|
|
See |nvim_buf_set_extmark()|
|
|
|
|
Namespaces allow any plugin to manage only its own extmarks, ignoring those
|
|
created by another plugin.
|
|
|
|
Extmark positions changed by an edit will be restored on undo/redo. Creating
|
|
and deleting extmarks is not a buffer change, thus new undo states are not
|
|
created for extmark changes.
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Global Functions *api-global*
|
|
|
|
nvim__get_runtime({pat}, {all}, {*opts}) *nvim__get_runtime()*
|
|
Find files in runtime directories
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|api-fast|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {pat} pattern of files to search for
|
|
• {all} whether to return all matches or only the first
|
|
• {opts} is_lua: only search lua subdirs
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
list of absolute paths to the found files
|
|
|
|
nvim__id({obj}) *nvim__id()*
|
|
Returns object given as argument.
|
|
|
|
This API function is used for testing. One should not rely on its presence
|
|
in plugins.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {obj} Object to return.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
its argument.
|
|
|
|
nvim__id_array({arr}) *nvim__id_array()*
|
|
Returns array given as argument.
|
|
|
|
This API function is used for testing. One should not rely on its presence
|
|
in plugins.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {arr} Array to return.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
its argument.
|
|
|
|
nvim__id_dictionary({dct}) *nvim__id_dictionary()*
|
|
Returns dictionary given as argument.
|
|
|
|
This API function is used for testing. One should not rely on its presence
|
|
in plugins.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {dct} Dictionary to return.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
its argument.
|
|
|
|
nvim__id_float({flt}) *nvim__id_float()*
|
|
Returns floating-point value given as argument.
|
|
|
|
This API function is used for testing. One should not rely on its presence
|
|
in plugins.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {flt} Value to return.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
its argument.
|
|
|
|
nvim__inspect_cell({grid}, {row}, {col}) *nvim__inspect_cell()*
|
|
NB: if your UI doesn't use hlstate, this will not return hlstate first
|
|
time.
|
|
|
|
nvim__stats() *nvim__stats()*
|
|
Gets internal stats.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Map of various internal stats.
|
|
|
|
nvim_call_atomic({calls}) *nvim_call_atomic()*
|
|
Calls many API methods atomically.
|
|
|
|
This has two main usages:
|
|
1. To perform several requests from an async context atomically, i.e.
|
|
without interleaving redraws, RPC requests from other clients, or user
|
|
interactions (however API methods may trigger autocommands or event
|
|
processing which have such side effects, e.g. |:sleep| may wake
|
|
timers).
|
|
2. To minimize RPC overhead (roundtrips) of a sequence of many requests.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {calls} an array of calls, where each call is described by an array
|
|
with two elements: the request name, and an array of
|
|
arguments.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Array of two elements. The first is an array of return values. The
|
|
second is NIL if all calls succeeded. If a call resulted in an error,
|
|
it is a three-element array with the zero-based index of the call
|
|
which resulted in an error, the error type and the error message. If
|
|
an error occurred, the values from all preceding calls will still be
|
|
returned.
|
|
|
|
nvim_chan_send({chan}, {data}) *nvim_chan_send()*
|
|
Send data to channel `id`. For a job, it writes it to the stdin of the
|
|
process. For the stdio channel |channel-stdio|, it writes to Nvim's
|
|
stdout. For an internal terminal instance (|nvim_open_term()|) it writes
|
|
directly to terminal output. See |channel-bytes| for more information.
|
|
|
|
This function writes raw data, not RPC messages. If the channel was
|
|
created with `rpc=true` then the channel expects RPC messages, use
|
|
|vim.rpcnotify()| and |vim.rpcrequest()| instead.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
Lua |vim.api| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {chan} id of the channel
|
|
• {data} data to write. 8-bit clean: can contain NUL bytes.
|
|
|
|
nvim_create_buf({listed}, {scratch}) *nvim_create_buf()*
|
|
Creates a new, empty, unnamed buffer.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {listed} Sets 'buflisted'
|
|
• {scratch} Creates a "throwaway" |scratch-buffer| for temporary work
|
|
(always 'nomodified'). Also sets 'nomodeline' on the
|
|
buffer.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Buffer handle, or 0 on error
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
buf_open_scratch
|
|
|
|
nvim_del_current_line() *nvim_del_current_line()*
|
|
Deletes the current line.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
nvim_del_keymap({mode}, {lhs}) *nvim_del_keymap()*
|
|
Unmaps a global |mapping| for the given mode.
|
|
|
|
To unmap a buffer-local mapping, use |nvim_buf_del_keymap()|.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_set_keymap()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_del_mark({name}) *nvim_del_mark()*
|
|
Deletes an uppercase/file named mark. See |mark-motions|.
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
fails with error if a lowercase or buffer local named mark is used.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Mark name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
true if the mark was deleted, else false.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_buf_del_mark()|
|
|
|nvim_get_mark()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_del_var({name}) *nvim_del_var()*
|
|
Removes a global (g:) variable.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
|
|
nvim_echo({chunks}, {history}, {opts}) *nvim_echo()*
|
|
Echo a message.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {chunks} A list of [text, hl_group] arrays, each representing a text
|
|
chunk with specified highlight. `hl_group` element can be
|
|
omitted for no highlight.
|
|
• {history} if true, add to |message-history|.
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Reserved for future use.
|
|
|
|
nvim_err_write({str}) *nvim_err_write()*
|
|
Writes a message to the Vim error buffer. Does not append "\n", the
|
|
message is buffered (won't display) until a linefeed is written.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {str} Message
|
|
|
|
nvim_err_writeln({str}) *nvim_err_writeln()*
|
|
Writes a message to the Vim error buffer. Appends "\n", so the buffer is
|
|
flushed (and displayed).
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {str} Message
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
nvim_err_write()
|
|
|
|
nvim_eval_statusline({str}, {*opts}) *nvim_eval_statusline()*
|
|
Evaluates statusline string.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|api-fast|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {str} Statusline string (see 'statusline').
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters.
|
|
• winid: (number) |window-ID| of the window to use as context
|
|
for statusline.
|
|
• maxwidth: (number) Maximum width of statusline.
|
|
• fillchar: (string) Character to fill blank spaces in the
|
|
statusline (see 'fillchars'). Treated as single-width even
|
|
if it isn't.
|
|
• highlights: (boolean) Return highlight information.
|
|
• use_winbar: (boolean) Evaluate winbar instead of statusline.
|
|
• use_tabline: (boolean) Evaluate tabline instead of
|
|
statusline. When true, {winid} is ignored. Mutually
|
|
exclusive with {use_winbar}.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Dictionary containing statusline information, with these keys:
|
|
• str: (string) Characters that will be displayed on the statusline.
|
|
• width: (number) Display width of the statusline.
|
|
• highlights: Array containing highlight information of the
|
|
statusline. Only included when the "highlights" key in {opts} is
|
|
true. Each element of the array is a |Dictionary| with these keys:
|
|
• start: (number) Byte index (0-based) of first character that uses
|
|
the highlight.
|
|
• group: (string) Name of highlight group.
|
|
|
|
nvim_exec_lua({code}, {args}) *nvim_exec_lua()*
|
|
Execute Lua code. Parameters (if any) are available as `...` inside the
|
|
chunk. The chunk can return a value.
|
|
|
|
Only statements are executed. To evaluate an expression, prefix it with
|
|
`return`: return my_function(...)
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {code} Lua code to execute
|
|
• {args} Arguments to the code
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Return value of Lua code if present or NIL.
|
|
|
|
nvim_feedkeys({keys}, {mode}, {escape_ks}) *nvim_feedkeys()*
|
|
Sends input-keys to Nvim, subject to various quirks controlled by `mode`
|
|
flags. This is a blocking call, unlike |nvim_input()|.
|
|
|
|
On execution error: does not fail, but updates v:errmsg.
|
|
|
|
To input sequences like <C-o> use |nvim_replace_termcodes()| (typically
|
|
with escape_ks=false) to replace |keycodes|, then pass the result to
|
|
nvim_feedkeys().
|
|
|
|
Example: >
|
|
:let key = nvim_replace_termcodes("<C-o>", v:true, v:false, v:true)
|
|
:call nvim_feedkeys(key, 'n', v:false)
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {keys} to be typed
|
|
• {mode} behavior flags, see |feedkeys()|
|
|
• {escape_ks} If true, escape K_SPECIAL bytes in `keys` This should be
|
|
false if you already used |nvim_replace_termcodes()|, and
|
|
true otherwise.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
feedkeys()
|
|
vim_strsave_escape_ks
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_api_info() *nvim_get_api_info()*
|
|
Returns a 2-tuple (Array), where item 0 is the current channel id and item
|
|
1 is the |api-metadata| map (Dictionary).
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
2-tuple [{channel-id}, {api-metadata}]
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|api-fast|
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_chan_info({chan}) *nvim_get_chan_info()*
|
|
Gets information about a channel.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Dictionary describing a channel, with these keys:
|
|
• "id" Channel id.
|
|
• "argv" (optional) Job arguments list.
|
|
• "stream" Stream underlying the channel.
|
|
• "stdio" stdin and stdout of this Nvim instance
|
|
• "stderr" stderr of this Nvim instance
|
|
• "socket" TCP/IP socket or named pipe
|
|
• "job" Job with communication over its stdio.
|
|
|
|
• "mode" How data received on the channel is interpreted.
|
|
• "bytes" Send and receive raw bytes.
|
|
• "terminal" |terminal| instance interprets ASCII sequences.
|
|
• "rpc" |RPC| communication on the channel is active.
|
|
|
|
• "pty" (optional) Name of pseudoterminal. On a POSIX system this is a
|
|
device path like "/dev/pts/1". If the name is unknown, the key will
|
|
still be present if a pty is used (e.g. for conpty on Windows).
|
|
• "buffer" (optional) Buffer with connected |terminal| instance.
|
|
• "client" (optional) Info about the peer (client on the other end of
|
|
the RPC channel), if provided by it via |nvim_set_client_info()|.
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_color_by_name({name}) *nvim_get_color_by_name()*
|
|
Returns the 24-bit RGB value of a |nvim_get_color_map()| color name or
|
|
"#rrggbb" hexadecimal string.
|
|
|
|
Example: >
|
|
:echo nvim_get_color_by_name("Pink")
|
|
:echo nvim_get_color_by_name("#cbcbcb")
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Color name or "#rrggbb" string
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
24-bit RGB value, or -1 for invalid argument.
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_color_map() *nvim_get_color_map()*
|
|
Returns a map of color names and RGB values.
|
|
|
|
Keys are color names (e.g. "Aqua") and values are 24-bit RGB color values
|
|
(e.g. 65535).
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Map of color names and RGB values.
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_context({*opts}) *nvim_get_context()*
|
|
Gets a map of the current editor state.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters.
|
|
• types: List of |context-types| ("regs", "jumps", "bufs",
|
|
"gvars", …) to gather, or empty for "all".
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
map of global |context|.
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_current_buf() *nvim_get_current_buf()*
|
|
Gets the current buffer.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Buffer handle
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_current_line() *nvim_get_current_line()*
|
|
Gets the current line.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Current line string
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_current_tabpage() *nvim_get_current_tabpage()*
|
|
Gets the current tabpage.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Tabpage handle
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_current_win() *nvim_get_current_win()*
|
|
Gets the current window.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Window handle
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_hl_by_id({hl_id}, {rgb}) *nvim_get_hl_by_id()*
|
|
Gets a highlight definition by id. |hlID()|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {hl_id} Highlight id as returned by |hlID()|
|
|
• {rgb} Export RGB colors
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Highlight definition map
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
nvim_get_hl_by_name
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_hl_by_name({name}, {rgb}) *nvim_get_hl_by_name()*
|
|
Gets a highlight definition by name.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Highlight group name
|
|
• {rgb} Export RGB colors
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Highlight definition map
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
nvim_get_hl_by_id
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_hl_id_by_name({name}) *nvim_get_hl_id_by_name()*
|
|
Gets a highlight group by name
|
|
|
|
similar to |hlID()|, but allocates a new ID if not present.
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_keymap({mode}) *nvim_get_keymap()*
|
|
Gets a list of global (non-buffer-local) |mapping| definitions.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {mode} Mode short-name ("n", "i", "v", ...)
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Array of |maparg()|-like dictionaries describing mappings. The
|
|
"buffer" key is always zero.
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_mark({name}, {opts}) *nvim_get_mark()*
|
|
Return a tuple (row, col, buffer, buffername) representing the position of
|
|
the uppercase/file named mark. See |mark-motions|.
|
|
|
|
Marks are (1,0)-indexed. |api-indexing|
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
fails with error if a lowercase or buffer local named mark is used.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Mark name
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Reserved for future use.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
4-tuple (row, col, buffer, buffername), (0, 0, 0, '') if the mark is
|
|
not set.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_buf_set_mark()|
|
|
|nvim_del_mark()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_mode() *nvim_get_mode()*
|
|
Gets the current mode. |mode()| "blocking" is true if Nvim is waiting for
|
|
input.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Dictionary { "mode": String, "blocking": Boolean }
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|api-fast|
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_proc({pid}) *nvim_get_proc()*
|
|
Gets info describing process `pid`.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Map of process properties, or NIL if process not found.
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_proc_children({pid}) *nvim_get_proc_children()*
|
|
Gets the immediate children of process `pid`.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Array of child process ids, empty if process not found.
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_runtime_file({name}, {all}) *nvim_get_runtime_file()*
|
|
Find files in runtime directories
|
|
|
|
"name" can contain wildcards. For example
|
|
nvim_get_runtime_file("colors/*.vim", true) will return all color scheme
|
|
files. Always use forward slashes (/) in the search pattern for
|
|
subdirectories regardless of platform.
|
|
|
|
It is not an error to not find any files. An empty array is returned then.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|api-fast|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} pattern of files to search for
|
|
• {all} whether to return all matches or only the first
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
list of absolute paths to the found files
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_var({name}) *nvim_get_var()*
|
|
Gets a global (g:) variable.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Variable value
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_vvar({name}) *nvim_get_vvar()*
|
|
Gets a v: variable.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Variable value
|
|
|
|
nvim_input({keys}) *nvim_input()*
|
|
Queues raw user-input. Unlike |nvim_feedkeys()|, this uses a low-level
|
|
input buffer and the call is non-blocking (input is processed
|
|
asynchronously by the eventloop).
|
|
|
|
On execution error: does not fail, but updates v:errmsg.
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
|keycodes| like <CR> are translated, so "<" is special. To input a
|
|
literal "<", send <LT>.
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
For mouse events use |nvim_input_mouse()|. The pseudokey form
|
|
"<LeftMouse><col,row>" is deprecated since |api-level| 6.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|api-fast|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {keys} to be typed
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Number of bytes actually written (can be fewer than requested if the
|
|
buffer becomes full).
|
|
|
|
*nvim_input_mouse()*
|
|
nvim_input_mouse({button}, {action}, {modifier}, {grid}, {row}, {col})
|
|
Send mouse event from GUI.
|
|
|
|
Non-blocking: does not wait on any result, but queues the event to be
|
|
processed soon by the event loop.
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
Currently this doesn't support "scripting" multiple mouse events by
|
|
calling it multiple times in a loop: the intermediate mouse positions
|
|
will be ignored. It should be used to implement real-time mouse input
|
|
in a GUI. The deprecated pseudokey form ("<LeftMouse><col,row>") of
|
|
|nvim_input()| has the same limitation.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|api-fast|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {button} Mouse button: one of "left", "right", "middle", "wheel",
|
|
"move".
|
|
• {action} For ordinary buttons, one of "press", "drag", "release".
|
|
For the wheel, one of "up", "down", "left", "right".
|
|
Ignored for "move".
|
|
• {modifier} String of modifiers each represented by a single char. The
|
|
same specifiers are used as for a key press, except that
|
|
the "-" separator is optional, so "C-A-", "c-a" and "CA"
|
|
can all be used to specify Ctrl+Alt+click.
|
|
• {grid} Grid number if the client uses |ui-multigrid|, else 0.
|
|
• {row} Mouse row-position (zero-based, like redraw events)
|
|
• {col} Mouse column-position (zero-based, like redraw events)
|
|
|
|
nvim_list_bufs() *nvim_list_bufs()*
|
|
Gets the current list of buffer handles
|
|
|
|
Includes unlisted (unloaded/deleted) buffers, like `:ls!`. Use
|
|
|nvim_buf_is_loaded()| to check if a buffer is loaded.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
List of buffer handles
|
|
|
|
nvim_list_chans() *nvim_list_chans()*
|
|
Get information about all open channels.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Array of Dictionaries, each describing a channel with the format
|
|
specified at |nvim_get_chan_info()|.
|
|
|
|
nvim_list_runtime_paths() *nvim_list_runtime_paths()*
|
|
Gets the paths contained in 'runtimepath'.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
List of paths
|
|
|
|
nvim_list_tabpages() *nvim_list_tabpages()*
|
|
Gets the current list of tabpage handles.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
List of tabpage handles
|
|
|
|
nvim_list_uis() *nvim_list_uis()*
|
|
Gets a list of dictionaries representing attached UIs.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Array of UI dictionaries, each with these keys:
|
|
• "height" Requested height of the UI
|
|
• "width" Requested width of the UI
|
|
• "rgb" true if the UI uses RGB colors (false implies |cterm-colors|)
|
|
• "ext_..." Requested UI extensions, see |ui-option|
|
|
• "chan" Channel id of remote UI (not present for TUI)
|
|
|
|
nvim_list_wins() *nvim_list_wins()*
|
|
Gets the current list of window handles.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
List of window handles
|
|
|
|
nvim_load_context({dict}) *nvim_load_context()*
|
|
Sets the current editor state from the given |context| map.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {dict} |Context| map.
|
|
|
|
nvim_notify({msg}, {log_level}, {opts}) *nvim_notify()*
|
|
Notify the user with a message
|
|
|
|
Relays the call to vim.notify . By default forwards your message in the
|
|
echo area but can be overridden to trigger desktop notifications.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {msg} Message to display to the user
|
|
• {log_level} The log level
|
|
• {opts} Reserved for future use.
|
|
|
|
nvim_open_term({buffer}, {opts}) *nvim_open_term()*
|
|
Open a terminal instance in a buffer
|
|
|
|
By default (and currently the only option) the terminal will not be
|
|
connected to an external process. Instead, input send on the channel will
|
|
be echoed directly by the terminal. This is useful to display ANSI
|
|
terminal sequences returned as part of a rpc message, or similar.
|
|
|
|
Note: to directly initiate the terminal using the right size, display the
|
|
buffer in a configured window before calling this. For instance, for a
|
|
floating display, first create an empty buffer using |nvim_create_buf()|,
|
|
then display it using |nvim_open_win()|, and then call this function. Then
|
|
|nvim_chan_send()| can be called immediately to process sequences in a
|
|
virtual terminal having the intended size.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} the buffer to use (expected to be empty)
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters.
|
|
• on_input: lua callback for input sent, i e keypresses in
|
|
terminal mode. Note: keypresses are sent raw as they would
|
|
be to the pty master end. For instance, a carriage return
|
|
is sent as a "\r", not as a "\n". |textlock| applies. It
|
|
is possible to call |nvim_chan_send()| directly in the
|
|
callback however. ["input", term, bufnr, data]
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Channel id, or 0 on error
|
|
|
|
nvim_out_write({str}) *nvim_out_write()*
|
|
Writes a message to the Vim output buffer. Does not append "\n", the
|
|
message is buffered (won't display) until a linefeed is written.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {str} Message
|
|
|
|
nvim_paste({data}, {crlf}, {phase}) *nvim_paste()*
|
|
Pastes at cursor, in any mode.
|
|
|
|
Invokes the `vim.paste` handler, which handles each mode appropriately.
|
|
Sets redo/undo. Faster than |nvim_input()|. Lines break at LF ("\n").
|
|
|
|
Errors ('nomodifiable', `vim.paste()` failure, …) are reflected in `err`
|
|
but do not affect the return value (which is strictly decided by
|
|
`vim.paste()`). On error, subsequent calls are ignored ("drained") until
|
|
the next paste is initiated (phase 1 or -1).
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {data} Multiline input. May be binary (containing NUL bytes).
|
|
• {crlf} Also break lines at CR and CRLF.
|
|
• {phase} -1: paste in a single call (i.e. without streaming). To
|
|
"stream" a paste, call `nvim_paste` sequentially with these `phase` values:
|
|
• 1: starts the paste (exactly once)
|
|
• 2: continues the paste (zero or more times)
|
|
• 3: ends the paste (exactly once)
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
|
|
• true: Client may continue pasting.
|
|
• false: Client must cancel the paste.
|
|
|
|
nvim_put({lines}, {type}, {after}, {follow}) *nvim_put()*
|
|
Puts text at cursor, in any mode.
|
|
|
|
Compare |:put| and |p| which are always linewise.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {lines} |readfile()|-style list of lines. |channel-lines|
|
|
• {type} Edit behavior: any |getregtype()| result, or:
|
|
• "b" |blockwise-visual| mode (may include width, e.g. "b3")
|
|
• "c" |charwise| mode
|
|
• "l" |linewise| mode
|
|
• "" guess by contents, see |setreg()|
|
|
• {after} If true insert after cursor (like |p|), or before (like
|
|
|P|).
|
|
• {follow} If true place cursor at end of inserted text.
|
|
|
|
*nvim_replace_termcodes()*
|
|
nvim_replace_termcodes({str}, {from_part}, {do_lt}, {special})
|
|
Replaces terminal codes and |keycodes| (<CR>, <Esc>, ...) in a string with
|
|
the internal representation.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {str} String to be converted.
|
|
• {from_part} Legacy Vim parameter. Usually true.
|
|
• {do_lt} Also translate <lt>. Ignored if `special` is false.
|
|
• {special} Replace |keycodes|, e.g. <CR> becomes a "\r" char.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
replace_termcodes
|
|
cpoptions
|
|
|
|
*nvim_select_popupmenu_item()*
|
|
nvim_select_popupmenu_item({item}, {insert}, {finish}, {opts})
|
|
Selects an item in the completion popup menu.
|
|
|
|
If neither |ins-completion| nor |cmdline-completion| popup menu is active
|
|
this API call is silently ignored. Useful for an external UI using
|
|
|ui-popupmenu| to control the popup menu with the mouse. Can also be used
|
|
in a mapping; use <Cmd> |:map-cmd| or a Lua mapping to ensure the mapping
|
|
doesn't end completion mode.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {item} Index (zero-based) of the item to select. Value of -1
|
|
selects nothing and restores the original text.
|
|
• {insert} For |ins-completion|, whether the selection should be
|
|
inserted in the buffer. Ignored for |cmdline-completion|.
|
|
• {finish} Finish the completion and dismiss the popup menu. Implies
|
|
{insert}.
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Reserved for future use.
|
|
|
|
*nvim_set_client_info()*
|
|
nvim_set_client_info({name}, {version}, {type}, {methods}, {attributes})
|
|
Self-identifies the client.
|
|
|
|
The client/plugin/application should call this after connecting, to
|
|
provide hints about its identity and purpose, for debugging and
|
|
orchestration.
|
|
|
|
Can be called more than once; the caller should merge old info if
|
|
appropriate. Example: library first identifies the channel, then a plugin
|
|
using that library later identifies itself.
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
"Something is better than nothing". You don't need to include all the
|
|
fields.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Short name for the connected client
|
|
• {version} Dictionary describing the version, with these (optional)
|
|
keys:
|
|
• "major" major version (defaults to 0 if not set, for
|
|
no release yet)
|
|
• "minor" minor version
|
|
• "patch" patch number
|
|
• "prerelease" string describing a prerelease, like
|
|
"dev" or "beta1"
|
|
• "commit" hash or similar identifier of commit
|
|
• {type} Must be one of the following values. Client libraries
|
|
should default to "remote" unless overridden by the
|
|
user.
|
|
• "remote" remote client connected to Nvim.
|
|
• "ui" gui frontend
|
|
• "embedder" application using Nvim as a component (for
|
|
example, IDE/editor implementing a vim mode).
|
|
• "host" plugin host, typically started by nvim
|
|
• "plugin" single plugin, started by nvim
|
|
• {methods} Builtin methods in the client. For a host, this does not
|
|
include plugin methods which will be discovered later.
|
|
The key should be the method name, the values are dicts
|
|
with these (optional) keys (more keys may be added in
|
|
future versions of Nvim, thus unknown keys are ignored.
|
|
Clients must only use keys defined in this or later
|
|
versions of Nvim):
|
|
• "async" if true, send as a notification. If false or
|
|
unspecified, use a blocking request
|
|
• "nargs" Number of arguments. Could be a single integer
|
|
or an array of two integers, minimum and maximum
|
|
inclusive.
|
|
• {attributes} Arbitrary string:string map of informal client
|
|
properties. Suggested keys:
|
|
• "website": Client homepage URL (e.g. GitHub
|
|
repository)
|
|
• "license": License description ("Apache 2", "GPLv3",
|
|
"MIT", …)
|
|
• "logo": URI or path to image, preferably small logo or
|
|
icon. .png or .svg format is preferred.
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_current_buf({buffer}) *nvim_set_current_buf()*
|
|
Sets the current buffer.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_current_dir({dir}) *nvim_set_current_dir()*
|
|
Changes the global working directory.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {dir} Directory path
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_current_line({line}) *nvim_set_current_line()*
|
|
Sets the current line.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {line} Line contents
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_current_tabpage({tabpage}) *nvim_set_current_tabpage()*
|
|
Sets the current tabpage.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {tabpage} Tabpage handle
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_current_win({window}) *nvim_set_current_win()*
|
|
Sets the current window.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_hl({ns_id}, {name}, {*val}) *nvim_set_hl()*
|
|
Sets a highlight group.
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
Unlike the `:highlight` command which can update a highlight group,
|
|
this function completely replaces the definition. For example:
|
|
`nvim_set_hl(0, 'Visual', {})` will clear the highlight group
|
|
'Visual'.
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
The fg and bg keys also accept the string values `"fg"` or `"bg"`
|
|
which act as aliases to the corresponding foreground and background
|
|
values of the Normal group. If the Normal group has not been defined,
|
|
using these values results in an error.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {ns_id} Namespace id for this highlight |nvim_create_namespace()|.
|
|
Use 0 to set a highlight group globally |:highlight|.
|
|
• {name} Highlight group name, e.g. "ErrorMsg"
|
|
• {val} Highlight definition map, accepts the following keys:
|
|
• fg (or foreground): color name or "#RRGGBB", see note.
|
|
• bg (or background): color name or "#RRGGBB", see note.
|
|
• sp (or special): color name or "#RRGGBB"
|
|
• blend: integer between 0 and 100
|
|
• bold: boolean
|
|
• standout: boolean
|
|
• underline: boolean
|
|
• undercurl: boolean
|
|
• underdouble: boolean
|
|
• underdotted: boolean
|
|
• underdashed: boolean
|
|
• strikethrough: boolean
|
|
• italic: boolean
|
|
• reverse: boolean
|
|
• nocombine: boolean
|
|
• link: name of another highlight group to link to, see
|
|
|:hi-link|.
|
|
• default: Don't override existing definition |:hi-default|
|
|
• ctermfg: Sets foreground of cterm color |ctermfg|
|
|
• ctermbg: Sets background of cterm color |ctermbg|
|
|
• cterm: cterm attribute map, like |highlight-args|. If not
|
|
set, cterm attributes will match those from the attribute
|
|
map documented above.
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_hl_ns({ns_id}) *nvim_set_hl_ns()*
|
|
Set active namespace for highlights. This can be set for a single window,
|
|
see |nvim_win_set_hl_ns()|.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {ns_id} the namespace to use
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_hl_ns_fast({ns_id}) *nvim_set_hl_ns_fast()*
|
|
Set active namespace for highlights while redrawing.
|
|
|
|
This function meant to be called while redrawing, primarily from
|
|
|nvim_set_decoration_provider()| on_win and on_line callbacks, which are
|
|
allowed to change the namespace during a redraw cycle.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|api-fast|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {ns_id} the namespace to activate
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_keymap({mode}, {lhs}, {rhs}, {*opts}) *nvim_set_keymap()*
|
|
Sets a global |mapping| for the given mode.
|
|
|
|
To set a buffer-local mapping, use |nvim_buf_set_keymap()|.
|
|
|
|
Unlike |:map|, leading/trailing whitespace is accepted as part of the
|
|
{lhs} or {rhs}. Empty {rhs} is |<Nop>|. |keycodes| are replaced as usual.
|
|
|
|
Example: >
|
|
call nvim_set_keymap('n', ' <NL>', '', {'nowait': v:true})
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
is equivalent to: >
|
|
nmap <nowait> <Space><NL> <Nop>
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {mode} Mode short-name (map command prefix: "n", "i", "v", "x", …) or
|
|
"!" for |:map!|, or empty string for |:map|.
|
|
• {lhs} Left-hand-side |{lhs}| of the mapping.
|
|
• {rhs} Right-hand-side |{rhs}| of the mapping.
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters map: keys are |:map-arguments|, values are
|
|
booleans (default false). Accepts all |:map-arguments| as keys
|
|
excluding |<buffer>| but including |:noremap| and "desc".
|
|
Unknown key is an error. "desc" can be used to give a
|
|
description to the mapping. When called from Lua, also accepts
|
|
a "callback" key that takes a Lua function to call when the
|
|
mapping is executed. When "expr" is true, "replace_keycodes"
|
|
(boolean) can be used to replace keycodes in the resulting
|
|
string (see |nvim_replace_termcodes()|), and a Lua callback
|
|
returning `nil` is equivalent to returning an empty string.
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_var({name}, {value}) *nvim_set_var()*
|
|
Sets a global (g:) variable.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
• {value} Variable value
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_vvar({name}, {value}) *nvim_set_vvar()*
|
|
Sets a v: variable, if it is not readonly.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
• {value} Variable value
|
|
|
|
nvim_strwidth({text}) *nvim_strwidth()*
|
|
Calculates the number of display cells occupied by `text`. Control
|
|
characters including <Tab> count as one cell.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {text} Some text
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Number of cells
|
|
|
|
nvim_subscribe({event}) *nvim_subscribe()*
|
|
Subscribes to event broadcasts.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {event} Event type string
|
|
|
|
nvim_unsubscribe({event}) *nvim_unsubscribe()*
|
|
Unsubscribes to event broadcasts.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {event} Event type string
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Vimscript Functions *api-vimscript*
|
|
|
|
*nvim_call_dict_function()*
|
|
nvim_call_dict_function({dict}, {fn}, {args})
|
|
Calls a VimL |Dictionary-function| with the given arguments.
|
|
|
|
On execution error: fails with VimL error, updates v:errmsg.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {dict} Dictionary, or String evaluating to a VimL |self| dict
|
|
• {fn} Name of the function defined on the VimL dict
|
|
• {args} Function arguments packed in an Array
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Result of the function call
|
|
|
|
nvim_call_function({fn}, {args}) *nvim_call_function()*
|
|
Calls a VimL function with the given arguments.
|
|
|
|
On execution error: fails with VimL error, updates v:errmsg.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {fn} Function to call
|
|
• {args} Function arguments packed in an Array
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Result of the function call
|
|
|
|
nvim_command({command}) *nvim_command()*
|
|
Executes an Ex command.
|
|
|
|
On execution error: fails with VimL error, updates v:errmsg.
|
|
|
|
Prefer using |nvim_cmd()| or |nvim_exec()| over this. To evaluate multiple
|
|
lines of Vim script or an Ex command directly, use |nvim_exec()|. To
|
|
construct an Ex command using a structured format and then execute it, use
|
|
|nvim_cmd()|. To modify an Ex command before evaluating it, use
|
|
|nvim_parse_cmd()| in conjunction with |nvim_cmd()|.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {command} Ex command string
|
|
|
|
nvim_eval({expr}) *nvim_eval()*
|
|
Evaluates a VimL |expression|. Dictionaries and Lists are recursively
|
|
expanded.
|
|
|
|
On execution error: fails with VimL error, updates v:errmsg.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {expr} VimL expression string
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Evaluation result or expanded object
|
|
|
|
nvim_exec({src}, {output}) *nvim_exec()*
|
|
Executes Vimscript (multiline block of Ex commands), like anonymous
|
|
|:source|.
|
|
|
|
Unlike |nvim_command()| this function supports heredocs, script-scope
|
|
(s:), etc.
|
|
|
|
On execution error: fails with VimL error, updates v:errmsg.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {src} Vimscript code
|
|
• {output} Capture and return all (non-error, non-shell |:!|) output
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Output (non-error, non-shell |:!|) if `output` is true, else empty
|
|
string.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|execute()|
|
|
|nvim_command()|
|
|
|nvim_cmd()|
|
|
|
|
*nvim_parse_expression()*
|
|
nvim_parse_expression({expr}, {flags}, {highlight})
|
|
Parse a VimL expression.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|api-fast|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {expr} Expression to parse. Always treated as a single line.
|
|
• {flags} Flags:
|
|
• "m" if multiple expressions in a row are allowed (only
|
|
the first one will be parsed),
|
|
• "E" if EOC tokens are not allowed (determines whether
|
|
they will stop parsing process or be recognized as an
|
|
operator/space, though also yielding an error).
|
|
• "l" when needing to start parsing with lvalues for
|
|
":let" or ":for". Common flag sets:
|
|
• "m" to parse like for ":echo".
|
|
• "E" to parse like for "<C-r>=".
|
|
• empty string for ":call".
|
|
• "lm" to parse for ":let".
|
|
• {highlight} If true, return value will also include "highlight" key
|
|
containing array of 4-tuples (arrays) (Integer, Integer,
|
|
Integer, String), where first three numbers define the
|
|
highlighted region and represent line, starting column
|
|
and ending column (latter exclusive: one should highlight
|
|
region [start_col, end_col)).
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
|
|
• AST: top-level dictionary with these keys:
|
|
• "error": Dictionary with error, present only if parser saw some
|
|
error. Contains the following keys:
|
|
• "message": String, error message in printf format, translated.
|
|
Must contain exactly one "%.*s".
|
|
• "arg": String, error message argument.
|
|
|
|
• "len": Amount of bytes successfully parsed. With flags equal to ""
|
|
that should be equal to the length of expr string. (“Successfully
|
|
parsed” here means “participated in AST creation”, not “till the
|
|
first error”.)
|
|
• "ast": AST, either nil or a dictionary with these keys:
|
|
• "type": node type, one of the value names from ExprASTNodeType
|
|
stringified without "kExprNode" prefix.
|
|
• "start": a pair [line, column] describing where node is
|
|
"started" where "line" is always 0 (will not be 0 if you will be
|
|
using nvim_parse_viml() on e.g. ":let", but that is not present
|
|
yet). Both elements are Integers.
|
|
• "len": “length” of the node. This and "start" are there for
|
|
debugging purposes primary (debugging parser and providing debug
|
|
information).
|
|
• "children": a list of nodes described in top/"ast". There always
|
|
is zero, one or two children, key will not be present if node
|
|
has no children. Maximum number of children may be found in
|
|
node_maxchildren array.
|
|
|
|
• Local values (present only for certain nodes):
|
|
• "scope": a single Integer, specifies scope for "Option" and
|
|
"PlainIdentifier" nodes. For "Option" it is one of ExprOptScope
|
|
values, for "PlainIdentifier" it is one of ExprVarScope values.
|
|
• "ident": identifier (without scope, if any), present for "Option",
|
|
"PlainIdentifier", "PlainKey" and "Environment" nodes.
|
|
• "name": Integer, register name (one character) or -1. Only present
|
|
for "Register" nodes.
|
|
• "cmp_type": String, comparison type, one of the value names from
|
|
ExprComparisonType, stringified without "kExprCmp" prefix. Only
|
|
present for "Comparison" nodes.
|
|
• "ccs_strategy": String, case comparison strategy, one of the value
|
|
names from ExprCaseCompareStrategy, stringified without
|
|
"kCCStrategy" prefix. Only present for "Comparison" nodes.
|
|
• "augmentation": String, augmentation type for "Assignment" nodes.
|
|
Is either an empty string, "Add", "Subtract" or "Concat" for "=",
|
|
"+=", "-=" or ".=" respectively.
|
|
• "invert": Boolean, true if result of comparison needs to be
|
|
inverted. Only present for "Comparison" nodes.
|
|
• "ivalue": Integer, integer value for "Integer" nodes.
|
|
• "fvalue": Float, floating-point value for "Float" nodes.
|
|
• "svalue": String, value for "SingleQuotedString" and
|
|
"DoubleQuotedString" nodes.
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Command Functions *api-command*
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_create_user_command()*
|
|
nvim_buf_create_user_command({buffer}, {name}, {command}, {*opts})
|
|
Create a new user command |user-commands| in the given buffer.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
nvim_create_user_command
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_del_user_command()*
|
|
nvim_buf_del_user_command({buffer}, {name})
|
|
Delete a buffer-local user-defined command.
|
|
|
|
Only commands created with |:command-buffer| or
|
|
|nvim_buf_create_user_command()| can be deleted with this function.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer.
|
|
• {name} Name of the command to delete.
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_get_commands({buffer}, {*opts}) *nvim_buf_get_commands()*
|
|
Gets a map of buffer-local |user-commands|.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Currently not used.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Map of maps describing commands.
|
|
|
|
nvim_cmd({*cmd}, {*opts}) *nvim_cmd()*
|
|
Executes an Ex command.
|
|
|
|
Unlike |nvim_command()| this command takes a structured Dictionary instead
|
|
of a String. This allows for easier construction and manipulation of an Ex
|
|
command. This also allows for things such as having spaces inside a
|
|
command argument, expanding filenames in a command that otherwise doesn't
|
|
expand filenames, etc. Command arguments may also be Number, Boolean or
|
|
String.
|
|
|
|
The first argument may also be used instead of count for commands that
|
|
support it in order to make their usage simpler with |vim.cmd()|. For
|
|
example, instead of `vim.cmd.bdelete{ count = 2 }`, you may do
|
|
`vim.cmd.bdelete(2)`.
|
|
|
|
On execution error: fails with VimL error, updates v:errmsg.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {cmd} Command to execute. Must be a Dictionary that can contain the
|
|
same values as the return value of |nvim_parse_cmd()| except
|
|
"addr", "nargs" and "nextcmd" which are ignored if provided.
|
|
All values except for "cmd" are optional.
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters.
|
|
• output: (boolean, default false) Whether to return command
|
|
output.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Command output (non-error, non-shell |:!|) if `output` is true, else
|
|
empty string.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_exec()|
|
|
|nvim_command()|
|
|
|
|
*nvim_create_user_command()*
|
|
nvim_create_user_command({name}, {command}, {*opts})
|
|
Create a new user command |user-commands|
|
|
|
|
{name} is the name of the new command. The name must begin with an
|
|
uppercase letter.
|
|
|
|
{command} is the replacement text or Lua function to execute.
|
|
|
|
Example: >
|
|
:call nvim_create_user_command('SayHello', 'echo "Hello world!"', {})
|
|
:SayHello
|
|
Hello world!
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Name of the new user command. Must begin with an uppercase
|
|
letter.
|
|
• {command} Replacement command to execute when this user command is
|
|
executed. When called from Lua, the command can also be a
|
|
Lua function. The function is called with a single table
|
|
argument that contains the following keys:
|
|
• name: (string) Command name
|
|
• args: (string) The args passed to the command, if any
|
|
|<args>|
|
|
• fargs: (table) The args split by unescaped whitespace
|
|
(when more than one argument is allowed), if any
|
|
|<f-args>|
|
|
• bang: (boolean) "true" if the command was executed with a
|
|
! modifier |<bang>|
|
|
• line1: (number) The starting line of the command range
|
|
|<line1>|
|
|
• line2: (number) The final line of the command range
|
|
|<line2>|
|
|
• range: (number) The number of items in the command range:
|
|
0, 1, or 2 |<range>|
|
|
• count: (number) Any count supplied |<count>|
|
|
• reg: (string) The optional register, if specified |<reg>|
|
|
• mods: (string) Command modifiers, if any |<mods>|
|
|
• smods: (table) Command modifiers in a structured format.
|
|
Has the same structure as the "mods" key of
|
|
|nvim_parse_cmd()|.
|
|
• {opts} Optional command attributes. See |command-attributes| for
|
|
more details. To use boolean attributes (such as
|
|
|:command-bang| or |:command-bar|) set the value to "true".
|
|
In addition to the string options listed in
|
|
|:command-complete|, the "complete" key also accepts a Lua
|
|
function which works like the "customlist" completion mode
|
|
|:command-completion-customlist|. Additional parameters:
|
|
• desc: (string) Used for listing the command when a Lua
|
|
function is used for {command}.
|
|
• force: (boolean, default true) Override any previous
|
|
definition.
|
|
• preview: (function) Preview callback for 'inccommand'
|
|
|:command-preview|
|
|
|
|
nvim_del_user_command({name}) *nvim_del_user_command()*
|
|
Delete a user-defined command.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Name of the command to delete.
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_commands({*opts}) *nvim_get_commands()*
|
|
Gets a map of global (non-buffer-local) Ex commands.
|
|
|
|
Currently only |user-commands| are supported, not builtin Ex commands.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Currently only supports {"builtin":false}
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Map of maps describing commands.
|
|
|
|
nvim_parse_cmd({str}, {opts}) *nvim_parse_cmd()*
|
|
Parse command line.
|
|
|
|
Doesn't check the validity of command arguments.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|api-fast|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {str} Command line string to parse. Cannot contain "\n".
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Reserved for future use.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Dictionary containing command information, with these keys:
|
|
• cmd: (string) Command name.
|
|
• range: (array) (optional) Command range (|<line1>| |<line2>|).
|
|
Omitted if command doesn't accept a range. Otherwise, has no
|
|
elements if no range was specified, one element if only a single
|
|
range item was specified, or two elements if both range items were
|
|
specified.
|
|
• count: (number) (optional) Command |<count>|. Omitted if command
|
|
cannot take a count.
|
|
• reg: (string) (optional) Command |<register>|. Omitted if command
|
|
cannot take a register.
|
|
• bang: (boolean) Whether command contains a |<bang>| (!) modifier.
|
|
• args: (array) Command arguments.
|
|
• addr: (string) Value of |:command-addr|. Uses short name.
|
|
• nargs: (string) Value of |:command-nargs|.
|
|
• nextcmd: (string) Next command if there are multiple commands
|
|
separated by a |:bar|. Empty if there isn't a next command.
|
|
• magic: (dictionary) Which characters have special meaning in the
|
|
command arguments.
|
|
• file: (boolean) The command expands filenames. Which means
|
|
characters such as "%", "#" and wildcards are expanded.
|
|
• bar: (boolean) The "|" character is treated as a command separator
|
|
and the double quote character (") is treated as the start of a
|
|
comment.
|
|
|
|
• mods: (dictionary) |:command-modifiers|.
|
|
• filter: (dictionary) |:filter|.
|
|
• pattern: (string) Filter pattern. Empty string if there is no
|
|
filter.
|
|
• force: (boolean) Whether filter is inverted or not.
|
|
|
|
• silent: (boolean) |:silent|.
|
|
• emsg_silent: (boolean) |:silent!|.
|
|
• unsilent: (boolean) |:unsilent|.
|
|
• sandbox: (boolean) |:sandbox|.
|
|
• noautocmd: (boolean) |:noautocmd|.
|
|
• browse: (boolean) |:browse|.
|
|
• confirm: (boolean) |:confirm|.
|
|
• hide: (boolean) |:hide|.
|
|
• horizontal: (boolean) |:horizontal|.
|
|
• keepalt: (boolean) |:keepalt|.
|
|
• keepjumps: (boolean) |:keepjumps|.
|
|
• keepmarks: (boolean) |:keepmarks|.
|
|
• keeppatterns: (boolean) |:keeppatterns|.
|
|
• lockmarks: (boolean) |:lockmarks|.
|
|
• noswapfile: (boolean) |:noswapfile|.
|
|
• tab: (integer) |:tab|. -1 when omitted.
|
|
• verbose: (integer) |:verbose|. -1 when omitted.
|
|
• vertical: (boolean) |:vertical|.
|
|
• split: (string) Split modifier string, is an empty string when
|
|
there's no split modifier. If there is a split modifier it can be
|
|
one of:
|
|
• "aboveleft": |:aboveleft|.
|
|
• "belowright": |:belowright|.
|
|
• "topleft": |:topleft|.
|
|
• "botright": |:botright|.
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Options Functions *api-options*
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_get_option({buffer}, {name}) *nvim_buf_get_option()*
|
|
Gets a buffer option value
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {name} Option name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Option value
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_set_option({buffer}, {name}, {value}) *nvim_buf_set_option()*
|
|
Sets a buffer option value. Passing `nil` as value deletes the option
|
|
(only works if there's a global fallback)
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {name} Option name
|
|
• {value} Option value
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_all_options_info() *nvim_get_all_options_info()*
|
|
Gets the option information for all options.
|
|
|
|
The dictionary has the full option names as keys and option metadata
|
|
dictionaries as detailed at |nvim_get_option_info()|.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
dictionary of all options
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_option({name}) *nvim_get_option()*
|
|
Gets the global value of an option.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Option name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Option value (global)
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_option_info({name}) *nvim_get_option_info()*
|
|
Gets the option information for one option
|
|
|
|
Resulting dictionary has keys:
|
|
• name: Name of the option (like 'filetype')
|
|
• shortname: Shortened name of the option (like 'ft')
|
|
• type: type of option ("string", "number" or "boolean")
|
|
• default: The default value for the option
|
|
• was_set: Whether the option was set.
|
|
• last_set_sid: Last set script id (if any)
|
|
• last_set_linenr: line number where option was set
|
|
• last_set_chan: Channel where option was set (0 for local)
|
|
• scope: one of "global", "win", or "buf"
|
|
• global_local: whether win or buf option has a global value
|
|
• commalist: List of comma separated values
|
|
• flaglist: List of single char flags
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Option name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Option Information
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_option_value({name}, {*opts}) *nvim_get_option_value()*
|
|
Gets the value of an option. The behavior of this function matches that of
|
|
|:set|: the local value of an option is returned if it exists; otherwise,
|
|
the global value is returned. Local values always correspond to the
|
|
current buffer or window, unless "buf" or "win" is set in {opts}.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Option name
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters
|
|
• scope: One of "global" or "local". Analogous to |:setglobal|
|
|
and |:setlocal|, respectively.
|
|
• win: |window-ID|. Used for getting window local options.
|
|
• buf: Buffer number. Used for getting buffer local options.
|
|
Implies {scope} is "local".
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Option value
|
|
|
|
nvim_set_option({name}, {value}) *nvim_set_option()*
|
|
Sets the global value of an option.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Option name
|
|
• {value} New option value
|
|
|
|
*nvim_set_option_value()*
|
|
nvim_set_option_value({name}, {value}, {*opts})
|
|
Sets the value of an option. The behavior of this function matches that of
|
|
|:set|: for global-local options, both the global and local value are set
|
|
unless otherwise specified with {scope}.
|
|
|
|
Note the options {win} and {buf} cannot be used together.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Option name
|
|
• {value} New option value
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters
|
|
• scope: One of "global" or "local". Analogous to
|
|
|:setglobal| and |:setlocal|, respectively.
|
|
• win: |window-ID|. Used for setting window local option.
|
|
• buf: Buffer number. Used for setting buffer local option.
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_get_option({window}, {name}) *nvim_win_get_option()*
|
|
Gets a window option value
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {name} Option name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Option value
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_set_option({window}, {name}, {value}) *nvim_win_set_option()*
|
|
Sets a window option value. Passing `nil` as value deletes the option
|
|
(only works if there's a global fallback)
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {name} Option name
|
|
• {value} Option value
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Buffer Functions *api-buffer*
|
|
|
|
|
|
For more information on buffers, see |buffers|.
|
|
|
|
Unloaded Buffers:~
|
|
|
|
Buffers may be unloaded by the |:bunload| command or the buffer's
|
|
|'bufhidden'| option. When a buffer is unloaded its file contents are
|
|
freed from memory and vim cannot operate on the buffer lines until it is
|
|
reloaded (usually by opening the buffer again in a new window). API
|
|
methods such as |nvim_buf_get_lines()| and |nvim_buf_line_count()| will be
|
|
affected.
|
|
|
|
You can use |nvim_buf_is_loaded()| or |nvim_buf_line_count()| to check
|
|
whether a buffer is loaded.
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_attach({buffer}, {send_buffer}, {opts}) *nvim_buf_attach()*
|
|
Activates buffer-update events on a channel, or as Lua callbacks.
|
|
|
|
Example (Lua): capture buffer updates in a global `events` variable (use "print(vim.inspect(events))" to see its contents): >
|
|
events = {}
|
|
vim.api.nvim_buf_attach(0, false, {
|
|
on_lines=function(...) table.insert(events, {...}) end})
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {send_buffer} True if the initial notification should contain the
|
|
whole buffer: first notification will be
|
|
`nvim_buf_lines_event`. Else the first notification
|
|
will be `nvim_buf_changedtick_event`. Not for Lua
|
|
callbacks.
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters.
|
|
• on_lines: Lua callback invoked on change. Return `true` to detach. Args:
|
|
• the string "lines"
|
|
• buffer handle
|
|
• b:changedtick
|
|
• first line that changed (zero-indexed)
|
|
• last line that was changed
|
|
• last line in the updated range
|
|
• byte count of previous contents
|
|
• deleted_codepoints (if `utf_sizes` is true)
|
|
• deleted_codeunits (if `utf_sizes` is true)
|
|
|
|
• on_bytes: lua callback invoked on change. This
|
|
callback receives more granular information about the
|
|
change compared to on_lines. Return `true` to detach. Args:
|
|
• the string "bytes"
|
|
• buffer handle
|
|
• b:changedtick
|
|
• start row of the changed text (zero-indexed)
|
|
• start column of the changed text
|
|
• byte offset of the changed text (from the start of
|
|
the buffer)
|
|
• old end row of the changed text
|
|
• old end column of the changed text
|
|
• old end byte length of the changed text
|
|
• new end row of the changed text
|
|
• new end column of the changed text
|
|
• new end byte length of the changed text
|
|
|
|
• on_changedtick: Lua callback invoked on changedtick
|
|
increment without text change. Args:
|
|
• the string "changedtick"
|
|
• buffer handle
|
|
• b:changedtick
|
|
|
|
• on_detach: Lua callback invoked on detach. Args:
|
|
• the string "detach"
|
|
• buffer handle
|
|
|
|
• on_reload: Lua callback invoked on reload. The entire
|
|
buffer content should be considered changed. Args:
|
|
• the string "reload"
|
|
• buffer handle
|
|
|
|
• utf_sizes: include UTF-32 and UTF-16 size of the
|
|
replaced region, as args to `on_lines`.
|
|
• preview: also attach to command preview (i.e.
|
|
'inccommand') events.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
False if attach failed (invalid parameter, or buffer isn't loaded);
|
|
otherwise True. TODO: LUA_API_NO_EVAL
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_buf_detach()|
|
|
|api-buffer-updates-lua|
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_call({buffer}, {fun}) *nvim_buf_call()*
|
|
call a function with buffer as temporary current buffer
|
|
|
|
This temporarily switches current buffer to "buffer". If the current
|
|
window already shows "buffer", the window is not switched If a window
|
|
inside the current tabpage (including a float) already shows the buffer
|
|
One of these windows will be set as current window temporarily. Otherwise
|
|
a temporary scratch window (called the "autocmd window" for historical
|
|
reasons) will be used.
|
|
|
|
This is useful e.g. to call vimL functions that only work with the current
|
|
buffer/window currently, like |termopen()|.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
Lua |vim.api| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {fun} Function to call inside the buffer (currently lua callable
|
|
only)
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Return value of function. NB: will deepcopy lua values currently, use
|
|
upvalues to send lua references in and out.
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_del_keymap({buffer}, {mode}, {lhs}) *nvim_buf_del_keymap()*
|
|
Unmaps a buffer-local |mapping| for the given mode.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_del_keymap()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_del_mark({buffer}, {name}) *nvim_buf_del_mark()*
|
|
Deletes a named mark in the buffer. See |mark-motions|.
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
only deletes marks set in the buffer, if the mark is not set in the
|
|
buffer it will return false.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer to set the mark on
|
|
• {name} Mark name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
true if the mark was deleted, else false.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_buf_set_mark()|
|
|
|nvim_del_mark()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_del_var({buffer}, {name}) *nvim_buf_del_var()*
|
|
Removes a buffer-scoped (b:) variable
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_delete({buffer}, {opts}) *nvim_buf_delete()*
|
|
Deletes the buffer. See |:bwipeout|
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Keys:
|
|
• force: Force deletion and ignore unsaved changes.
|
|
• unload: Unloaded only, do not delete. See |:bunload|
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_detach({buffer}) *nvim_buf_detach()*
|
|
Deactivates buffer-update events on the channel.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
False if detach failed (because the buffer isn't loaded); otherwise
|
|
True.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_buf_attach()|
|
|
|api-lua-detach| for detaching Lua callbacks
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_get_changedtick({buffer}) *nvim_buf_get_changedtick()*
|
|
Gets a changed tick of a buffer
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
`b:changedtick` value.
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_get_keymap({buffer}, {mode}) *nvim_buf_get_keymap()*
|
|
Gets a list of buffer-local |mapping| definitions.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {mode} Mode short-name ("n", "i", "v", ...)
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Array of |maparg()|-like dictionaries describing mappings. The
|
|
"buffer" key holds the associated buffer handle.
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_get_lines()*
|
|
nvim_buf_get_lines({buffer}, {start}, {end}, {strict_indexing})
|
|
Gets a line-range from the buffer.
|
|
|
|
Indexing is zero-based, end-exclusive. Negative indices are interpreted as
|
|
length+1+index: -1 refers to the index past the end. So to get the last
|
|
element use start=-2 and end=-1.
|
|
|
|
Out-of-bounds indices are clamped to the nearest valid value, unless
|
|
`strict_indexing` is set.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {start} First line index
|
|
• {end} Last line index, exclusive
|
|
• {strict_indexing} Whether out-of-bounds should be an error.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Array of lines, or empty array for unloaded buffer.
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_get_mark({buffer}, {name}) *nvim_buf_get_mark()*
|
|
Returns a tuple (row,col) representing the position of the named mark. See
|
|
|mark-motions|.
|
|
|
|
Marks are (1,0)-indexed. |api-indexing|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {name} Mark name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
(row, col) tuple, (0, 0) if the mark is not set, or is an
|
|
uppercase/file mark set in another buffer.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_buf_set_mark()|
|
|
|nvim_buf_del_mark()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_get_name({buffer}) *nvim_buf_get_name()*
|
|
Gets the full file name for the buffer
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Buffer name
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_get_offset({buffer}, {index}) *nvim_buf_get_offset()*
|
|
Returns the byte offset of a line (0-indexed). |api-indexing|
|
|
|
|
Line 1 (index=0) has offset 0. UTF-8 bytes are counted. EOL is one byte.
|
|
'fileformat' and 'fileencoding' are ignored. The line index just after the
|
|
last line gives the total byte-count of the buffer. A final EOL byte is
|
|
counted if it would be written, see 'eol'.
|
|
|
|
Unlike |line2byte()|, throws error for out-of-bounds indexing. Returns -1
|
|
for unloaded buffer.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {index} Line index
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Integer byte offset, or -1 for unloaded buffer.
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_get_text()*
|
|
nvim_buf_get_text({buffer}, {start_row}, {start_col}, {end_row}, {end_col},
|
|
{opts})
|
|
Gets a range from the buffer.
|
|
|
|
This differs from |nvim_buf_get_lines()| in that it allows retrieving only
|
|
portions of a line.
|
|
|
|
Indexing is zero-based. Row indices are end-inclusive, and column indices
|
|
are end-exclusive.
|
|
|
|
Prefer |nvim_buf_get_lines()| when retrieving entire lines.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {start_row} First line index
|
|
• {start_col} Starting column (byte offset) on first line
|
|
• {end_row} Last line index, inclusive
|
|
• {end_col} Ending column (byte offset) on last line, exclusive
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Currently unused.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Array of lines, or empty array for unloaded buffer.
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_get_var({buffer}, {name}) *nvim_buf_get_var()*
|
|
Gets a buffer-scoped (b:) variable.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Variable value
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_is_loaded({buffer}) *nvim_buf_is_loaded()*
|
|
Checks if a buffer is valid and loaded. See |api-buffer| for more info
|
|
about unloaded buffers.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
true if the buffer is valid and loaded, false otherwise.
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_is_valid({buffer}) *nvim_buf_is_valid()*
|
|
Checks if a buffer is valid.
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
Even if a buffer is valid it may have been unloaded. See |api-buffer|
|
|
for more info about unloaded buffers.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
true if the buffer is valid, false otherwise.
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_line_count({buffer}) *nvim_buf_line_count()*
|
|
Returns the number of lines in the given buffer.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Line count, or 0 for unloaded buffer. |api-buffer|
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_set_keymap()*
|
|
nvim_buf_set_keymap({buffer}, {mode}, {lhs}, {rhs}, {*opts})
|
|
Sets a buffer-local |mapping| for the given mode.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_set_keymap()|
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_set_lines()*
|
|
nvim_buf_set_lines({buffer}, {start}, {end}, {strict_indexing}, {replacement})
|
|
Sets (replaces) a line-range in the buffer.
|
|
|
|
Indexing is zero-based, end-exclusive. Negative indices are interpreted as
|
|
length+1+index: -1 refers to the index past the end. So to change or
|
|
delete the last element use start=-2 and end=-1.
|
|
|
|
To insert lines at a given index, set `start` and `end` to the same index.
|
|
To delete a range of lines, set `replacement` to an empty array.
|
|
|
|
Out-of-bounds indices are clamped to the nearest valid value, unless
|
|
`strict_indexing` is set.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {start} First line index
|
|
• {end} Last line index, exclusive
|
|
• {strict_indexing} Whether out-of-bounds should be an error.
|
|
• {replacement} Array of lines to use as replacement
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_buf_set_text()|
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_set_mark()*
|
|
nvim_buf_set_mark({buffer}, {name}, {line}, {col}, {opts})
|
|
Sets a named mark in the given buffer, all marks are allowed
|
|
file/uppercase, visual, last change, etc. See |mark-motions|.
|
|
|
|
Marks are (1,0)-indexed. |api-indexing|
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
Passing 0 as line deletes the mark
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer to set the mark on
|
|
• {name} Mark name
|
|
• {line} Line number
|
|
• {col} Column/row number
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Reserved for future use.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
true if the mark was set, else false.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_buf_del_mark()|
|
|
|nvim_buf_get_mark()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_set_name({buffer}, {name}) *nvim_buf_set_name()*
|
|
Sets the full file name for a buffer
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {name} Buffer name
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_set_text()*
|
|
nvim_buf_set_text({buffer}, {start_row}, {start_col}, {end_row}, {end_col},
|
|
{replacement})
|
|
Sets (replaces) a range in the buffer
|
|
|
|
This is recommended over |nvim_buf_set_lines()| when only modifying parts
|
|
of a line, as extmarks will be preserved on non-modified parts of the
|
|
touched lines.
|
|
|
|
Indexing is zero-based. Row indices are end-inclusive, and column indices
|
|
are end-exclusive.
|
|
|
|
To insert text at a given `(row, column)` location, use `start_row =
|
|
end_row = row` and `start_col = end_col = col`. To delete the text in a
|
|
range, use `replacement = {}`.
|
|
|
|
Prefer |nvim_buf_set_lines()| if you are only adding or deleting entire
|
|
lines.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {start_row} First line index
|
|
• {start_col} Starting column (byte offset) on first line
|
|
• {end_row} Last line index, inclusive
|
|
• {end_col} Ending column (byte offset) on last line, exclusive
|
|
• {replacement} Array of lines to use as replacement
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_buf_set_lines()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_set_var({buffer}, {name}, {value}) *nvim_buf_set_var()*
|
|
Sets a buffer-scoped (b:) variable
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
• {value} Variable value
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Extmark Functions *api-extmark*
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_add_highlight()*
|
|
nvim_buf_add_highlight({buffer}, {ns_id}, {hl_group}, {line}, {col_start},
|
|
{col_end})
|
|
Adds a highlight to buffer.
|
|
|
|
Useful for plugins that dynamically generate highlights to a buffer (like
|
|
a semantic highlighter or linter). The function adds a single highlight to
|
|
a buffer. Unlike |matchaddpos()| highlights follow changes to line
|
|
numbering (as lines are inserted/removed above the highlighted line), like
|
|
signs and marks do.
|
|
|
|
Namespaces are used for batch deletion/updating of a set of highlights. To
|
|
create a namespace, use |nvim_create_namespace()| which returns a
|
|
namespace id. Pass it in to this function as `ns_id` to add highlights to
|
|
the namespace. All highlights in the same namespace can then be cleared
|
|
with single call to |nvim_buf_clear_namespace()|. If the highlight never
|
|
will be deleted by an API call, pass `ns_id = -1`.
|
|
|
|
As a shorthand, `ns_id = 0` can be used to create a new namespace for the
|
|
highlight, the allocated id is then returned. If `hl_group` is the empty
|
|
string no highlight is added, but a new `ns_id` is still returned. This is
|
|
supported for backwards compatibility, new code should use
|
|
|nvim_create_namespace()| to create a new empty namespace.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {ns_id} namespace to use or -1 for ungrouped highlight
|
|
• {hl_group} Name of the highlight group to use
|
|
• {line} Line to highlight (zero-indexed)
|
|
• {col_start} Start of (byte-indexed) column range to highlight
|
|
• {col_end} End of (byte-indexed) column range to highlight, or -1 to
|
|
highlight to end of line
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
The ns_id that was used
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_clear_namespace()*
|
|
nvim_buf_clear_namespace({buffer}, {ns_id}, {line_start}, {line_end})
|
|
Clears namespaced objects (highlights, extmarks, virtual text) from a
|
|
region.
|
|
|
|
Lines are 0-indexed. |api-indexing| To clear the namespace in the entire
|
|
buffer, specify line_start=0 and line_end=-1.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {ns_id} Namespace to clear, or -1 to clear all namespaces.
|
|
• {line_start} Start of range of lines to clear
|
|
• {line_end} End of range of lines to clear (exclusive) or -1 to
|
|
clear to end of buffer.
|
|
|
|
nvim_buf_del_extmark({buffer}, {ns_id}, {id}) *nvim_buf_del_extmark()*
|
|
Removes an extmark.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {ns_id} Namespace id from |nvim_create_namespace()|
|
|
• {id} Extmark id
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
true if the extmark was found, else false
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_get_extmark_by_id()*
|
|
nvim_buf_get_extmark_by_id({buffer}, {ns_id}, {id}, {opts})
|
|
Gets the position (0-indexed) of an extmark.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {ns_id} Namespace id from |nvim_create_namespace()|
|
|
• {id} Extmark id
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Keys:
|
|
• details: Whether to include the details dict
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
0-indexed (row, col) tuple or empty list () if extmark id was absent
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_get_extmarks()*
|
|
nvim_buf_get_extmarks({buffer}, {ns_id}, {start}, {end}, {opts})
|
|
Gets extmarks in "traversal order" from a |charwise| region defined by
|
|
buffer positions (inclusive, 0-indexed |api-indexing|).
|
|
|
|
Region can be given as (row,col) tuples, or valid extmark ids (whose
|
|
positions define the bounds). 0 and -1 are understood as (0,0) and (-1,-1)
|
|
respectively, thus the following are equivalent:
|
|
>
|
|
nvim_buf_get_extmarks(0, my_ns, 0, -1, {})
|
|
nvim_buf_get_extmarks(0, my_ns, [0,0], [-1,-1], {})
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
If `end` is less than `start`, traversal works backwards. (Useful with
|
|
`limit`, to get the first marks prior to a given position.)
|
|
|
|
Example:
|
|
>
|
|
local a = vim.api
|
|
local pos = a.nvim_win_get_cursor(0)
|
|
local ns = a.nvim_create_namespace('my-plugin')
|
|
-- Create new extmark at line 1, column 1.
|
|
local m1 = a.nvim_buf_set_extmark(0, ns, 0, 0, {})
|
|
-- Create new extmark at line 3, column 1.
|
|
local m2 = a.nvim_buf_set_extmark(0, ns, 0, 2, {})
|
|
-- Get extmarks only from line 3.
|
|
local ms = a.nvim_buf_get_extmarks(0, ns, {2,0}, {2,0}, {})
|
|
-- Get all marks in this buffer + namespace.
|
|
local all = a.nvim_buf_get_extmarks(0, ns, 0, -1, {})
|
|
print(vim.inspect(ms))
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {ns_id} Namespace id from |nvim_create_namespace()|
|
|
• {start} Start of range: a 0-indexed (row, col) or valid extmark id
|
|
(whose position defines the bound). |api-indexing|
|
|
• {end} End of range (inclusive): a 0-indexed (row, col) or valid
|
|
extmark id (whose position defines the bound).
|
|
|api-indexing|
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters. Keys:
|
|
• limit: Maximum number of marks to return
|
|
• details Whether to include the details dict
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
List of [extmark_id, row, col] tuples in "traversal order".
|
|
|
|
*nvim_buf_set_extmark()*
|
|
nvim_buf_set_extmark({buffer}, {ns_id}, {line}, {col}, {*opts})
|
|
Creates or updates an extmark.
|
|
|
|
By default a new extmark is created when no id is passed in, but it is
|
|
also possible to create a new mark by passing in a previously unused id or
|
|
move an existing mark by passing in its id. The caller must then keep
|
|
track of existing and unused ids itself. (Useful over RPC, to avoid
|
|
waiting for the return value.)
|
|
|
|
Using the optional arguments, it is possible to use this to highlight a
|
|
range of text, and also to associate virtual text to the mark.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {ns_id} Namespace id from |nvim_create_namespace()|
|
|
• {line} Line where to place the mark, 0-based. |api-indexing|
|
|
• {col} Column where to place the mark, 0-based. |api-indexing|
|
|
• {opts} Optional parameters.
|
|
• id : id of the extmark to edit.
|
|
• end_row : ending line of the mark, 0-based inclusive.
|
|
• end_col : ending col of the mark, 0-based exclusive.
|
|
• hl_group : name of the highlight group used to highlight
|
|
this mark.
|
|
• hl_eol : when true, for a multiline highlight covering the
|
|
EOL of a line, continue the highlight for the rest of the
|
|
screen line (just like for diff and cursorline highlight).
|
|
• virt_text : virtual text to link to this mark. A list of
|
|
[text, highlight] tuples, each representing a text chunk
|
|
with specified highlight. `highlight` element can either
|
|
be a single highlight group, or an array of multiple
|
|
highlight groups that will be stacked (highest priority
|
|
last). A highlight group can be supplied either as a
|
|
string or as an integer, the latter which can be obtained
|
|
using |nvim_get_hl_id_by_name()|.
|
|
• virt_text_pos : position of virtual text. Possible values:
|
|
• "eol": right after eol character (default)
|
|
• "overlay": display over the specified column, without
|
|
shifting the underlying text.
|
|
• "right_align": display right aligned in the window.
|
|
|
|
• virt_text_win_col : position the virtual text at a fixed
|
|
window column (starting from the first text column)
|
|
• virt_text_hide : hide the virtual text when the background
|
|
text is selected or hidden due to horizontal scroll
|
|
'nowrap'
|
|
• hl_mode : control how highlights are combined with the
|
|
highlights of the text. Currently only affects virt_text
|
|
highlights, but might affect `hl_group` in later versions.
|
|
• "replace": only show the virt_text color. This is the
|
|
default
|
|
• "combine": combine with background text color
|
|
• "blend": blend with background text color.
|
|
|
|
• virt_lines : virtual lines to add next to this mark This
|
|
should be an array over lines, where each line in turn is
|
|
an array over [text, highlight] tuples. In general, buffer
|
|
and window options do not affect the display of the text.
|
|
In particular 'wrap' and 'linebreak' options do not take
|
|
effect, so the number of extra screen lines will always
|
|
match the size of the array. However the 'tabstop' buffer
|
|
option is still used for hard tabs. By default lines are
|
|
placed below the buffer line containing the mark.
|
|
• virt_lines_above: place virtual lines above instead.
|
|
• virt_lines_leftcol: Place extmarks in the leftmost column
|
|
of the window, bypassing sign and number columns.
|
|
• ephemeral : for use with |nvim_set_decoration_provider()|
|
|
callbacks. The mark will only be used for the current
|
|
redraw cycle, and not be permantently stored in the
|
|
buffer.
|
|
• right_gravity : boolean that indicates the direction the
|
|
extmark will be shifted in when new text is inserted (true
|
|
for right, false for left). defaults to true.
|
|
• end_right_gravity : boolean that indicates the direction
|
|
the extmark end position (if it exists) will be shifted in
|
|
when new text is inserted (true for right, false for
|
|
left). Defaults to false.
|
|
• priority: a priority value for the highlight group or sign
|
|
attribute. For example treesitter highlighting uses a
|
|
value of 100.
|
|
• strict: boolean that indicates extmark should not be
|
|
placed if the line or column value is past the end of the
|
|
buffer or end of the line respectively. Defaults to true.
|
|
• sign_text: string of length 1-2 used to display in the
|
|
sign column. Note: ranges are unsupported and decorations
|
|
are only applied to start_row
|
|
• sign_hl_group: name of the highlight group used to
|
|
highlight the sign column text. Note: ranges are
|
|
unsupported and decorations are only applied to start_row
|
|
• number_hl_group: name of the highlight group used to
|
|
highlight the number column. Note: ranges are unsupported
|
|
and decorations are only applied to start_row
|
|
• line_hl_group: name of the highlight group used to
|
|
highlight the whole line. Note: ranges are unsupported and
|
|
decorations are only applied to start_row
|
|
• cursorline_hl_group: name of the highlight group used to
|
|
highlight the line when the cursor is on the same line as
|
|
the mark and 'cursorline' is enabled. Note: ranges are
|
|
unsupported and decorations are only applied to start_row
|
|
• conceal: string which should be either empty or a single
|
|
character. Enable concealing similar to |:syn-conceal|.
|
|
When a character is supplied it is used as |:syn-cchar|.
|
|
"hl_group" is used as highlight for the cchar if provided,
|
|
otherwise it defaults to |hl-Conceal|.
|
|
• spell: boolean indicating that spell checking should be
|
|
performed within this extmark
|
|
• ui_watched: boolean that indicates the mark should be
|
|
drawn by a UI. When set, the UI will receive win_extmark
|
|
events. Note: the mark is positioned by virt_text
|
|
attributes. Can be used together with virt_text.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Id of the created/updated extmark
|
|
|
|
nvim_create_namespace({name}) *nvim_create_namespace()*
|
|
Creates a new *namespace* or gets an existing one.
|
|
|
|
Namespaces are used for buffer highlights and virtual text, see
|
|
|nvim_buf_add_highlight()| and |nvim_buf_set_extmark()|.
|
|
|
|
Namespaces can be named or anonymous. If `name` matches an existing
|
|
namespace, the associated id is returned. If `name` is an empty string a
|
|
new, anonymous namespace is created.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} Namespace name or empty string
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Namespace id
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_namespaces() *nvim_get_namespaces()*
|
|
Gets existing, non-anonymous namespaces.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
dict that maps from names to namespace ids.
|
|
|
|
*nvim_set_decoration_provider()*
|
|
nvim_set_decoration_provider({ns_id}, {*opts})
|
|
Set or change decoration provider for a namespace
|
|
|
|
This is a very general purpose interface for having lua callbacks being
|
|
triggered during the redraw code.
|
|
|
|
The expected usage is to set extmarks for the currently redrawn buffer.
|
|
|nvim_buf_set_extmark()| can be called to add marks on a per-window or
|
|
per-lines basis. Use the `ephemeral` key to only use the mark for the
|
|
current screen redraw (the callback will be called again for the next
|
|
redraw ).
|
|
|
|
Note: this function should not be called often. Rather, the callbacks
|
|
themselves can be used to throttle unneeded callbacks. the `on_start`
|
|
callback can return `false` to disable the provider until the next redraw.
|
|
Similarly, return `false` in `on_win` will skip the `on_lines` calls for
|
|
that window (but any extmarks set in `on_win` will still be used). A
|
|
plugin managing multiple sources of decoration should ideally only set one
|
|
provider, and merge the sources internally. You can use multiple `ns_id`
|
|
for the extmarks set/modified inside the callback anyway.
|
|
|
|
Note: doing anything other than setting extmarks is considered
|
|
experimental. Doing things like changing options are not expliticly
|
|
forbidden, but is likely to have unexpected consequences (such as 100% CPU
|
|
consumption). doing `vim.rpcnotify` should be OK, but `vim.rpcrequest` is
|
|
quite dubious for the moment.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
Lua |vim.api| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {ns_id} Namespace id from |nvim_create_namespace()|
|
|
• {opts} Table of callbacks:
|
|
• on_start: called first on each screen redraw ["start",
|
|
tick]
|
|
• on_buf: called for each buffer being redrawn (before window
|
|
callbacks) ["buf", bufnr, tick]
|
|
• on_win: called when starting to redraw a specific window.
|
|
["win", winid, bufnr, topline, botline_guess]
|
|
• on_line: called for each buffer line being redrawn. (The
|
|
interaction with fold lines is subject to change) ["win",
|
|
winid, bufnr, row]
|
|
• on_end: called at the end of a redraw cycle ["end", tick]
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Window Functions *api-window*
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_call({window}, {fun}) *nvim_win_call()*
|
|
Calls a function with window as temporary current window.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
Lua |vim.api| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {fun} Function to call inside the window (currently lua callable
|
|
only)
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Return value of function. NB: will deepcopy lua values currently, use
|
|
upvalues to send lua references in and out.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|win_execute()|
|
|
|nvim_buf_call()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_close({window}, {force}) *nvim_win_close()*
|
|
Closes the window (like |:close| with a |window-ID|).
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {force} Behave like `:close!` The last window of a buffer with
|
|
unwritten changes can be closed. The buffer will become
|
|
hidden, even if 'hidden' is not set.
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_del_var({window}, {name}) *nvim_win_del_var()*
|
|
Removes a window-scoped (w:) variable
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_get_buf({window}) *nvim_win_get_buf()*
|
|
Gets the current buffer in a window
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Buffer handle
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_get_cursor({window}) *nvim_win_get_cursor()*
|
|
Gets the (1,0)-indexed, buffer-relative cursor position for a given window
|
|
(different windows showing the same buffer have independent cursor
|
|
positions). |api-indexing|
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
(row, col) tuple
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_get_height({window}) *nvim_win_get_height()*
|
|
Gets the window height
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Height as a count of rows
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_get_number({window}) *nvim_win_get_number()*
|
|
Gets the window number
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Window number
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_get_position({window}) *nvim_win_get_position()*
|
|
Gets the window position in display cells. First position is zero.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
(row, col) tuple with the window position
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_get_tabpage({window}) *nvim_win_get_tabpage()*
|
|
Gets the window tabpage
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Tabpage that contains the window
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_get_var({window}, {name}) *nvim_win_get_var()*
|
|
Gets a window-scoped (w:) variable
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Variable value
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_get_width({window}) *nvim_win_get_width()*
|
|
Gets the window width
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Width as a count of columns
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_hide({window}) *nvim_win_hide()*
|
|
Closes the window and hide the buffer it contains (like |:hide| with a
|
|
|window-ID|).
|
|
|
|
Like |:hide| the buffer becomes hidden unless another window is editing
|
|
it, or 'bufhidden' is `unload`, `delete` or `wipe` as opposed to |:close|
|
|
or |nvim_win_close()|, which will close the buffer.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_is_valid({window}) *nvim_win_is_valid()*
|
|
Checks if a window is valid
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
true if the window is valid, false otherwise
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_set_buf({window}, {buffer}) *nvim_win_set_buf()*
|
|
Sets the current buffer in a window, without side effects
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer handle
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_set_cursor({window}, {pos}) *nvim_win_set_cursor()*
|
|
Sets the (1,0)-indexed cursor position in the window. |api-indexing| This
|
|
scrolls the window even if it is not the current one.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {pos} (row, col) tuple representing the new position
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_set_height({window}, {height}) *nvim_win_set_height()*
|
|
Sets the window height.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {height} Height as a count of rows
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_set_hl_ns({window}, {ns_id}) *nvim_win_set_hl_ns()*
|
|
Set highlight namespace for a window. This will use highlights defined in
|
|
this namespace, but fall back to global highlights (ns=0) when missing.
|
|
|
|
This takes precedence over the 'winhighlight' option.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {ns_id} the namespace to use
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_set_var({window}, {name}, {value}) *nvim_win_set_var()*
|
|
Sets a window-scoped (w:) variable
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
• {value} Variable value
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_set_width({window}, {width}) *nvim_win_set_width()*
|
|
Sets the window width. This will only succeed if the screen is split
|
|
vertically.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {width} Width as a count of columns
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Win_Config Functions *api-win_config*
|
|
|
|
nvim_open_win({buffer}, {enter}, {*config}) *nvim_open_win()*
|
|
Open a new window.
|
|
|
|
Currently this is used to open floating and external windows. Floats are
|
|
windows that are drawn above the split layout, at some anchor position in
|
|
some other window. Floats can be drawn internally or by external GUI with
|
|
the |ui-multigrid| extension. External windows are only supported with
|
|
multigrid GUIs, and are displayed as separate top-level windows.
|
|
|
|
For a general overview of floats, see |api-floatwin|.
|
|
|
|
Exactly one of `external` and `relative` must be specified. The `width`
|
|
and `height` of the new window must be specified.
|
|
|
|
With relative=editor (row=0,col=0) refers to the top-left corner of the
|
|
screen-grid and (row=Lines-1,col=Columns-1) refers to the bottom-right
|
|
corner. Fractional values are allowed, but the builtin implementation
|
|
(used by non-multigrid UIs) will always round down to nearest integer.
|
|
|
|
Out-of-bounds values, and configurations that make the float not fit
|
|
inside the main editor, are allowed. The builtin implementation truncates
|
|
values so floats are fully within the main screen grid. External GUIs
|
|
could let floats hover outside of the main window like a tooltip, but this
|
|
should not be used to specify arbitrary WM screen positions.
|
|
|
|
Example (Lua): window-relative float >
|
|
vim.api.nvim_open_win(0, false,
|
|
{relative='win', row=3, col=3, width=12, height=3})
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Example (Lua): buffer-relative float (travels as buffer is scrolled) >
|
|
vim.api.nvim_open_win(0, false,
|
|
{relative='win', width=12, height=3, bufpos={100,10}})
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
not allowed when |textlock| is active
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {buffer} Buffer to display, or 0 for current buffer
|
|
• {enter} Enter the window (make it the current window)
|
|
• {config} Map defining the window configuration. Keys:
|
|
• relative: Sets the window layout to "floating", placed at
|
|
(row,col) coordinates relative to:
|
|
• "editor" The global editor grid
|
|
• "win" Window given by the `win` field, or current
|
|
window.
|
|
• "cursor" Cursor position in current window.
|
|
|
|
• win: |window-ID| for relative="win".
|
|
• anchor: Decides which corner of the float to place at
|
|
(row,col):
|
|
• "NW" northwest (default)
|
|
• "NE" northeast
|
|
• "SW" southwest
|
|
• "SE" southeast
|
|
|
|
• width: Window width (in character cells). Minimum of 1.
|
|
• height: Window height (in character cells). Minimum of 1.
|
|
• bufpos: Places float relative to buffer text (only when
|
|
relative="win"). Takes a tuple of zero-indexed [line,
|
|
column]. `row` and `col` if given are applied relative to this position, else they
|
|
default to:
|
|
• `row=1` and `col=0` if `anchor` is "NW" or "NE"
|
|
• `row=0` and `col=0` if `anchor` is "SW" or "SE" (thus
|
|
like a tooltip near the buffer text).
|
|
|
|
• row: Row position in units of "screen cell height", may be
|
|
fractional.
|
|
• col: Column position in units of "screen cell width", may
|
|
be fractional.
|
|
• focusable: Enable focus by user actions (wincmds, mouse
|
|
events). Defaults to true. Non-focusable windows can be
|
|
entered by |nvim_set_current_win()|.
|
|
• external: GUI should display the window as an external
|
|
top-level window. Currently accepts no other positioning
|
|
configuration together with this.
|
|
• zindex: Stacking order. floats with higher `zindex` go on top on floats with lower indices. Must be larger
|
|
than zero. The following screen elements have hard-coded
|
|
z-indices:
|
|
• 100: insert completion popupmenu
|
|
• 200: message scrollback
|
|
• 250: cmdline completion popupmenu (when
|
|
wildoptions+=pum) The default value for floats are 50.
|
|
In general, values below 100 are recommended, unless
|
|
there is a good reason to overshadow builtin elements.
|
|
|
|
• style: Configure the appearance of the window. Currently
|
|
only takes one non-empty value:
|
|
• "minimal" Nvim will display the window with many UI
|
|
options disabled. This is useful when displaying a
|
|
temporary float where the text should not be edited.
|
|
Disables 'number', 'relativenumber', 'cursorline',
|
|
'cursorcolumn', 'foldcolumn', 'spell' and 'list'
|
|
options. 'signcolumn' is changed to `auto` and
|
|
'colorcolumn' is cleared. The end-of-buffer region is
|
|
hidden by setting `eob` flag of 'fillchars' to a space
|
|
char, and clearing the |hl-EndOfBuffer| region in
|
|
'winhighlight'.
|
|
|
|
• border: Style of (optional) window border. This can either
|
|
be a string or an array. The string values are
|
|
• "none": No border (default).
|
|
• "single": A single line box.
|
|
• "double": A double line box.
|
|
• "rounded": Like "single", but with rounded corners ("╭"
|
|
etc.).
|
|
• "solid": Adds padding by a single whitespace cell.
|
|
• "shadow": A drop shadow effect by blending with the
|
|
background.
|
|
• If it is an array, it should have a length of eight or
|
|
any divisor of eight. The array will specifify the eight
|
|
chars building up the border in a clockwise fashion
|
|
starting with the top-left corner. As an example, the
|
|
double box style could be specified as [ "╔", "═" ,"╗",
|
|
"║", "╝", "═", "╚", "║" ]. If the number of chars are
|
|
less than eight, they will be repeated. Thus an ASCII
|
|
border could be specified as [ "/", "-", "\\", "|" ], or
|
|
all chars the same as [ "x" ]. An empty string can be
|
|
used to turn off a specific border, for instance, [ "",
|
|
"", "", ">", "", "", "", "<" ] will only make vertical
|
|
borders but not horizontal ones. By default,
|
|
`FloatBorder` highlight is used, which links to
|
|
`WinSeparator` when not defined. It could also be
|
|
specified by character: [ {"+", "MyCorner"}, {"x",
|
|
"MyBorder"} ].
|
|
|
|
• title: Title (optional) in window border, String or list.
|
|
List is [text, highlight] tuples. if is string the default
|
|
highlight group is `FloatTitle`.
|
|
• title_pos: Title position must set with title option.
|
|
value can be of `left` `center` `right` default is left.
|
|
• noautocmd: If true then no buffer-related autocommand
|
|
events such as |BufEnter|, |BufLeave| or |BufWinEnter| may
|
|
fire from calling this function.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Window handle, or 0 on error
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_get_config({window}) *nvim_win_get_config()*
|
|
Gets window configuration.
|
|
|
|
The returned value may be given to |nvim_open_win()|.
|
|
|
|
`relative` is empty for normal windows.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Map defining the window configuration, see |nvim_open_win()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_win_set_config({window}, {*config}) *nvim_win_set_config()*
|
|
Configures window layout. Currently only for floating and external windows
|
|
(including changing a split window to those layouts).
|
|
|
|
When reconfiguring a floating window, absent option keys will not be
|
|
changed. `row`/`col` and `relative` must be reconfigured together.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {window} Window handle, or 0 for current window
|
|
• {config} Map defining the window configuration, see |nvim_open_win()|
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_open_win()|
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Tabpage Functions *api-tabpage*
|
|
|
|
nvim_tabpage_del_var({tabpage}, {name}) *nvim_tabpage_del_var()*
|
|
Removes a tab-scoped (t:) variable
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {tabpage} Tabpage handle, or 0 for current tabpage
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
|
|
nvim_tabpage_get_number({tabpage}) *nvim_tabpage_get_number()*
|
|
Gets the tabpage number
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {tabpage} Tabpage handle, or 0 for current tabpage
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Tabpage number
|
|
|
|
nvim_tabpage_get_var({tabpage}, {name}) *nvim_tabpage_get_var()*
|
|
Gets a tab-scoped (t:) variable
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {tabpage} Tabpage handle, or 0 for current tabpage
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Variable value
|
|
|
|
nvim_tabpage_get_win({tabpage}) *nvim_tabpage_get_win()*
|
|
Gets the current window in a tabpage
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {tabpage} Tabpage handle, or 0 for current tabpage
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Window handle
|
|
|
|
nvim_tabpage_is_valid({tabpage}) *nvim_tabpage_is_valid()*
|
|
Checks if a tabpage is valid
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {tabpage} Tabpage handle, or 0 for current tabpage
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
true if the tabpage is valid, false otherwise
|
|
|
|
nvim_tabpage_list_wins({tabpage}) *nvim_tabpage_list_wins()*
|
|
Gets the windows in a tabpage
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {tabpage} Tabpage handle, or 0 for current tabpage
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
List of windows in `tabpage`
|
|
|
|
*nvim_tabpage_set_var()*
|
|
nvim_tabpage_set_var({tabpage}, {name}, {value})
|
|
Sets a tab-scoped (t:) variable
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {tabpage} Tabpage handle, or 0 for current tabpage
|
|
• {name} Variable name
|
|
• {value} Variable value
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
Autocmd Functions *api-autocmd*
|
|
|
|
nvim_clear_autocmds({*opts}) *nvim_clear_autocmds()*
|
|
Clear all autocommands that match the corresponding {opts}. To delete a
|
|
particular autocmd, see |nvim_del_autocmd()|.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {opts} Parameters
|
|
• event: (string|table) Examples:
|
|
• event: "pat1"
|
|
• event: { "pat1" }
|
|
• event: { "pat1", "pat2", "pat3" }
|
|
|
|
• pattern: (string|table)
|
|
• pattern or patterns to match exactly.
|
|
• For example, if you have `*.py` as that pattern for the
|
|
autocmd, you must pass `*.py` exactly to clear it.
|
|
`test.py` will not match the pattern.
|
|
|
|
• defaults to clearing all patterns.
|
|
• NOTE: Cannot be used with {buffer}
|
|
|
|
• buffer: (bufnr)
|
|
• clear only |autocmd-buflocal| autocommands.
|
|
• NOTE: Cannot be used with {pattern}
|
|
|
|
• group: (string|int) The augroup name or id.
|
|
• NOTE: If not passed, will only delete autocmds not in any group.
|
|
|
|
nvim_create_augroup({name}, {*opts}) *nvim_create_augroup()*
|
|
Create or get an autocommand group |autocmd-groups|.
|
|
|
|
To get an existing group id, do: >
|
|
local id = vim.api.nvim_create_augroup("MyGroup", {
|
|
clear = false
|
|
})
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} String: The name of the group
|
|
• {opts} Dictionary Parameters
|
|
• clear (bool) optional: defaults to true. Clear existing
|
|
commands if the group already exists |autocmd-groups|.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Integer id of the created group.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|autocmd-groups|
|
|
|
|
nvim_create_autocmd({event}, {*opts}) *nvim_create_autocmd()*
|
|
Create an |autocommand|
|
|
|
|
The API allows for two (mutually exclusive) types of actions to be
|
|
executed when the autocommand triggers: a callback function (Lua or
|
|
Vimscript), or a command (like regular autocommands).
|
|
|
|
Example using callback: >
|
|
-- Lua function
|
|
local myluafun = function() print("This buffer enters") end
|
|
|
|
-- Vimscript function name (as a string)
|
|
local myvimfun = "g:MyVimFunction"
|
|
|
|
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd({"BufEnter", "BufWinEnter"}, {
|
|
pattern = {"*.c", "*.h"},
|
|
callback = myluafun, -- Or myvimfun
|
|
})
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Lua functions receive a table with information about the autocmd event as
|
|
an argument. To use a function which itself accepts another (optional)
|
|
parameter, wrap the function in a lambda:
|
|
>
|
|
-- Lua function with an optional parameter.
|
|
-- The autocmd callback would pass a table as argument but this
|
|
-- function expects number|nil
|
|
local myluafun = function(bufnr) bufnr = bufnr or vim.api.nvim_get_current_buf() end
|
|
|
|
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd({"BufEnter", "BufWinEnter"}, {
|
|
pattern = {"*.c", "*.h"},
|
|
callback = function() myluafun() end,
|
|
})
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Example using command: >
|
|
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd({"BufEnter", "BufWinEnter"}, {
|
|
pattern = {"*.c", "*.h"},
|
|
command = "echo 'Entering a C or C++ file'",
|
|
})
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Example values for pattern: >
|
|
pattern = "*.py"
|
|
pattern = { "*.py", "*.pyi" }
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Note: The `pattern` is passed to callbacks and commands as a literal string; environment
|
|
variables like `$HOME` and `~` are not automatically expanded as they are by |:autocmd|. Instead,
|
|
|expand()| such variables explicitly: >
|
|
pattern = vim.fn.expand("~") .. "/some/path/*.py"
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Example values for event: >
|
|
"BufWritePre"
|
|
{"CursorHold", "BufWritePre", "BufWritePost"}
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {event} (string|array) The event or events to register this
|
|
autocommand
|
|
• {opts} Dictionary of autocommand options:
|
|
• group (string|integer) optional: the autocommand group name
|
|
or id to match against.
|
|
• pattern (string|array) optional: pattern or patterns to
|
|
match literally against |autocmd-pattern|.
|
|
• buffer (integer) optional: buffer number for buffer local
|
|
autocommands |autocmd-buflocal|. Cannot be used with
|
|
{pattern}.
|
|
• desc (string) optional: description of the autocommand.
|
|
• callback (function|string) optional: if a string, the name
|
|
of a Vimscript function to call when this autocommand is
|
|
triggered. Otherwise, a Lua function which is called when
|
|
this autocommand is triggered. Cannot be used with
|
|
{command}. Lua callbacks can return true to delete the
|
|
autocommand; in addition, they accept a single table
|
|
argument with the following keys:
|
|
• id: (number) the autocommand id
|
|
• event: (string) the name of the event that triggered the
|
|
autocommand |autocmd-events|
|
|
• group: (number|nil) the autocommand group id, if it
|
|
exists
|
|
• match: (string) the expanded value of |<amatch>|
|
|
• buf: (number) the expanded value of |<abuf>|
|
|
• file: (string) the expanded value of |<afile>|
|
|
• data: (any) arbitrary data passed to
|
|
|nvim_exec_autocmds()|
|
|
|
|
• command (string) optional: Vim command to execute on event.
|
|
Cannot be used with {callback}
|
|
• once (boolean) optional: defaults to false. Run the
|
|
autocommand only once |autocmd-once|.
|
|
• nested (boolean) optional: defaults to false. Run nested
|
|
autocommands |autocmd-nested|.
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Integer id of the created autocommand.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|autocommand|
|
|
|nvim_del_autocmd()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_del_augroup_by_id({id}) *nvim_del_augroup_by_id()*
|
|
Delete an autocommand group by id.
|
|
|
|
To get a group id one can use |nvim_get_autocmds()|.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: behavior differs from |:augroup-delete|. When deleting a group,
|
|
autocommands contained in this group will also be deleted and cleared.
|
|
This group will no longer exist.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {id} Integer The id of the group.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_del_augroup_by_name()|
|
|
|nvim_create_augroup()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_del_augroup_by_name({name}) *nvim_del_augroup_by_name()*
|
|
Delete an autocommand group by name.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: behavior differs from |:augroup-delete|. When deleting a group,
|
|
autocommands contained in this group will also be deleted and cleared.
|
|
This group will no longer exist.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {name} String The name of the group.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|autocmd-groups|
|
|
|
|
nvim_del_autocmd({id}) *nvim_del_autocmd()*
|
|
Delete an autocommand by id.
|
|
|
|
NOTE: Only autocommands created via the API have an id.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {id} Integer The id returned by nvim_create_autocmd
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|nvim_create_autocmd()|
|
|
|
|
nvim_exec_autocmds({event}, {*opts}) *nvim_exec_autocmds()*
|
|
Execute all autocommands for {event} that match the corresponding {opts}
|
|
|autocmd-execute|.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {event} (String|Array) The event or events to execute
|
|
• {opts} Dictionary of autocommand options:
|
|
• group (string|integer) optional: the autocommand group name
|
|
or id to match against. |autocmd-groups|.
|
|
• pattern (string|array) optional: defaults to "*"
|
|
|autocmd-pattern|. Cannot be used with {buffer}.
|
|
• buffer (integer) optional: buffer number
|
|
|autocmd-buflocal|. Cannot be used with {pattern}.
|
|
• modeline (bool) optional: defaults to true. Process the
|
|
modeline after the autocommands |<nomodeline>|.
|
|
• data (any): arbitrary data to send to the autocommand
|
|
callback. See |nvim_create_autocmd()| for details.
|
|
|
|
See also: ~
|
|
|:doautocmd|
|
|
|
|
nvim_get_autocmds({*opts}) *nvim_get_autocmds()*
|
|
Get all autocommands that match the corresponding {opts}.
|
|
|
|
These examples will get autocommands matching ALL the given criteria: >
|
|
-- Matches all criteria
|
|
autocommands = vim.api.nvim_get_autocmds({
|
|
group = "MyGroup",
|
|
event = {"BufEnter", "BufWinEnter"},
|
|
pattern = {"*.c", "*.h"}
|
|
})
|
|
|
|
-- All commands from one group
|
|
autocommands = vim.api.nvim_get_autocmds({
|
|
group = "MyGroup",
|
|
})
|
|
<
|
|
|
|
NOTE: When multiple patterns or events are provided, it will find all the
|
|
autocommands that match any combination of them.
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {opts} Dictionary with at least one of the following:
|
|
• group (string|integer): the autocommand group name or id to
|
|
match against.
|
|
• event (string|array): event or events to match against
|
|
|autocmd-events|.
|
|
• pattern (string|array): pattern or patterns to match against
|
|
|autocmd-pattern|. Cannot be used with {buffer}
|
|
• buffer: Buffer number or list of buffer numbers for buffer
|
|
local autocommands |autocmd-buflocal|. Cannot be used with
|
|
{pattern}
|
|
|
|
Return: ~
|
|
Array of autocommands matching the criteria, with each item containing
|
|
the following fields:
|
|
• id (number): the autocommand id (only when defined with the API).
|
|
• group (integer): the autocommand group id.
|
|
• group_name (string): the autocommand group name.
|
|
• desc (string): the autocommand description.
|
|
• event (string): the autocommand event.
|
|
• command (string): the autocommand command. Note: this will be empty
|
|
if a callback is set.
|
|
• callback (function|string|nil): Lua function or name of a Vim script
|
|
function which is executed when this autocommand is triggered.
|
|
• once (boolean): whether the autocommand is only run once.
|
|
• pattern (string): the autocommand pattern. If the autocommand is
|
|
buffer local |autocmd-buffer-local|:
|
|
• buflocal (boolean): true if the autocommand is buffer local.
|
|
• buffer (number): the buffer number.
|
|
|
|
|
|
==============================================================================
|
|
UI Functions *api-ui*
|
|
|
|
nvim_ui_attach({width}, {height}, {options}) *nvim_ui_attach()*
|
|
Activates UI events on the channel.
|
|
|
|
Entry point of all UI clients. Allows |--embed| to continue startup.
|
|
Implies that the client is ready to show the UI. Adds the client to the
|
|
list of UIs. |nvim_list_uis()|
|
|
|
|
Note:
|
|
If multiple UI clients are attached, the global screen dimensions
|
|
degrade to the smallest client. E.g. if client A requests 80x40 but
|
|
client B requests 200x100, the global screen has size 80x40.
|
|
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Attributes: ~
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|RPC| only
|
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Parameters: ~
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• {width} Requested screen columns
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|
• {height} Requested screen rows
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|
• {options} |ui-option| map
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nvim_ui_detach() *nvim_ui_detach()*
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Deactivates UI events on the channel.
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|
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Removes the client from the list of UIs. |nvim_list_uis()|
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|
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Attributes: ~
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|RPC| only
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|
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|
*nvim_ui_pum_set_bounds()*
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nvim_ui_pum_set_bounds({width}, {height}, {row}, {col})
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Tells Nvim the geometry of the popupmenu, to align floating windows with
|
|
an external popup menu.
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|
|
|
Note that this method is not to be confused with
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|
|nvim_ui_pum_set_height()|, which sets the number of visible items in the
|
|
popup menu, while this function sets the bounding box of the popup menu,
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|
including visual elements such as borders and sliders. Floats need not use
|
|
the same font size, nor be anchored to exact grid corners, so one can set
|
|
floating-point numbers to the popup menu geometry.
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|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {width} Popupmenu width.
|
|
• {height} Popupmenu height.
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|
• {row} Popupmenu row.
|
|
• {col} Popupmenu height.
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|
|
|
nvim_ui_pum_set_height({height}) *nvim_ui_pum_set_height()*
|
|
Tells Nvim the number of elements displaying in the popupmenu, to decide
|
|
<PageUp> and <PageDown> movement.
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|
|
|
Attributes: ~
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|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {height} Popupmenu height, must be greater than zero.
|
|
|
|
nvim_ui_set_option({name}, {value}) *nvim_ui_set_option()*
|
|
TODO: Documentation
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
nvim_ui_try_resize({width}, {height}) *nvim_ui_try_resize()*
|
|
TODO: Documentation
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
*nvim_ui_try_resize_grid()*
|
|
nvim_ui_try_resize_grid({grid}, {width}, {height})
|
|
Tell Nvim to resize a grid. Triggers a grid_resize event with the
|
|
requested grid size or the maximum size if it exceeds size limits.
|
|
|
|
On invalid grid handle, fails with error.
|
|
|
|
Attributes: ~
|
|
|RPC| only
|
|
|
|
Parameters: ~
|
|
• {grid} The handle of the grid to be changed.
|
|
• {width} The new requested width.
|
|
• {height} The new requested height.
|
|
|
|
vim:tw=78:ts=8:sw=4:sts=4:et:ft=help:norl:
|