Giter VIP home page Giter VIP logo

briofita_vim's Introduction

Briofita Colorscheme

Briofita is a colorful dark background Vim colorscheme.

Briofita was first released in 2012 on the Vim website (vim.org). Current version is 4.1.0.

Since the first version the author has been using (and improving) it daily for most of his activities that could be performed via Vim editor: work, study, research…​

Along the time a need was felt to add new highlights for new utilities, programming languages, etc. and the author became somewhat frustrated at having to frequently switch and try out different colorschemes to fit different cases…​ So, as it currently is, Briofita became the colorscheme the author uses every day most of the time.

Evidently whatever be the colorscheme a selection of features/utilities/languages would never fit optimally all the use cases. For special cases, I myself use other schemes which I have downloaded from Github or from the Vim web site. Along the time even I have created a few different colorschemes, mostly shortened Briofita derivations, which I am soon to make available for Github or Vim users.

Briofita colorscheme implements many custom highlights and supports syntax coloring for many languages, utilities, plugins, tools…​ Although heavier than common Vim colorschemes it runs smoothly on current computers.

Briofita colorscheme is fit for common, non-specialized usage, but custom, colorful highlights are provided for several programming languages. For example:

  • authoring, writing, publishing:

    • Asciidoc;

    • Markdown; …​

  • software development:

    • Java,

    • Javascript;

    • Json, Yaml;

    • Julia;

    • Perl / Perl6;

    • Python / Python3;

    • Ruby;

    • Haskell;

    • Lua;

    • C++ and C;

    • Shellscript;

    • HTML, XHTML, XML, CSS;

    • Ruby;

    • SQL, PL/SQL, CSV; …​

  • Vim-related development:

    • VimL / Vimscript;

    • Vim help;

    • custom highlights for Vim plugins;

Vim website page:

Please check additional details in the companion Vim help file; it is in the "doc" sub-directory and, if Briofita is correctly installed, typing ":help briofita" will display it.

Selected Screenshots

Go language

Go language sample

Java

Java language sample

Julia

Julia language sample

Python

Python language sample

Vimscript

Vimscript language sample

C language

C language sample

CSS

CSS sample

Javascript

Javascript sample

Perl 6

Perl 6 sample

Ruby and RHTML

Ruby sample
RHTML sample

XML

XML sample

Installation

You can install Briofita by dowloading it as a Zip file either from the Vim.org site or from Github; or by cloning its Git repo from Github.

Manual Installation: Traditional Way

Once downloaded, unpack it. Then copy the contents of each extracted sub-directory in the corresponding directory of your .vim or _vim directory.

Create the directory if does not previously exist; for example: if there is no ~/.vim/autoload directory in your Vim run on a terminal the commands:

cd ~/.vim
mkdir autoload

Plugin Assisted Installation

You may use Plug, Pathogen or another of the available plugin-management plugins. Please read your plugin help file and follow its instructions.

Notice that the location where Briofita will be placed depends on your plugin. Pathogen, for example, manages plugins installed in the "bundle" directory.

Manual Installation: New Way

From Vim 8 on you may place your extracted Zip in one of the sub-directories of the "pack" directory.

If you place it in the "~/.vim/pack/start" subdirectory the colorscheme becomes available from the Vim startup time.

If you place it in "~/.vim/pack/opt" subdirectory you will need to first run ":packadd" to make it available.

Installation by Cloning

Installation can be done by cloning Briofita Git repository from Github.

Details will not be given here; on the Web where you will surely find a plenty of tutorials about how to clone a Github repo.

Usage

Once installed, the colorscheme can be used like any other colorscheme. For example, use below command:

:color briofita

If you do NOT want the colorscheme to set the Vim 8 "termguicolor" option please define (or place in your .vimrc) a global variable like below:

let g:briofita_skip_termguicolor = 1

If you do NOT want the colorscheme to set the Vim option "guicursor" please define (or place in your .vimrc) a global variable like below:

let g:briofita_skip_guicursor = 1

Default operation sets termguicolor if Vim 8 (or more) version, and sets guicursor to an appropriate value.

License

The Vim licence (change the term "Vim" to "Briofita Vim colorscheme").

Additional files

Briofita comes with a Vim help file and a lightline plugin theme. The lightline theme — for Vim statusline — is still experimental and will likely be changed in future releases.

You may contact the author either via Github-provided channels (pull requests, issues, etc.) or via email:

Sergio Nobre <brio dot develop at gmail dot com>

(put "[VIM]" in the subject, please)

briofita_vim's People

Contributors

sonobre avatar

Stargazers

 avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar  avatar

Watchers

 avatar

Forkers

tlnob

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    🖖 Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. 📊📈🎉

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google ❤️ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.