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*rainbow-delimiters.txt* Alternating highlight for delimiters in code
*rainbow-delimiters*
*rb-delimiters*
Author: Alejandro "HiPhish" Sanchez
License: Apache-2.0
Version: 0.4.0
==============================================================================
TABLE OF CONTENTS *rb-delimiters-contents*
1. Introduction .............................. |rb-delimiters-intro|
2. Setup and configuration ................... |rb-delimiters-setup|
2.1 Highlight colors ...................... |rb-delimiters-colors|
2.2 Strategies ............................ |rb-delimiters-strategy|
2.3 Queries ............................... |rb-delimiters-query|
2.4 Logging ............................... |rb-delimiters-logging|
3. Extending ................................. |rb-delimiters-extending|
3.1 The library ........................... |rb-delimiters-api|
3.2 Custom queries ........................ |rb-delimiters-custom-query|
3.3 Custom strategies ..................... |rb-delimiters-custom-strategy|
3.4 Adding new languages .................. |rb-delimiters-custom-lang|
4. Acknowledgements .......................... |rb-delimiters-credit|
5. Further reading ........................... |rb-delimiters-reading|
==============================================================================
INTRODUCTION *rb-delimiters-intro*
This plugin provides alternating highlighting for delimiters in Neovim, also
known as "rainbow parentheses". Thanks to the built-in |treesitter| support
we are not limited to just parentheses. We can match any part of the document
tree, such as HTML tags or `do` / `end` pairs in Lua. We can define new
patterns for existing languages, add support for new languages and even change
the strategy used for highlighting.
==============================================================================
SETUP AND CONFIGURATION *rb-delimiters-setup*
Install Rainbow-Delimiters like any other Neovim plugin. You also need a
Tree-sitter parser for each language to want to support.
*g:rainbow_delimiters*
Configuration is done through the variable `g:rainbow_delimiters`. It is a
dictionary which can be defined both in Vim script and in Lua. The following
keys are recognized:
`strategy`
Dictionary mapping Tree-sitter language names to strategies. The empty
string is the key for the default strategy. See |rb-delimiters-strategy|
for more information about strategies.
`query`
Dictionary mapping Tree-sitter language names to queries. The empty string
is the key for the default query. See |rb-delimiters-query| for more
information about queries.
`priority`
Dictionary mapping Tree-sitter language names to highlight priority values.
The empty string is the key for the default priority. See
|vim.highlight.priorities| and |treesitter-highlight-priority| for more
information on priorities.
`highlight`
List of names of the highlight groups to use for highlighting, for more
information see |rb-delimiters-colors|.
`whitelist`
List of Tree-sitter languages for which to enabled rainbow delimiters.
Rainbow delimiters will be disabled for all other languages.
`blacklist`
List of Tree-sitter languages for which to disabled rainbow delimiters.
Rainbow delimiters will be enabled for all other languages.
`log`
Settings for logging information. This is a dictionary which contains
further settings. See |rb-delimiters-logging| for details.
If neither the white- nor the blacklist are set rainbow delimiters will be
enabled for all languages. If both lists are set it is undefined which will
take precedence.
Here is an example configuration:
>vim
let g:rainbow_delimiters = {
\ 'strategy': {
\ '': rainbow_delimiters#strategy.global,
\ 'vim': rainbow_delimiters#strategy.local,
\ },
\ 'query': {
\ '': 'rainbow-delimiters',
\ 'lua': 'rainbow-blocks',
\ },
\ 'priority': {
\ '': 110,
\ 'lua': 210,
\ },
\ 'highlight': [
\ 'RainbowDelimiterRed',
\ 'RainbowDelimiterYellow',
\ 'RainbowDelimiterBlue',
\ 'RainbowDelimiterOrange',
\ 'RainbowDelimiterGreen',
\ 'RainbowDelimiterViolet',
\ 'RainbowDelimiterCyan',
\ ],
\ 'blacklist': ['c', 'cpp'],
\ }
<
Alternatively, the same configuration in Lua:
>lua
-- This module contains a number of default definitions
local rainbow_delimiters = require 'rainbow-delimiters'
---@type rainbow_delimiters.config
vim.g.rainbow_delimiters = {
strategy = {
[''] = rainbow_delimiters.strategy['global'],
commonlisp = rainbow_delimiters.strategy['local'],
},
query = {
[''] = 'rainbow-delimiters',
lua = 'rainbow-blocks',
},
priority = {
[''] = 110,
lua = 210,
},
highlight = {
'RainbowDelimiterRed',
'RainbowDelimiterYellow',
'RainbowDelimiterBlue',
'RainbowDelimiterOrange',
'RainbowDelimiterGreen',
'RainbowDelimiterViolet',
'RainbowDelimiterCyan',
},
blacklist = {'c', 'cpp'},
}
<
*rainbow-delimiters.setup*
'rainbow-delimiters.setup'.setup({config})
Some people prefer to call a Lua `setup` function, so a setup function is
available as part of a Lua module.
>lua
require 'rainbow-delimiters.setup'.setup {
strategy = {
[''] = rainbow_delimiters.strategy['global'],
commonlisp = rainbow_delimiters.strategy['local'],
},
query = {
[''] = 'rainbow-delimiters',
latex = 'rainbow-blocks',
},
highlight = {
'RainbowDelimiterRed',
'RainbowDelimiterYellow',
'RainbowDelimiterBlue',
'RainbowDelimiterOrange',
'RainbowDelimiterGreen',
'RainbowDelimiterViolet',
'RainbowDelimiterCyan',
},
blacklist = {'c', 'cpp'},
}
<
The keys are exactly the same as for |g:rainbow_delimiters|. In fact, this
function does the same as setting the variable directly.
As an aside, this is a bad practice carried over from a time when Lua support
in Neovim still had issues with Vim script interoperability, but it has
persisted through cargo-culting. You are better off not using this function.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
HIGHLIGHT COLORS *rb-delimiters-colors*
The `highlight` setting controls which highlight group to apply. It is a list
of any number of highlight group names as strings. The default values are in
this order:
- `RainbowDelimiterRed`
- `RainbowDelimiterYellow`
- `RainbowDelimiterBlue`
- `RainbowDelimiterOrange`
- `RainbowDelimiterGreen`
- `RainbowDelimiterViolet`
- `RainbowDelimiterCyan`
These are non-standard highlight groups and I have tried to find reasonable
default values for most uses. Nevertheless, you probably want to redefine
them for your colour scheme or link them to some existing group.
The colors are intentionally not in the order of the rainbow to help make the
contrast between adjacent delimiters more noticeable. Re-order the groups in
your settings if you prefer a different order.
Example highlight group definitions:
>vim
" Link to an existing highlight group
highlight link RainbowDelimiterRed WarningMsg
" Define the highlight from scratch
highlight RainbowDelimiterOrange guifg=#d65d0e ctermfg=White
<
You will probably want to have different colours per theme. Since most themes
will lack definitions for the above groups you will need to hook in somehow.
A simple solution is to use an autocommand.
>vim
au ColorSchemePre MyTheme highlight link RainbowDelimiter MyThemeRed
au ColorSchemePre MyTheme highlight link RainbowDelimiter MyThemeYellow
" and so on...
<
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
STRATEGIES *rb-delimiters-strategy*
A strategy defines how to perform the highlighting of delimiters. For
example, the included global strategy highlights every delimiter in a buffer
and updates the highlights when the document tree changes. On the other hand,
the included local strategy highlights only the sub-tree of the document which
contains the cursor and is updated whenever the cursor moves.
The strategy is set globally with per-language overrides. The setting is a
dictionary where the empty string is the key for the default strategy and the
overrides use the name of the language as keys.
Each value can be either a strategy or a function which evaluates to a
strategy. A function can be used to defer the decision to a later point in
time.
The function has the following signature:
Parameters: ~
• {bufnr} Number of the buffer to highlight
Return: ~
Either a strategy or `nil` (or |v:null|). If `nil`, rainbow delimiters
will be disabled for that buffer.
NOTE
Functions can only be used from Lua.
>lua
local rainbow = require 'rainbow-delimiters'
strategy = {
-- Use global strategy by default
[''] = rainbow.strategy['global'],
-- Use local for HTML
html = rainbow.strategy['local'],
-- Pick the strategy for LaTeX dynamically based on the buffer size
latex = function(bufnr)
-- Disabled for very large files, global strategy for large files,
-- local strategy otherwise
local line_count = vim.api.nvim_buf_line_count(bufnr)
if line_count > 10000 then
return nil
elseif line_count > 1000 then
return rainbow.strategy['global']
end
return rainbow.strategy['local']
end
}
<
A strategy is a table which must contain specific fields. It is possible to
define your own strategy, see |rb-delimiters-custom-strategy|. The following
strategies are included:
*rb-delimiters.strategy.global*
Global~
'rainbow-delimiters'.strategy['global']
The default strategy, highlights the entire buffer. Has very simple logic.
*rb-delimiters.strategy.local*
Local~
'rainbow-delimiters'.strategy['local']
Based on the cursor position highlights only the sub-tree which contains the
cursor. Updated every time the cursor moves and uses more complex logic than
the global strategy to figure out which nodes exactly to highlight.
*rb-delimiters.strategy.noop*
No-op~
'rainbow-delimiters'.strategy['noop']
A dummy strategy which does nothing. This is only useful in testing or if you
really want an empty strategy.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
QUERIES *rb-delimiters-query*
A query defines what to match. Every language needs its own custom query.
The query setting is a table where each entry maps a language name to a query
name. The empty string is the key for the default query.
Each value in the table can be either the name of a query file or a function
which evaluates to the name of a query file. A function can be used to defer
the decision to a later point in time.
The function has the following signature:
Parameters: ~
• {bufnr} Number of the buffer to highlight
Return: ~
The name of the query as a string.
NOTE
Functions can only be used from Lua.
>lua
query = {
-- Use parentheses by default
[''] = 'rainbow-delimiters',
-- Use blocks for Lua
lua = 'rainbow-blocks',
-- Determine the query dynamically
query = function(bufnr)
-- Use blocks for read-only buffers like in `:InspectTree`
local is_nofile = vim.bo[bufnr].buftype == 'nofile'
return is_nofile and 'rainbow-blocks' or 'rainbow-delimiters'
end
}
<
If you wish to define your own custom query or add support for a new language,
consult |rb-delimiters-custom-query| for details.
For every language the query `rainbow-delimiters` is defined, which matches a
reasonable set of parentheses and similar delimiters for each language. In
addition there are the following extra queries for certain languages:
- `latex`
- `rainbow-blocks` Matches `\begin` and `\end` instructions
- `lua`
- `rainbow-blocks` Matches keyword delimiters like like `function` and
`end`, in addition to parentheses
- `javascript`
- `rainbow-delimiters-react` Includes React support, set by default for
Javascript files
- `rainbow-parens` Only parentheses without React tags
- `rainbow-tags-react` Only React tags without parentheses
- `query`
- `rainbow-blocks` Highlight named nodes and identifiers in addition to
parentheses (useful for |:InspectTree|)
- `tsx`
- `rainbow-parens` Just Typescript highlighting without React tags
- `rainbow-tags-react` Only React tags without Typescript highlighting
- `typescript`
- `rainbow-parens` Just Typescript highlighting without React tags
- `verilog`
- `rainbow-blocks` Matches keyword delimiters like `begin` and `end`, in
addition to parentheses
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
LOGGING *rb-delimiters-logging*
By default only errors are logged. You can adjust what and how to log by
adjusting the values of the `log` entry in the settings. For information how
to change settings. see |rb-delimiters-setup|.
The following settings are supported:
`file`
Path to the log file, default is `rainbow-delimiters.log` in your standard
log path (see |standard-path|).
`level`
Only messages equal to or above this value will be logged. The default is
to log warnings or above. See |log_levels| for possible values.
The log file format is a CSV file which uses the `TAB` character (ASCII
`0x09`) as the field separator and a `NL` (ASCII `0x0A`) as the record
separator.
The fields are in this order:
- Time stamp of when the message was logged in ISO 8601 format with time zone
- Log level as string
- Lua module from which the message was logged, or the empty string if outside
a module
- The logged message
==============================================================================
EXTENDING RAINBOW DELIMITERS
Rainbow delimiters are hackable, you can add your own strategies, queries for
existing languages or even queries for new languages. Strategies and queries
are split up to be independent and can be mixed arbitrarily, but there are
some rules which need to be followed.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
THE LIBRARY *rb-delimiters-api*
There is a utility library provided for people writing their own strategies.
It is available as a table under the Lua module `'rainbow-delimiters'`.
*rb-delimiters.enable*
*rb_delimiters#enable*
'rainbow-delimiters'.enable({bufnr})
Re-enable rainbow delimiters for the buffer {bufnr} (or the current buffer
if {bufnr} is `0`) after it has been disabled.
rainbow_delimiters#enable({bufnr})
Vim script binding for the above function.
*rb-delimiters.disable*
*rb_delimiters#disable*
'rainbow-delimiters'.disable({bufnr})
Disable rainbow delimiters for the buffer {bufnr} (or the current buffer
if {bufnr} is `0`).
rainbow_delimiters#disable({bufnr})
Vim script binding for the above function.
*rb-delimiters.toggle*
*rb_delimiters#toggle*
'rainbow-delimiters'.toggle({bufnr})
Toggle rainbow delimiters for the buffer {bufnr} (or the current buffer
if {bufnr} is `0`).
rainbow_delimiters#toggle({bufnr})
Vim script binding for the above function.
*rb-delimiters.is_enabled*
*rb_delimiters#is_enabled*
'rainbow-delimiters'.is_enabled({bufnr})
Check if rainbow delimiters are enabled for the buffer {bufnr} (or the
current buffer if {bufnr} is `0`).
rainbow_delimiters#is_enabled({bufnr})
Vim script binding for the above function.
*rb-delimiters.hlgroup_at*
*rainbow-delimiters#hlgroup_at*
'rainbow-delimiters'.hlgroup_at({nesting_level})
Gets the name of the highlight group set up at the given nesting level.
This function will properly roll over, meaning that if there are seven
highlight groups defined and the {nesting_level} is nine, you will get the
second highlight group.
rainbow-delimiters#hlgroup_at({nesting_level})
Vim script binding for the above function.
*rb-delimiters.strategy*
*g:rainbow_delimiters#strategy*
'rainbow-delimiters'.strategy
Table of included strategies. For more information about strategies see
|rb-delimiters-strategy|. The included ones are:
- `global` |rb-delimiters.strategy.global|
- `local` |rb-delimiters.strategy.local|
- `noop` |rb-delimiters.strategy.noop|
Do not add your own strategies to this table.
g:rainbow_delimiters#strategy
Vim script dictionary, equivalent of the above table with the same keys.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CUSTOM STRATEGIES *rb-delimiters-custom-strategy*
A strategy is a table which must contain a certain set of fields. In
object-oriented terminology we would say that a strategy table must implement
the strategy protocol.
>
strategy = {
on_attach = function(bufnr: integer, settings: table),
on_detach = function(bufnr: integer),
on_reset = function(bufnr: integer, settings: table),
}
<
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
on_attach({bufnr}, {settings})
This function takes two arguments: the number of the buffer and the table of
settings used by the buffer. This function is generally used to set up
autocommands or other callbacks for events when the highlighting needs to be
updated.
The settings table contains the following entries:
- `strategy` Strategy in use
- `parser` Reference to the buffer parser (|treesitter-languagetree|)
- `lang` Language of the current parser
A strategy should pick the settings it needs and either cache them in an
internal table, or construct closures (e.g. for callback functions) around
them.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
on_detach({bufnr})
This function takes one argument: the number of the buffer. This function is
generally used to clean up any custom state, autocommands and callbacks set up
in the `on_attach` function.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
on_reset({bufnr}, {settings})
Similar to `on_attach` with the same signature, except that this function is
called when the buffer has been reset in some way, for example if the
underlying file has been modified by a code formatter. Usually the strategy
should highlight the entire buffer from scratch again because we cannot rely
on Tree-sitter to tell us what has changed.
As a rule of thumb, `on_reset` should do the work of `on_attach`, minus all
the initial setup.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The logic within the strategy can vary wildly between strategies. Usually you
will want to install some callback in the `on_attach` function. That callback
can then use the Tree-sitter API and the utility library (see
|rb-delimiters-api|) to select which nodes to highlight and what highlight
group to apply.
See |rb-delimiters-custom-query| for the standard capture groups used.
Selecting standard capture groups allows your strategy to work with any of the
built-in queries as well as user-specified custom queries.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CUSTOM QUERIES *rb-delimiters-custom-query*
A query defines what exactly needs to be highlighted. Different languages
have different document trees, so you need a separate query for each language.
The queries need to define the following capture groups:
- `@container`
The entire delimited node.
- `@delimiter`
Any delimiter you want to highlight in the current `@container`.
- `@sentinel`
A marker used to signal that you are done with the `@container`. This
should almost always be put right after the last `@delimiter` in the given
`@container`.
- `@_<capture_name>`
Delimiters starting with `_` (underscore) are ignored for highlighting
purposes, but you can use them for treesitter predicates like
`#eq?`, `#any-eq?`, etc. (These are very rarely needed.)
`@container` and `@sentinel` are mandatory, and `@delimiter` will always be
present as well since `@delimiter` is what is highlighted. The captures
starting with underscore will be rarely used, since you only need them for
predicates in a few special cases.
Let's look at an example first. Here is a snippet of HTML code:
>html
<a href="https://example.com">
Example<br/>link
</a>
<
The corresponding document tree including anonymous nodes is as follows:
>query
(element ; [0, 0] - [2, 4]
(start_tag ; [0, 0] - [0, 30]
"<" ; [0, 0] - [0, 1]
(tag_name) ; [0, 1] - [0, 2]
(attribute ; [0, 3] - [0, 29]
(attribute_name) ; [0, 3] - [0, 7]
"=" ; [0, 7] - [0, 8]
(quoted_attribute_value ; [0, 8] - [0, 29]
"\"" ; [0, 8] - [0, 9]
(attribute_value) ; [0, 9] - [0, 28]
"\"")) ; [0, 28] - [0, 29]
">") ; [0, 29] - [0, 30]
(text) ; [1, 4] - [1, 11]
(element ; [1, 11] - [1, 16]
(self_closing_tag ; [1, 11] - [1, 16]
"<" ; [1, 11] - [1, 12]
(tag_name) ; [1, 12] - [1, 14]
"/>")) ; [1, 14] - [1, 16]
(text) ; [1, 16] - [1, 20]
(end_tag ; [2, 0] - [2, 4]
"</" ; [2, 0] - [2, 2]
(tag_name) ; [2, 2] - [2, 3]
">")) ; [2, 3] - [2, 4]
<
As a human I immediately perceive the entire link as one object with two
delimiters: the opening `<a>` tag and the closing `</a>` tag. Perhaps the
self-closing `<br/>` tag can be seen as an intermediate delimiter because it
does not open a new scope. On the other hand, it is part of the content of
the entire link, not one of its delimiters.
As you can see, it is up to interpretation as to what exactly constitutes a
delimiter. In this example for the sake of exhaustiveness we will consider
the `<br/>` tag a delimiter. The corresponding query is as follows:
>query
(element
(start_tag) @delimiter
(element
(self_closing_tag) @delimiter)? ; Optional!
(end_tag) @delimiter @sentinel) @container
<
Highlighting the entire tag might be too vibrant though. What if we want to
highlight only the opening and closing angle brackets? The query gets
slightly more complex because we have to descend deeper into the document
tree.
>query
(element
((start_tag
["<" ">"] @delimiter)
(element
(self_closing_tag
["<" "/>"] @delimiter))? ;Optional!
(end_tag
"</" @delimiter
">" @delimiter @sentinel))) @container
<
Note that we don't want to put the `@sentinel` on the second to last `@delimiter`
`"</"`, we need to be careful to put it on the last `@delimiter`.
You might now see why we need the `@container` capture group: there is no way
to know in general how deeply the delimiter is nested. Even for one language
our understanding of what constitutes a delimiter is up for debate. Therefore
a human must decide for each query which node is the container and which nodes
are the delimiters. Capturing this information makes it available for use in
strategies.
We are not limited to only one opening and one closing delimiter. The
included default query captures the angle brackets and the tag name, but not
attributes between the tag name and closing angle bracket. This strikes a
pleasant middle ground between the two above extremes.
>query
(element
(start_tag
"<" @delimiter
(tag_name) @delimiter
">" @delimiter)
(end_tag
"</" @delimiter
(tag_name) @delimiter
">" @delimiter @sentinel)) @container
<
Here both opening and closing tag have three delimiters each.
In HTML the terminating slash in a self-closing tag is optional. Instead of
`<br/>` we can write `<br>`. A naïve query would look like this:
>query
(element
(start_tag
"<" @delimiter
(tag_name) @delimiter @_tag_name
">" @delimiter @sentinel)) @container
<
However, this query also matches the opening tag of regular tags like `<div>`.
This is where the `@_tag_name` capture comes in. The set of self-closing tags
is finite, so we can list them explicitly. This way a regular opening tag
will not match this particular pattern.
>query
(element
(start_tag
"<" @delimiter
(tag_name) @delimiter @_tag_name
">" @delimiter @sentinel)
;; List abridged for brevity
(#any-of? @_tag_name "br" "hr" "input")) @container
<
We need the `@_tag_name` capture so that it can be used with the `#any-of?`
predicate (|treesitter-predicate-any-of?|), but the capture itself is not used
for highlighting.
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADDING SUPPORT FOR NEW LANGUAGES *rb-delimiters-custom-lang*
Supporting a new new language requires creating one or more queries for the
language. If the query is mature enough please consider upstreaming it so
everyone can benefit.
==============================================================================
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS *rb-delimiters-credit*
The original version of nvim-ts-rainbow was written by Chinmay "p00f" Dalal,
and discontinued in January of 2023. The original repositories can be found
under these URLs:
- https://sr.ht/~p00f/nvim-ts-rainbow/
- https://github.com/p00f/nvim-ts-rainbow
==============================================================================
FURTHER READING *rb-delimiters-reading*
- nvim-treesitter plugin https://github.com/nvim-treesitter/nvim-treesitter
- Official Tree-sitter website https://tree-sitter.github.io/tree-sitter/
- Neovim Tree-sitter documentation: |treesitter.txt|
==============================================================================
vim:tw=78:ts=8:sw=4:et:ft=help:norl:
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