prism.vim
sets colorscheme based on your working directory. This helps you
distinguish among multiple instances in the window previewer. It's similar to
Peacock
for VSCode.
prism.vim
chooses a colorscheme from provided colorscheme list
, the choice is determined by a number, which is calculated based on the current working directory.
With vim-plug or your favorite plugin manager, like
Plug 'UncleBill/prism.vim'
Requires Vim 8.0+
for full support.
Prism.vim
will pick one from colorschemes below to set up.
" defaults to ['peachpuff', 'desert', 'evening', 'murphy']
" some of below are from https://github.com/flazz/vim-colorschemes
let g:prism_colorschemes = ['atom', 'desert', 'solarized', 'badwolf', 'lightyellow',
\ 'dracula', 'peachpuff', 'pablo', 'SlateDark', 'torte', 'blink', 'blueprint',
\ 'Benokai', 'greens', 'grayorange', 'graywh']
You can get a collection of colorschemes at flazz/vim-colorschemes
Tired of one fixed colorscheme? You can make it shift to another every X days automatically:
let g:prism_shift_period = 0 " disable shifting, default value
let g:prism_shift_period = 30 " every 30 days, days since 1979-1-1,
You can use the PrismSet
command to reset colorscheme at runtime. prism.vim
will record
your chosen colorscheme (in g:prism_config_file
, defaults to ~/.prism.vim.json
),
and will use this colorscheme for the working director in the future.
" use current colorscheme
:PrismSet<enter>
" select from installed colorschemes
:PrismSet <tab>
prism.vim
listens to the DirChanged
event, there are four options that can
be attached to:
"window" to trigger on `:lcd` "global" to trigger on `:cd` "auto" to trigger on 'autochdir'. "drop" to trigger on editing a file
See :h DirChanged
let g:prism_dir_changed_pattern = ['window', 'global']
Also see :h DirChanged
for the patterns your Vim supports.
Enable prism.vim
on switching tabs by:
" defaults to 0, disabled
let g:prism_count_tab = 1
Then prism.vim
adds tab index to count the value for picking colorscheme, and
listens to TabEnter
. Now switching tabs will change the colorscheme.
MIT License. Copyright (c) UncleBill