Home

Awesome

Vista.vim

CI

View and search LSP symbols, tags in Vim/NeoVim.

<p align="center"> <img width="600px" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/8850248/56469894-14d40780-6472-11e9-802f-729ac53bd4d5.gif"> <p align="center">Vista ctags</p> </p>

>>>> More screenshots

caveat: There is a major flaw about the tree view renderer of ctags at the moment, see #320 for more details.

Table Of Contents

<!-- TOC GFM --> <!-- /TOC -->

Introduction

I initially started vista.vim with an intention of replacing tagbar as it seemingly doesn't have a plan to support the promising Language Server Protocol and async processing.

In addition to being a tags viewer, vista.vim can also be a symbol navigator similar to ctrlp-funky. Last but not least, one important goal of vista.vim is to support LSP symbols, which understands the semantics instead of the regex only.

Features

Notes:

Requirement

I don't know the mimimal supported version. But if you only care about the ctags related feature, vim 7.4.1154+ should be enough. If you want to ctags to run asynchonously, Vim 8.0.27+ should be enough.

Otherwise, if you want to try any LSP related features, then you certainly need some plugins to retrive the LSP symbols, e.g., coc.nvim. When you have these LSP plugins set up, vista.vim should be ok to go as well.

In addition, if you want to search the symbols via fzf, you will have to install it first. Note that fzf 0.22.0 or above is required.

Installation

Plugin Manager

For other plugin managers please follow their instructions accordingly.

Package management

Vim 8

$ mkdir -p ~/.vim/pack/git-plugins/start
$ git clone https://github.com/liuchengxu/vista.vim.git --depth=1 ~/.vim/pack/git-plugins/start/vista.vim

NeoVim

$ mkdir -p ~/.local/share/nvim/site/pack/git-plugins/start
$ git clone https://github.com/liuchengxu/vista.vim.git --depth=1 ~/.local/share/nvim/site/pack/git-plugins/start/vista.vim

Usage

Show the nearest method/function in the statusline

Note: This is only supported for ctags and coc executive for now.

You can do the following to show the nearest method/function in your statusline:

function! NearestMethodOrFunction() abort
  return get(b:, 'vista_nearest_method_or_function', '')
endfunction

set statusline+=%{NearestMethodOrFunction()}

" By default vista.vim never run if you don't call it explicitly.
"
" If you want to show the nearest function in your statusline automatically,
" you can add the following line to your vimrc
autocmd VimEnter * call vista#RunForNearestMethodOrFunction()

Also refer to liuchengxu/eleline#18.

<p align="center"> <img width="800px" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/8850248/55477900-da363680-564c-11e9-8e71-845260f3d44b.png"> </p>

lightline.vim

let g:lightline = {
      \ 'colorscheme': 'wombat',
      \ 'active': {
      \   'left': [ [ 'mode', 'paste' ],
      \             [ 'readonly', 'filename', 'modified', 'method' ] ]
      \ },
      \ 'component_function': {
      \   'method': 'NearestMethodOrFunction'
      \ },
      \ }

Commands

CommandDescription
VistaOpen/Close vista window for viewing tags or LSP symbols
Vista!Close vista view window if already opened
Vista!!Toggle vista view window

:Vista [EXECUTIVE]: open vista window powered by EXECUTIVE.

:Vista finder [EXECUTIVE]: search tags/symbols generated from EXECUTIVE.

See :help vista-commands for more information.

Options

" How each level is indented and what to prepend.
" This could make the display more compact or more spacious.
" e.g., more compact: ["▸ ", ""]
" Note: this option only works for the kind renderer, not the tree renderer.
let g:vista_icon_indent = ["╰─▸ ", "├─▸ "]

" Executive used when opening vista sidebar without specifying it.
" See all the avaliable executives via `:echo g:vista#executives`.
let g:vista_default_executive = 'ctags'

" Set the executive for some filetypes explicitly. Use the explicit executive
" instead of the default one for these filetypes when using `:Vista` without
" specifying the executive.
let g:vista_executive_for = {
  \ 'cpp': 'vim_lsp',
  \ 'php': 'vim_lsp',
  \ }

" Declare the command including the executable and options used to generate ctags output
" for some certain filetypes.The file path will be appened to your custom command.
" For example:
let g:vista_ctags_cmd = {
      \ 'haskell': 'hasktags -x -o - -c',
      \ }

" To enable fzf's preview window set g:vista_fzf_preview.
" The elements of g:vista_fzf_preview will be passed as arguments to fzf#vim#with_preview()
" For example:
let g:vista_fzf_preview = ['right:50%']
" Ensure you have installed some decent font to show these pretty symbols, then you can enable icon for the kind.
let g:vista#renderer#enable_icon = 1

" The default icons can't be suitable for all the filetypes, you can extend it as you wish.
let g:vista#renderer#icons = {
\   "function": "\uf794",
\   "variable": "\uf71b",
\  }
<p align="center"> <img width="300px" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/8850248/55805524-2b449f80-5b11-11e9-85d4-018c305a5ecb.png"> </p>

See :help vista-options for more information.

Other tips

The ctags provided by the OS distribution may present issues, such as the ones described in #467. It is strongly recommended to use the newer version of ctags. The nightly build of ctags can be obtained from https://github.com/universal-ctags/ctags-nightly-build/releases. Alternatively, you can compile it yourself if you prefer.

Compile ctags with JSON format support

First of all, check if your universal-ctags supports JSON format via ctags --list-features. If not, I recommend you to install ctags with JSON format support that would make vista's parser easier and more reliable. And we are able to reduce some overhead in JSON mode by disabling the fixed fields.

The JSON support for ctags is avaliable if u-ctags is linked to libjansson when compiling.

Refer to Compiling and Installing Jansson as well.

Contributing

Vista.vim is still in beta, please file an issue if you run into any trouble or have any sugguestions.

License

MIT

Copyright (c) 2019 Liu-Cheng Xu