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💻 lazydev.nvim

lazydev.nvim is a plugin that properly configures LuaLS for editing your Neovim config by lazily updating your workspace libraries.

✨ Features

2024-06-01_21-02-40

⚠️ Limitations

⚡️ Requirements

📦 Installation

With lazy.nvim:

return {
  {
    "folke/lazydev.nvim",
    ft = "lua", -- only load on lua files
    opts = {
      library = {
        -- See the configuration section for more details
        -- Load luvit types when the `vim.uv` word is found
        { path = "luvit-meta/library", words = { "vim%.uv" } },
      },
    },
  },
  { "Bilal2453/luvit-meta", lazy = true }, -- optional `vim.uv` typings
  { -- optional completion source for require statements and module annotations
    "hrsh7th/nvim-cmp",
    opts = function(_, opts)
      opts.sources = opts.sources or {}
      table.insert(opts.sources, {
        name = "lazydev",
        group_index = 0, -- set group index to 0 to skip loading LuaLS completions
      })
    end,
  },
  -- { "folke/neodev.nvim", enabled = false }, -- make sure to uninstall or disable neodev.nvim
}

⚙️ Configuration

[!TIP] You can force enable/disable lazydev in certain project folders using :h 'exrc' with vim.g.lazydev_enabled = true or vim.g.lazydev_enabled = false

Examples:


{
  "folke/lazydev.nvim",
  ft = "lua", -- only load on lua files
  opts = {
    library = {
      -- Library paths can be absolute
      "~/projects/my-awesome-lib",
      -- Or relative, which means they will be resolved from the plugin dir.
      "lazy.nvim",
      "luvit-meta/library",
      -- It can also be a table with trigger words / mods
      -- Only load luvit types when the `vim.uv` word is found
      { path = "luvit-meta/library", words = { "vim%.uv" } },
      -- always load the LazyVim library
      "LazyVim",
      -- Only load the lazyvim library when the `LazyVim` global is found
      { path = "LazyVim", words = { "LazyVim" } },
      -- Load the wezterm types when the `wezterm` module is required
      -- Needs `justinsgithub/wezterm-types` to be installed
      { path = "wezterm-types", mods = { "wezterm" } },
      -- Load the xmake types when opening file named `xmake.lua`
      -- Needs `LelouchHe/xmake-luals-addon` to be installed
      { path = "xmake-luals-addon/library", files = { "xmake.lua" } },
    },
    -- always enable unless `vim.g.lazydev_enabled = false`
    -- This is the default
    enabled = function(root_dir)
      return vim.g.lazydev_enabled == nil and true or vim.g.lazydev_enabled
    end,
    -- disable when a .luarc.json file is found
    enabled = function(root_dir)
      return not vim.uv.fs_stat(root_dir .. "/.luarc.json")
    end,
  },
},

Default settings:

---@alias lazydev.Library {path:string, words:string[], mods:string[]}
---@alias lazydev.Library.spec string|{path:string, words?:string[], mods?:string[]}
---@class lazydev.Config
local defaults = {
  runtime = vim.env.VIMRUNTIME --[[@as string]],
  library = {}, ---@type lazydev.Library.spec[]
  integrations = {
    -- Fixes lspconfig's workspace management for LuaLS
    -- Only create a new workspace if the buffer is not part
    -- of an existing workspace or one of its libraries
    lspconfig = true,
    -- add the cmp source for completion of:
    -- `require "modname"`
    -- `---@module "modname"`
    cmp = true,
    -- same, but for Coq
    coq = false,
  },
  ---@type boolean|(fun(root:string):boolean?)
  enabled = function(root_dir)
      return vim.g.lazydev_enabled == nil and true or vim.g.lazydev_enabled
  end,
}

🚀 Usage

Just install the plugin and start editing your Lua files.

If you don't use nvim-lspconfig, then you can use require('lazydev').find_workspace(buf?) to check if the buffer is part of an existing workspace or its libraries.

The :LazyDev command: