NeoVim from the desk of Joshua Jones.
This configuration has been tested and heavily used on MacOS and Linux systems, so all requirements and instructions will assume as such.
$ mv ~/.config/nvim ~/.config/nvim.bak
$ rm -rf )
$ git clone [email protected]:Jonesy/nvim.git ~/.config/nvim
$ cd ~/.config/nvim
$ nvim
Launching NeoVim will install plugins via Lazy.
This config strives to strike a balance of minimalism and productivity, and is the result of 15 years and going of programming in Vim. It has a slight bent towards web development, primarily frontend-based, but also supports:
- Zig
- Lua
- Go & Templ (basic)
- Nix
- Swift
- PHP
- Bash
- and many others to come.
It works great for me, but your mileage may vary. My main motivation in sharing publicly is educational reference.
NeoVim Kickstart was a valuable resource in helping build the stable, minimalist foundation.
Plugins are managed following the file-based system, so lua/core/lazy.lua
will
crawl the lua/plugins
directory for files that return a Lazy-formatted table.
This config is shared between a MacOS and Nix-based Linux workstation, and I've found Nix devshells do a wonderful job of replacing Mason, so it is only enabled on MacOS systems, and will likely be removed entirely if I end up installing Nix-Darwin on my MacBook Pro. Mason is a terrific plugin, but it's one less plugin and dependency that I need, and Nix provides the added benefit of containerized LSP servers locked to specific versions.