Neovim integration for Visual Studio Code
For those who don't know Neovim is the fork of VIM to allow greater VIM extensibility and embeddability. The extension is using full embedded neovim instance as backend (with the exception of the insert mode and window/buffer/file management), no more half-complete VIM emulation
VSCodeVim has neovim integration but it doesn't use it for anything but ex-commands (e.g. commands like :normal
) and relying for own emulated implementation for anything else.
Please report any issues/suggestions to vscode-neovim repository
- Install vscode-neovim extension
- Install Neovim Required version 0.4.2 or greater
- If you already have big & custom
init.vim
i'd recommend to wrap existing settings & plugins withif !exists('g:vscode')
check to prevent potential breakings and problems
Neovim 0.4+ is required. Any version lower than that won't work. Many linux distributions have an old version of neovim in their package repo - always check what version are you installing.
If you want to use WSL version of neovim, set useWSL
configuration toggle and specify linux path to nvim binary. wsl.exe
windows binary and wslpath
linux binary are required for this. wslpath
must be available through $PATH
linux env setting.
- Almost fully feature-complete VIM integration by utilizing neovim
- First-class VSCode insert mode. The plugin unbinds self from the
type
event in the insert mode, so no typing lag and freezing anymore when long completion popup appears. - Fully working VSCode features - autocompletion/go to definition/snippets/multiple cursors/etc...
- vimrc/vim plugins/etc are supported (few plugins don't make sense with vscode, such as nerdtree)
Neovim 0.4.2 or greater
- Set neovim path in the extension settings and you're good to go. Important you must specify full path to neovim, like
C:\Neovim\bin\nvim.exe
or/usr/local/bin/nvim
- Visual modes are not producing real vscode selections (few versions had this feature previously, but it was implemented through ugly & hacky workarounds). Any vscode commands expecting selection won't work. To round the corners, invoking VSCode command picker through the default hotkeys (
f1
/ctrl/cmd+shift+p
) from visual mode converts vim selection to real vscode selection. Also commenting/indenting/formatting works out of the box too. If you're using some custom mapping for calling vscode commands and depends on real vscode selection, you can useVSCodeNotifyRange
/VSCodeNotifyRangePos
(the first one linewise, the latter characterwise) functions which will convert visual mode selection to vscode selection before calling the command. See this for example and mapping - The extenison for now works best if
editor.scrollBeyondLastLine
is disabled. - When you type some commands they may be substituted for the another, like
:write
will be replaced by:Write
. This is normal. - File/tab/window management (
:w
/q
/etc...) commands are substituted and mapped to vscode actions. If you're using some custom commands/custom mappings to them, you might need to rebind them to call vscode actions instead. See reference links below for examples if you want to use custom keybindngs/commands. DO NOT use vim:w
, etc... in scripts/keybindings, they won't work. - It's better to use spaces instead of tabs for file indent.
<C-v>
is broken for tab indents
- O, o keys mapped to vscode
editor.action.insertLineBefore/insertLineAfter
command thus dont support count prefix - =, == are mapped to
editor.action.formatSelection
- It's possible to call vscode commands from neovim. See
VSCodeCall/VSCodeNotify
vim functions invscode-neovim.vim
file.VSCodeCall
is blocking request, whileVSCodeNotify
is not (see below) - Scrolling is done by VSCode side.
<C-d>/<C-u>/etc...
are slighly different - File management commands such as
e
/w
/q
etc are mapped to corresponding vscode commands and behavior may be different (see below) gf
/gd
/<C-]
are mapped toeditor.action.revealDefinition
(ShortcutF12
). also<C-]>
works in vim helps filesgF
/gD
are mapped toeditor.action.peekDefinition
(opens definition in peek)<C-w>gF
/<C-w>gf
/<C-w>gd
are mapped toeditor.action.revealDefinitionAside
(original vim command - open new tab and go to the file under cursor, but vscode/vim window/tabs metaphors are completely different, so it's useful to do slighlty different thing here)
If you have any performance problems (cursor jitter usually) make sure you're not using these kinds of extensions:
- Line number extensions (VSCode has built-in support for normal/relative line numbers)
- Indent guide extensions (VSCode has built-in indent guides)
- Brackets highlighter extensions (VSCode has built-in feature)
- Anything that renders decorators/put something into vscode gutter very often, e.g. on each cursor/line move
Such extension may be fine and work well, but combined with any extension which should control the cursor position (such as any vim extension) it may work very bad, due to shared vscode extension host between all extensions (E.g. one extension is taking the control over the host and blocking the other extension, this produces jitter).
If you're not sure, disable all other extensions except mine, reload vscode/window and see if the problem persist before reporting.
Also there are a reports that some vim settings/vim plugins increase latency and causing performance problems. Make sure you've disabled unneeded plugins. Many of them don't make sense with vscode and may cause any sort of problems. You don't need any code, highlighting, completion, lsp plugins as well any plugins that spawn windows/buffers (nerdtree and similar), fuzzy-finders plugins, etc. You might want to keep navigation/text-objects/text-editing/etc plugins - they should be fine.
Put into your keybindings.json:
for jj
{
"command": "vscode-neovim.compositeEscape1",
"key": "j",
"when": "neovim.mode == insert",
"args": "j"
}
to enable jk
add also:
{
"command": "vscode-neovim.compositeEscape2",
"key": "k",
"when": "neovim.mode == insert",
"args": "k"
}
This should do the trick:
if exists('g:vscode')
" VSCode extension
else
" ordinary neovim
endif
There are few helper functions that could be used to invoke any vscode commands:
VSCodeNotify(command, ...)
/VSCodeCall(command, ...)
- invokes vscode command with optional argumentsVSCodeNotifyRange(command, line1, line2, leaveSelection ,...)
/VSCodeCallRange(command, line1, line2, leaveSelection, ...)
- produces real vscode selection from line1 to line2 and invokes vscode command. Linewise. Put 1 forleaveSelection
argument to leave vscode selection after invoking the commandVSCodeNotifyRangePos(command, line1, line2, pos1, pos2, leaveSelection ,...)
/VSCodeCallRangePos(command, line1, line2, pos1, pos2, leaveSelection, ...)
- produces real vscode selection from line1.pos1 to line2.pos2 and invokes vscode command. Characterwise
Functions with Notify
in name are non-blocking, the ones with Call
are blocking. Generally use Notify unless you really need a blocking call
Examples:
Produce linewise selection and show vscode commands (default binding)
function! s:showCommands()
normal! gv
let startLine = line("v")
let endLine = line(".")
call VSCodeNotifyRange("workbench.action.showCommands", startLine, endLine, 1)
endfunction
xnoremap <silent> <C-P> :<C-u>call <SID>showCommands()<CR>
Produce characterwise selection and show vscode commands (default binding):
function! s:showCommands()
normal! gv
let startPos = getpos("v")
let endPos = getpos(".")
call VSCodeNotifyRangePos("workbench.action.showCommands", startPos[1], endPos[1], startPos[2], endPos[2], 1)
endfunction
xnoremap <silent> <C-P> :<C-u>call <SID>showCommands()<CR>
Run Find in files for word under cursor in vscode:
nnoremap <silent> ? :<C-u>call VSCodeNotify('workbench.action.findInFiles', { 'query': expand('<cword>')})<CR>
Open definition aside (default binding):
nnoremap <silent> <C-w>gd :<C-u>call VSCodeNotify('editor.action.revealDefinitionAside')<CR>
Jumplist lifetime is mapped to vscode's view column lifetime and not persisted between restarts. Also jumplist is not inherited for split
/etc... commands
Command menu has the wildmenu completion on type. The completion options appear after 1.5s (to not bother you when you write :w
or :noh
). <C-n>/<C-p>
selects the option and <Tab>
accepts it. See the gif:
Multiple cursors work in:
- Insert mode
- (Optional) Visual line mode
- (Optional) Visual block mode
To spawn multiple cursors from visual line/block modes type ma
/mA
or mi
/mI
(by default). The effect differs:
- For visual line mode
mi
will start insert mode on each selected line on the first non whitespace characeter andma
will on the end of line - For visual block mode
mi
will start insert on each selected line before the cursor block andma
after mA
/mI
versions account empty lines too (only for visual line mode, for visual block mode they're same as ma/mi)
See gif in action:
- See vscode-scrolling.vim for scrolling commands reference
- See vscode-file-commands.vim for file commands reference
- See vscode-tab-commands.vim for tab commands reference
- See vscode-window-commands.vim for window commands reference
:e[dit]
or ex
:e
without argument and without bang (!
) - opens quickopen window:e!
without argument and with bang - opens open file dialog:e [filename]
, e.g.:e $MYVIMRC
- opens a file in new tab. The file must exist:e! [filename]
, e.g.:e! $MYVIMRC
- closes current file (discard any changes) and opens a file. The file must exist
ene[w]
enew
Creates new untitled document in vscodeenew!
closes current file (discard any changes) and creates new untitled document
fin[d]
- Opens vscode's quick open window. Arguments and count are not supported
w[rite]
- Without bang (
!
) saves current file - With bang opens 'save as' dialog
sav[eas]
- Opens 'save as' dialog
wa[ll]
- Saves all files. Bang is not doing anything
q[uit]
or keys <C-w> q
/ <C-w> c
- Closes the active editor
wq
- Saves and closes the active editor
qa[ll]
- Closes all editors, but doesn't quit vscode. Acts like
qall!
, so beware for a nonsaved changes
wqa[ll]
/xa[ll]
- Saves all editors & close
tabe[dit]
- Similar to
e[dit]
. Without argument opens quickopen, with argument opens the file in new tab
tabnew
- Opens new untitled file
tabf[ind]
- Opens quickopen window
tab
/tabs
- Not supported. Doesn't make sense with vscode
tabc[lose]
- Closes active editor (tab)
tabo[nly]
- Closes other tabs in vscode group (pane). This differs from vim where a
tab
is a like a new window, but doesn't make sense in vscode.
tabn[ext]
or key gt
- Switches to next (or
count
tabs if argument is given) in the active vscode group (pane)
tabp[revious]
or key gT
- Switches to previous (or
count
tabs if argument is given) in the active vscode group (pane)
tabfir[st]
- Switches to the first tab in the active editor group
tabl[ast]
- Switches to the last tab in the active edtior group
tabm[ove]
- Not supported yet
Keys ZZ
and ZQ
are bound to :wq
and q!
respectively
Note: split size distribution is controlled by workbench.editor.splitSizing
setting. By default it's distribute
, which is mapped to vim's equalalways
and eadirection = 'both'
(default)
sp[lit]
or key <C-w> s
- Split editor horizontally. When argument given opens the specified file in the argument, e.g
:sp $MYVIMRC
. File must exist
vs[plit]
or key <C-w> v
- Split editor vertically. When argument given opens the specified file in the argument. File must exist
new
or key <C-w> n
- Like
sp[lit]
but creates new untitled file if no argument given
vne[w]
- Like
vs[plit]
but creates new untitled file if no argument given
<C-w> ^
- Not supported yet
vert[ical]
/lefta[bove]
/etc...
- Not supported yet
on[ly]
or key <C-w> o
- Without bang (
!
) Merges all editor groups into the one. Doesn't close editors - With bang closes all editors from all groups except current one
<C-w> j/k/h/l
- Focus group below/above/left/right
<C-w> <C-j>/<C-i>/<C-h>/<C-l>
- Move editor to group below/above/left/right. Vim doesn't have analogue mappings. Note:
<C-w> <C-i>
moves editor up. Logically it should be<C-w> <C-k>
but vscode has many commands mapped to<C-k> [key]
and doesn't allow to use<C-w> <C-k>
without unbinding them first
<C-w> r/R/x
- Not supported use
<C-w> <C-j>
and similar to move editors
<C-w> w
or <C-w> <C-w>
- Focus next group. The behavior may differ than in vim
<C-w> W
or <C-w> p
- Focus previous group. The behavior may differ than in vim.
<C-w> p
is completely different than in vim
<C-w> t
- Focus first editor group (most top-left)
<C-w> b
- Focus last editor group (most bottom-right)
<C-w> H/K/J/L
- Not supported yet
<C-w> =
- Align all editors to have the same width
[count]<C-w> >
or [count]<C-w> +
- Increase editor size by count. Both width & height are increased since in vscode it's not possible to control individual width/height
[count]<C-w> <
or [count]<C-w> -
- Decrease editor size by count. Both width & height are increased since in vscode it's not possible to control individual width/height
<C-w> _
- Toggle maximized editor size. Pressing again will restore the size
Enabled by useCtrlKeysForInsertMode = true
(default true)
Key | Desc | Status |
---|---|---|
CTRL-r [0-9a-z"%#*+:.-=] |
Paste from register | Works |
CTRL-a |
Paste previous inserted content | Works |
CTRL-u |
Delete all text till begining of line, if empty - delete newline | Bound to VSCode key |
CTRL-w |
Delete word left | Bound to VSCode key |
CTRL-h |
Delete character left | Bound to VSCode key |
CTRL-t |
Indent lines right | Bound to VSCode indent line |
CTRL-d |
Indent lines left | Bound to VSCode outindent line |
CTRL-j |
Insert line | Bound to VSCode insert line after |
Other keys are not supported in insert mode
Enabled by useCtrlKeysForNormalMode = true
(default true)
Refer to vim manual to get help what they're doing
- CTRL-a
- CTRL-b
- CTRL-c
- CTRL-d
- CTRL-e
- CTRL-f
- CTRL-i
- CTRL-o
- CTRL-r
- CTRL-u
- CTRL-v
- CTRL-w
- CTRL-x
- CTRL-y
- CTRL-]
- CTRL-j
- CTRL-k
- CTRL-l
- CTRL-h
- CTRL-/
Other control keys are not being sent (Usually useless with vscode)
- CTRL-h (delete one character left)
- CTRL-w (delete word left)
- CTRL-u (clear line)
- CTRL-g / CTRL-t (in incsearch mode moves to next/previous result)
- CTRL-l (add next character under the cursor to incsearch)
- CTRL-n / CTRL-p (select next/previous wildmenu completion)
- Tab - Select suggestion
{
"command": "vscode-neovim.send",
"key": "ctrl+tab",
"when": "editorTextFocus && neovim.mode != insert",
"args": "<C-Tab>"
}
{
"command": "-vscode-neovim.send",
"key": "ctrl+a"
}
Speaking honestly, original vim-easymotion works fine and as expected... except one thing: it really replaces your text with markers then restores back. It may work for VIM but for VS Code it leads to broken text and many errors reported while you're jumping. For this reason i created the special vim-easymotion fork which doesn't touch your text and instead use vscode text decorations. Just add my fork to your vim-plug
block or by using your favorite vim plugin installer and delete original vim-easymotion. Also overwin motions won't work (obviously) so don't use them. Happy jumping!
You can use vim-commentary if you like it. But vscode already has such functionality so why don't use it? Add to your init.vim/init.nvim
xmap gc <Plug>VSCodeCommentary
nmap gc <Plug>VSCodeCommentary
omap gc <Plug>VSCodeCommentary
nmap gcc <Plug>VSCodeCommentaryLine
Similar to vim-commentary, gcc is comment line (accept count), use gc with motion/in visual mode. VSCodeCommentary
is just a simple function which calls editor.action.commentLine
See Issues section
- VScode connects to neovim instance
- When opening a some file, a scratch buffer is created in nvim and being init with text content from vscode
- Normal/visual mode commands are being sent directly to neovim. The extension listens for buffer events and applies edits from neovim
- When entering the insert mode, the extensions stops listen for keystroke events and delegates typing mode to vscode (no neovim communication is being performed here)
- After pressing escape key from the insert mode, extension sends changes obtained from the insert mode to neovim
- vim-altercmd - Used for rebinding default commands to call vscode command
- neovim nodejs client - NodeJS library for communicating with Neovim