kickstart-nvim.mp4
A starting point for Neovim that is:
- Small
- Single-file (with examples of moving to multi-file)
- Documented
- Modular
This repo is meant to be used by YOU to begin your Neovim journey; remove the things you don't use and add what you miss.
Kickstart.nvim targets only the latest 'stable' and latest 'nightly' of Neovim. If you are experiencing issues, please make sure you have the latest versions.
Distribution Alternatives:
- LazyVim: A delightful distribution maintained by @folke (the author of lazy.nvim, the package manager used here)
NOTE Backup your previous configuration (if any exists)
Requirements:
- Make sure to review the readmes of the plugins if you are experiencing errors. In particular:
- See Windows Installation if you have trouble with
telescope-fzf-native
Neovim's configurations are located under the following paths, depending on your OS:
OS | PATH |
---|---|
Linux | $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nvim , ~/.config/nvim |
MacOS | $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nvim , ~/.config/nvim |
Windows (cmd) | %userprofile%\AppData\Local\nvim\ |
Windows (powershell) | $env:USERPROFILE\AppData\Local\nvim\ |
Clone kickstart.nvim:
- on Linux and Mac
git clone https://github.com/nvim-lua/kickstart.nvim.git "${XDG_CONFIG_HOME:-$HOME/.config}"/nvim
- on Windows (cmd)
git clone https://github.com/nvim-lua/kickstart.nvim.git "%localappdata%\nvim"
- on Windows (powershell)
git clone https://github.com/nvim-lua/kickstart.nvim.git "${env:LOCALAPPDATA}\nvim"
Start Neovim
nvim
The Lazy
plugin manager will start automatically on the first run and install the configured plugins - as can be seen in the introduction video. After the installation is complete you can press q
to close the Lazy
UI and you are ready to go! Next time you run nvim Lazy
will no longer show up.
Read through the init.lua
file in your configuration folder for more
information about extending and exploring Neovim. That also includes
examples of adding popularly requested plugins.
nvim --headless "+Lazy! sync" +qa
Pull-requests are welcome. The goal of this repo is not to create a Neovim configuration framework, but to offer a starting template that shows, by example, available features in Neovim. Some things that will not be included:
- Custom language server configuration (null-ls templates)
- Theming beyond a default colorscheme necessary for LSP highlight groups
Each PR, especially those which increase the line count, should have a description as to why the PR is necessary.
- What should I do if I already have a pre-existing neovim configuration?
- You should back it up, then delete all files associated with it.
- This includes your existing init.lua and the neovim files in
~/.local
which can be deleted withrm -rf ~/.local/share/nvim/
- You may also want to look at the migration guide for lazy.nvim
- Can I keep my existing configuration in parallel to kickstart?
- Yes! You can use NVIM_APPNAME
=nvim-NAME
to maintain multiple configurations. For example you can install the kickstart configuration in~/.config/nvim-kickstart
and create an alias:When you run Neovim usingalias nvim-kickstart='NVIM_APPNAME="nvim-kickstart" nvim'
nvim-kickstart
alias it will use the alternative config directory and the matching local directory~/.local/share/nvim-kickstart
. You can apply this approach to any Neovim distribution that you would like to try out.
- Yes! You can use NVIM_APPNAME
- What if I want to "uninstall" this configuration:
- See lazy.nvim uninstall information
- Why is the kickstart
init.lua
a single file? Wouldn't it make sense to split it into multiple files?- The main purpose of kickstart is to serve as a teaching tool and a reference
configuration that someone can easily
git clone
as a basis for their own. As you progress in learning Neovim and Lua, you might consider splittinginit.lua
into smaller parts. A fork of kickstart that does this while maintaining the exact same functionality is available here: - Discussions on this topic can be found here:
- The main purpose of kickstart is to serve as a teaching tool and a reference
configuration that someone can easily
Installation may require installing build tools, and updating the run command for telescope-fzf-native
See telescope-fzf-native
documentation for more details
This requires:
- Install CMake, and the Microsoft C++ Build Tools on Windows
{'nvim-telescope/telescope-fzf-native.nvim', build = 'cmake -S. -Bbuild -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release && cmake --build build --config Release && cmake --install build --prefix build' }
Windows with gcc/make using chocolatey
Alternatively, one can install gcc and make which don't require changing the config, the easiest way is to use choco:- install chocolatey either follow the instructions on the page or use winget, run in cmd as admin:
winget install --accept-source-agreements chocolatey.chocolatey
- install all requirements using choco, exit previous cmd and open a new one so that choco path is set, and run in cmd as admin:
choco install -y neovim git ripgrep wget fd unzip gzip mingw make
WSL (Windows Subsystem for Linux)
wsl --install
wsl
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:neovim-ppa/unstable -y
sudo apt update
sudo apt install make gcc ripgrep unzip git xclip neovim
Ubuntu Install Steps
sudo add-apt-repository ppa:neovim-ppa/unstable -y
sudo apt update
sudo apt install make gcc ripgrep unzip git xclip neovim
Debian Install Steps
sudo apt update
sudo apt install make gcc ripgrep unzip git xclip curl
# Now we install nvim
curl -LO https://github.com/neovim/neovim/releases/latest/download/nvim-linux64.tar.gz
sudo rm -rf /opt/nvim-linux64
sudo mkdir -p /opt/nvim-linux64
sudo chmod a+rX /opt/nvim-linux64
sudo tar -C /opt -xzf nvim-linux64.tar.gz
# make it available in /usr/local/bin, distro installs to /usr/bin
sudo ln -sf /opt/nvim-linux64/bin/nvim /usr/local/bin/
Fedora Install Steps
sudo dnf install -y gcc make git ripgrep fd-find unzip neovim
Arch Install Steps
sudo pacman -S --noconfirm --needed gcc make git ripgrep fd unzip neovim