This project is not currently maintained. If you'd like to help, or for further info, see #77
Vim bundle for styled-components, diet-cola, emotion, experimental glamor/styled, and astroturf content in javascript files.
After massive issues with the syntax highlighting of the previous version, this newly implemented plugin now only highlights CSS in javascript template strings, if the current APIs of the supported libraries are present. Thus there is no more bleeding of keywords into non-CSS sections of the file.
Note however, that this plugin does not provide (all existing) CSS rules. You should have an up to date vim runtime (for CSS2 rules) and - as long as CSS3 rules are not included - an additional plugin for CSS3 rules. (I recommend hail2u/vim-css3-syntax but feel free to use whatever you like.)
See the documentation for the specific vim package manager for details on how to install packages for vim.
Install via Vundle
Add to vimrc:
Plugin 'styled-components/vim-styled-components'
Install via:
:so ~/.vimrc
:PluginInstall
Install via vim-plug
Add to vimrc:
Plug 'styled-components/vim-styled-components', { 'branch': 'main' }
Install via:
:so ~/.vimrc
:PlugInstall
Install via pathogen
Run:
git clone https://github.com/styled-components/vim-styled-components/ ~/.vim/bundle/vim-styled-components
As vim doesn't supply the most exhaustive javascript and/or typescript support itself most vim users opt for using third party plugins to enhance syntax highlighting and omnicomplete, etc. Some of which might share the syntax definition names, but others doesn't. This fact requires one to go into the details of the syntax definition to makes sure the syntax definitions are correctly supported by this plugin. Please open an issue if you find incompatibilities with any plugins.
This is the list of plugins that are (somewhat) supported:
- pangloss/vim-javascript and thus
- sheerun/vim-polyglot (which uses former as it's javascript plugin),
- othree/yajs.vim, and
- HerringtonDarkholme/yats.vim
As only the official APIs are supported and they are necessary to indicate highlighting sections in your javascript file, renaming of the appropriate functions or externally defining the CSS rules in template strings will lead to missing highlighting. This means the following will not be correctly highlighted:
import styled as unstyled from 'styled-components';
unstyled`
background-color: papayawhip;
color: palevioletred;
`;
Neither will this:
import dc from 'diet-cola';
const mainStyles = `
background-color: papayawhip;
color: palevioletred;
`;
const Button = styled('h1')(mainStyles);
Syntax highlighting in vim works by comparing a list of previous lines to determine the current line's syntax items. For very long files the list of previous lines can exceed the maximum threshold. If this is the case for you, you can opt in to trade off quality with speed for syntax highlighting:
autocmd BufEnter *.{js,jsx,ts,tsx} :syntax sync fromstart
autocmd BufLeave *.{js,jsx,ts,tsx} :syntax sync clear
Note: Use at own risk! The first line will make vim consider all lines in the file for syntax highlighting if it encounters a javascript/typescript file, the second one will reset this value if it leaves the buffer again. (This will also reset previously set syntax-syncing settings, that you or other plugins might have set.)
Contributions are very welcome. 🙇
Browse existing issues or create a new one here.
Submit pull requests here. This project uses the git flow model for development. Please base your feature branch on the develop branch and follow the code style convention used in the already existing files.
A huge thanks goes to Bram Moolenaar for authoring/maintaining Vim.
Lots of love to Glen Maddern and Max Stoiber for creating styled-components.
And of course sylvainbannier for the initial workaround here.
Copyright (c) 2016 Karl Fleischmann.
Distributed under the same terms as Vim itself. See :help license
.