[vim] Fix broken color scheme

I learned once again that true color schemes don't work in macOS's Terminal.app.
I also learned that the default color scheme in neovim is very plain and doesn't
provide a lot of variation for treesitter syntax elements. So, choose a different
built-in color scheme as the default.

I also learned about the ColorScheme autocmd event, which is fired after a color
scheme is applied. Convert the (janky) reloadColorscheme function to a set of
autocommands that trigger based on the color scheme name.

Along the way, add some explicit configuration for treesitter: enable highlighting,
indentation, and make sure some of my common languages have plugins installed.
Also link the "objcpp" filetype to both "objc" and "cpp" treesitter plugins.

Lastly, make some updates to the git gutter color configuration. Create some
autocommands that are applied after the plugin is loaded. For the gutter, use
color 233 from the 256 color palette, which is a very dark gray.
This commit is contained in:
Eryn Wells 2024-09-19 13:45:02 -07:00
parent 7d26910371
commit 383fd5ceb9
4 changed files with 81 additions and 56 deletions

View file

@ -3,8 +3,25 @@
-- Ensure there's always a gutter column so there's no stutter when changes cause it to appear.
vim.wo.signcolumn = "yes"
vim.cmd [[
highlight GitGutterAdd ctermfg=Green ctermbg=0
highlight GitGutterChange ctermfg=DarkBlue ctermbg=0
highlight GitGutterDelete ctermfg=Red ctermbg=0
]]
local gitgutter_colorscheme_group = vim.api.nvim_create_augroup("GitGutterColorSchemeOverrides", { clear = true })
local function update_gitgutter_colors()
vim.cmd [[
hi! SignColumn ctermbg=233
hi! GitGutterAdd ctermbg=233
hi! GitGutterRemove ctermbg=233
hi! GitGutterChange ctermbg=233
hi! GitGutterChangeDelete ctermbg=233
]]
end
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("User", {
pattern = "GitGutter",
callback = update_gitgutter_colors,
group = gitgutter_colorscheme_group,
})
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("ColorScheme", {
callback = update_gitgutter_colors,
group = gitgutter_colorscheme_group,
})

View file

@ -61,13 +61,12 @@ vim.cmd [[
]]
require 'autocommands'
require 'colors'
require 'configuration'
require 'diagnostics'
require 'treesitter'
require 'lsp'
local colors = require 'colors'
colors.init()
local keys = require 'keys'
keys.init_key_opts()
keys.init_window_key_mappings()

View file

@ -1,58 +1,51 @@
-- Eryn Wells <eryn@erynwells.me>
local function reloadColorscheme(colorschemeName)
if colorschemeName == nil then
-- Allow using GUI style colors (#RRGGBB hex codes) in color terminals if we
-- know it can do it. This is required for most modern color themes. Apple's
-- Terminal.app doesn't have True Color support though, so make sure it's
-- off for that.
vim.g.termguicolors = not vim.env.TERM_PROGRAM == "Apple_Terminal"
local colorscheme_group = vim.api.nvim_create_augroup("ColorSchemeOverrides", { clear = true })
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("ColorScheme", {
callback = function()
vim.cmd [[
highlight clear
hi! ColorColumn cterm=NONE ctermbg=233
hi! CursorColumn cterm=NONE ctermbg=233
hi! CursorLine cterm=NONE ctermbg=233
hi! CursorLineNr cterm=bold ctermfg=White ctermbg=233
hi! LineNr ctermfg=DarkGray ctermbg=233
]]
else
vim.cmd {
cmd = "colorscheme",
args = {colorschemeName},
}
end
end,
group = colorscheme_group,
})
-- Make some bespoke adjustments for my cursor and line length highlights
vim.cmd [[
highlight ColorColumn cterm=NONE ctermbg=Black
highlight CursorColumn cterm=NONE ctermbg=Black
highlight CursorLine cterm=NONE ctermbg=Black
highlight CursorLineNr cterm=bold ctermfg=White ctermbg=Black
highlight LineNr ctermfg=DarkGray
]]
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("ColorScheme", {
pattern = "default",
callback = function()
vim.cmd [[ hi! NormalFloat ctermfg=8 ]]
end,
group = colorscheme_group,
})
-- Allow using GUI style colors (#RRGGBB hex codes) in color terminals if we
-- know it can do it. This is required for most modern color themes. Apple's
-- Terminal.app doesn't have True Color support though, so make sure it's
-- off for that.
vim.g.termguicolors = not vim.env.TERM_PROGRAM == "Apple_Terminal"
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("ColorScheme", {
pattern = "dracula",
callback = function()
vim.cmd [[ highlight CursorLineNr guibg=#44475a ]]
end,
group = colorscheme_group,
})
local themeName = vim.g.colors_name
if themeName == nil then
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("ColorScheme", {
pattern = "witchhazel",
callback = function()
vim.cmd [[
highlight! NormalFloat ctermbg=8
hi! default link LineNr CursorLineNr
hi! default link CursorLineNr CursorLine
]]
elseif themeName == "witchhazel" then
vim.cmd [[
highlight! default link LineNr CursorLineNr
highlight! default link CursorLineNr CursorLine
]]
elseif themeName == "dracula" then
vim.cmd [[
highlight CursorLineNr guibg=#44475a
]]
end
end
end,
group = colorscheme_group,
})
local function init()
if vim.env.TERM_PROGRAM == "Apple_Terminal" then
reloadColorscheme(nil)
else
reloadColorscheme("dracula")
end
end
return {
init = init,
reloadColorscheme = reloadColorscheme
}
vim.cmd [[ color zaibatsu ]]

View file

@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
-- Treesitter configuration
-- Eryn Wells <eryn@erynwells.me>
local treesitter = require 'nvim-treesitter.configs'
-- For some reason the Lua linter complains about missing fields here even
-- though they're not requried. So, ignore the error.
---@diagnostic disable:missing-fields
treesitter.setup {
highlight = { enable = true },
indent = { enable = true },
ensure_installed = { "c", "cpp", "javascript", "lua", "objc", "python", "rust", "vim" },
auto_install = true,
}
vim.treesitter.language.register("objcpp", { "objc", "cpp" })