Tabs, as understood by any other editor.
barbar.nvim
is a tabline plugin with re-orderable auto-sizing clickable tabs, icons,
nice highlighting, sort-by commands and a magic jump-to-buffer mode. Plus the tab
names are made unique when two filenames match.
In jump-to-buffer mode, tabs display a target letter instead of their icon. Jump to any buffer by simply typing their target letter. Even better, the target letter stays constant for the lifetime of the buffer, so if you're working with a set of files you can even type the letter ahead from memory.
/!\ NOTE: RECENT NEOVIM NIGHTLY BUILD (0.5) REQUIRED
Letters stay constant for the lifetime of the buffer. By default, letters are assigned
based on buffer name, eg README will get letter r. You can change this so that
letters are assigned based on usability: home row (asdfjkl;gh
) first, then other rows.
:BufferOrderByDirectory
and :BufferOrderByLanguage
Left-click to go, middle-click or close button to close.
A modified version of bbye.vim is included in this
plugin to close buffers without messing with your window layout and more. Available
as BufferClose
and bufferline#bbye#delete(buf)
.
Is two one dependency a lot for one plugin? Yes it is. But is Barbar a very good
tabline plugin? Also yes. Do you now understand why the Install section is
strategically placed after the cool demos? Yes again.
Plug 'kyazdani42/nvim-web-devicons'
" Plug 'romgrk/lib.kom' -- removed! You can remove it from your vimrc
Plug 'romgrk/barbar.nvim'
You can skip the dependency on 'kyazdani42/nvim-web-devicons'
if you
disable icons.
I might remove the dependencies in the future if I have enough time to port the required functions, or if you complain loud enough. If you want the icons, don't forget to install nerd fonts.
- Neovim
0.5
No default mappings are provided, here is an example. It is recommended to use
the BufferClose
command to close buffers instead of bdelete
because it will
not mess your window layout.
" Magic buffer-picking mode
nnoremap <silent> <C-s> :BufferPick<CR>
" Sort automatically by...
nnoremap <silent> <Space>bd :BufferOrderByDirectory<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <Space>bl :BufferOrderByLanguage<CR>
" Move to previous/next
nnoremap <silent> <A-,> :BufferPrevious<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <A-.> :BufferNext<CR>
" Re-order to previous/next
nnoremap <silent> <A-<> :BufferMovePrevious<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <A->> :BufferMoveNext<CR>
" Goto buffer in position...
nnoremap <silent> <A-1> :BufferGoto 1<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <A-2> :BufferGoto 2<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <A-3> :BufferGoto 3<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <A-4> :BufferGoto 4<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <A-5> :BufferGoto 5<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <A-6> :BufferGoto 6<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <A-7> :BufferGoto 7<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <A-8> :BufferGoto 8<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <A-9> :BufferLast<CR>
" Close buffer
nnoremap <silent> <A-c> :BufferClose<CR>
" Wipeout buffer
" :BufferWipeout<CR>
" Close commands
" :BufferCloseAllButCurrent<CR>
" :BufferCloseBuffersLeft<CR>
" :BufferCloseBuffersRight<CR>
" Other:
" :BarbarEnable - enables barbar (enabled by default)
" :BarbarDisable - very bad command, should never be used
NOTE: Until #13167 is merged,
having too many tabline items shows as "E541" :/ If this happens a lot to you,
you can disable the options clickable
, closable
, or icons
to reduce
the number of items you have.
" NOTE: This variable doesn't exist before barbar runs. Create it before
" setting any option.
let bufferline = {}
" Enable/disable animations
let bufferline.animation = v:true
" Enable/disable auto-hiding the tab bar when there is a single buffer
let bufferline.auto_hide = v:false
" Enable/disable icons
" if set to 'numbers', will show buffer index in the tabline
" if set to 'both', will show buffer index and icons in the tabline
let bufferline.icons = v:true
" Configure icons on the bufferline.
let bufferline.icon_separator_active = '▎'
let bufferline.icon_separator_inactive = '▎'
let bufferline.icon_close_tab = ''
let bufferline.icon_close_tab_modified = '●'
" Enable/disable close button
let bufferline.closable = v:true
" Enables/disable clickable tabs
" - left-click: go to buffer
" - middle-click: delete buffer
let bufferline.clickable = v:true
" If set, the letters for each buffer in buffer-pick mode will be
" assigned based on their name. Otherwise or in case all letters are
" already assigned, the behavior is to assign letters in order of
" usability (see order below)
let bufferline.semantic_letters = v:true
" New buffer letters are assigned in this order. This order is
" optimal for the qwerty keyboard layout but might need adjustement
" for other layouts.
let bufferline.letters =
\ 'asdfjkl;ghnmxcvbziowerutyqpASDFJKLGHNMXCVBZIOWERUTYQP'
" Sets the maximum padding width with which to surround each tab
let bufferline.maximum_padding = 4
For the highlight groups, here are the default ones. Your colorscheme can override them by defining them.
function bufferline#highlight#setup()
let fg_target = 'red'
let fg_current = s:fg(['Normal'], '#efefef')
let fg_visible = s:fg(['TabLineSel'], '#efefef')
let fg_inactive = s:fg(['TabLineFill'], '#888888')
let fg_modified = s:fg(['WarningMsg'], '#E5AB0E')
let fg_special = s:fg(['Special'], '#599eff')
let fg_subtle = s:fg(['NonText', 'Comment'], '#555555')
let bg_current = s:bg(['Normal'], '#000000')
let bg_visible = s:bg(['TabLineSel', 'Normal'], '#000000')
let bg_inactive = s:bg(['TabLineFill', 'StatusLine'], '#000000')
" Current: current buffer
" Visible: visible but not current buffer
" Inactive: invisible but not current buffer
" -Mod: when modified
" -Sign: the separator between buffers
" -Target: letter in buffer-picking mode
call s:hi_all([
\ ['BufferCurrent', fg_current, bg_current],
\ ['BufferCurrentMod', fg_modified, bg_current],
\ ['BufferCurrentSign', fg_special, bg_current],
\ ['BufferCurrentTarget', fg_target, bg_current, 'bold'],
\ ['BufferVisible', fg_visible, bg_visible],
\ ['BufferVisibleMod', fg_modified, bg_visible],
\ ['BufferVisibleSign', fg_visible, bg_visible],
\ ['BufferVisibleTarget', fg_target, bg_visible, 'bold'],
\ ['BufferInactive', fg_inactive, bg_inactive],
\ ['BufferInactiveMod', fg_modified, bg_inactive],
\ ['BufferInactiveSign', fg_subtle, bg_inactive],
\ ['BufferInactiveTarget', fg_target, bg_inactive, 'bold'],
\ ['BufferTabpages', fg_special, bg_inactive, 'bold'],
\ ['BufferTabpageFill', fg_inactive, bg_inactive],
\ ])
endfunc
You can also use the doom-one.vim colorscheme that defines those groups and is also very pleasant as you could see in the demos above.
Barbar is called barbar because it's a bar, but it's also more than a bar: a "barbar".
It is pronounced like "Jar Jar" in "Jar Jar Binks", but with Bs.
No, barbar has nothing to do with barbarians.
barbar.nvim: Distributed under the terms of the JSON license. bbye.vim: Distributed under the terms of the GNU Affero license.