IceNvim is a beautiful, powerful and customizable neovim config. Powerful, yet blazing fast.
For a detailed introduction on the various features of and on how to use IceNvim, refer to the wiki.
- Ideal for development:
- Set up for C# / Flutter / Lua / Python / Rust / Web development and markdown writing
- Git integration
- Enhanced editing experience:
- Plugins such as
hop.nvim
,undotree
andvim-surround
- For Chinese users, automatic IME switching when changing modes (needs additional setup)
- Plugins such as
- Nice looks:
- Multiple colorschemes made ready
- A custom colorschemes picker
- User friendly:
- Uses which-key.nvim for new comers to check out keymaps
- Well equiped:
- An icon viewer to check whether your font works well with icons
- A configuration file selector
- Modern: uses
Lazy
andMason
- Customizable:
- Override defaults with your own config file
- IceNvim requires neovim 0.9.0+, but version 0.10.0+ is preferred
- Additionally, you need to install these also:
- A nerd font: this is optional, but things may look funny without one installed
- git: almost all the plugin and lsp installations depend on it
- Required by Mason:
- curl
- gzip / 7zip
- wget
- Required by telescope:
- fd
- ripgrep (also required by grug-far.nvim)
- Required by nvim treesitter:
- gcc
- node
- npm
- Required by markdown-preview.nvim:
- yarn
- Required by rust-tools:
- rust-analyzer (NOT the rust-analyzer provided by Mason!!!)
- python3 and pip3
- Additional dependencies on Linux / WSL:
- unzip
- python virtual environment
- xclip (for accessing system clipboard)
- zip
Note that some of the packages might have different names with different package managers!
Installing dependencies on Arch:
sudo pacman -S --needed curl gzip wget fd ripgrep gcc nodejs npm python python-pip unzip zip xclip python-virtualenv
Installing dependencies on Windows (via scoop):
scoop install curl gzip wget fd ripgrep mingw nodejs-lts python
To verify if these are installed, try opening neovim with nvim --noplugin
and then running checkhealth core
.
On Windows:
git clone https://github.com/Shaobin-Jiang/IceNvim "$env:LOCALAPPDATA\nvim"
On Linux:
git clone https://github.com/Shaobin-Jiang/IceNvim ~/.config/nvim
For automatic IME switching when inputing Chinese, im-select.exe is needed.
Download it from https://github.com/daipeihust/im-select/raw/master/win/out/x86/im-select.exe and place to the bin
directory in the configuration directory.
Additionally, if you are using wsl, you might have to do this:
chmod +x ~/.config/nvim/bin/im-select.exe
Although text yanked from within IceNvim is already available from outside, one might find that unicode characters are not copied properly on Windows and WSL. This is because the functionality is dealt with by Windows' CLIP
command which does a poor job when used with utf-8 characters.
To solve this, one might need to download uclip.exe and place it in the bin
directory in the configuration directory.
Additionally, if you are using wsl, you might have to do this:
chmod +x ~/.config/nvim/bin/uclip.exe
This neovim configuration allows users to override the default configuration by creating a custom
dir under lua/
.
IceNvim will try to detect and load custom/init.lua
. Since custom/
is git-ignored, it will be easy for you to make your own configurations without messing up the original git repo and missing follow-up updates.
Most IceNvim config options can be found under a global variable Ice
. The entire setup follows this routine:
- IceNvim sets its default options and store some of them, e.g., plugin config and keymaps, in
Ice
- IceNvim loads
custom/init.lua
- IceNvim uses
Ice
to set up plugins and create keymaps
Therefore, almost everything IceNvim defines can be re-configured by you.
An example custom/init.lua
:
Ice.plugins["nvim-transparent"].enabled = false
Ice.keymap.general.open_terminal = { "n", "<leader>terminal", ":split term:https://bash<CR>" }
local autogroup = vim.api.nvim_create_augroup("OverrideFtplugin", { clear = true })
vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd("BufEnter", {
group = autogroup,
callback = function()
if vim.bo.filetype == "lua" then
vim.cmd "setlocal colorcolumn=120"
end
end,
})
When installing omnisharp, make sure that dotnet sdk is installed.
When receiving nuget-related errors when installing csharpier, you might have to configure nuget source (see https://learn.microsoft.com/zh-cn/nuget/reference/errors-and-warnings/nu1100#solution-2):
dotnet nuget add source https://api.nuget.org/v3/index.json -n nuget.org
You need to check how you installed rust. I have not been able to set up rust-analyzer when installing rust only (e.g., via scoop install rust
or sudo zypper in rust
) either, but with the officially recommended way, i.e., by installing rustup, everything works properly.
Also, you might find that completion does not work when first opening a rust project. That is because some time needs to be taken to index the code, and completion would only work after indexing is done.
When installing typst-preview.nvim, you might have this error: Downloading typst-preview binary failed, exit code: 35
. This might be due to the use of proxies. Shut down softwares of such kind and run this command again:
lua require("typst-preview").update()