Highlighting keywords or lines can be useful when analyzing code, reviewing summaries, and quickly comparing spellings. This plugin provides easy commands and shortcuts to set and delete highlights, and additional features such as Move to Highlight, Save and Load, Find Pattern, and Customize Colors.
Installation
Key Map
Jump to Highlight
One Time Highlight
Following Highlight
Find in Files Highlight
Positional Highlight
Save & Load
Sync Mode
Customizing Colors
Configuration
What's New ✨
version | feature | key map |
---|---|---|
1.62 | Jump to Highlight of the same color | O |
1.60 | Sync Mode across all tab-pages | |
1.58 | Positional Highlight associated with a buffer | O |
1.56 | One Time Highlight and Jump | |
1.52 | Find window key i for View | O |
1.38 | Input patterns in the command-line | |
1.35 | Multifunction keys for Find | O |
You can use your preferred plugin manager using the string 'azabiong/vim-highlighter'
. For example:
vim-plug .vim
Plug 'azabiong/vim-highlighter'
lazy.nvim .lua
{
"azabiong/vim-highlighter",
init = function()
-- settings
end,
},
or, Vim's built-in package feature:
Linux, Mac Windows ~/.vim ~/vimfiles in the terminal:
cd ~/.vim && git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/azabiong/vim-highlighter.git pack/azabiong/start/vim-highlighter cd ~/.vim && vim -u NONE -c "helptags pack/azabiong/start/vim-highlighter/doc" -c q
The plugin uses the following default key mapping variables that work in both normal and visual modes, and each key can be easily defined in the configuration file.
.vim
let HiSet = 'f<CR>'
let HiErase = 'f<BS>'
let HiClear = 'f<C-L>'
let HiFind = 'f<Tab>'
let HiSetSL = 't<CR>'
.lua
vim.cmd([[
let HiSet = 'f<CR>'
let HiErase = 'f<BS>'
let HiClear = 'f<C-L>'
let HiFind = 'f<Tab>'
let HiSetSL = 't<CR>'
]])
Default key mappings:
f Enter
,f Backspace
,f Ctrl+L
,f Tab
andt Enter
In normal mode, HiSet
and HiErase
keys set or erase highlighting of the word under the cursor. HiClear
key clears all highlights.
In visual mode, the highlight is selected as a partial pattern from the selection and applied to other words.
You can also select an entire line and highlight it.
To set highlighting by entering a pattern:
:Hi + pattern
The plugin supports jumping to highlights using three sets of commands.
1. Pattern
The Hi <
and Hi >
commands move the cursor back and forth to highlights that
matches the pattern at the cursor position or to the recently set highlight.
2. Position
The Hi {
and Hi }
commands, move the cursor to the nearest highlight,
even if the pattern or type differs from the current selection.
3. Color
The Hi [
and Hi ]
commands support moving to highlights of the same color with different patterns or types,
which can be useful when grouping highlights by content.
You can easily define key mappings for these commands. For example:
nn <CR> <Cmd>Hi><CR>
nn g<CR> <Cmd>Hi<<CR>
Alternatively, you can map the n and N keys to
HiSearch()
function, which automatically selects the search type between native search and jump commands. → Configuration
When you only need quick pattern matching at the cursor position without setting highlighting, One Time Highlight can be useful.
When the cursor is over a word or visual selection that is not highlighted, pressing HiErase
key sets One Time Highlight.
The highlight remains on while the cursor is stationary, and automatically turns off after the cursor moves.
One Time Highlight displays matches in all windows on the current tab-page, and
Jump commands Hi<>
and Hi[]
are also supported.
When you need automatic matching based on cursor movement, Following Highlight mode may be useful.
Pressing HiSet
key over One Time Highlight without moving the cursor sets Following Highlight mode.
The highlight follows the cursor. Pressing HiEarase
key turns off the mode.
Following Highlight displays matches in all windows on the current tab-page, and
Jump commands Hi<>
and Hi[]
are also supported.
cWORD matching
Sometimes, when comparing patterns consisting of letters and symbols, Vim's <cWORD>
matching option can be useful.
The following command toggles between the default <cword>
and <cWORD>
matching options:
:Hi <>
If you have installed hi-performance search tools such as ag, rg, ack, sift, or grep, the plugin can run it when looking for patterns based on the current directory. And when the given expression is simple, the plugin can highlight patterns to make them easier to find.
HiFind
key brings up the Find command prompt.
If one of the tools listed above is in the $PATH, the plugin can run it using default options.
You can also set your preferred search tool and options in the HiFindTool
variable. For example:
let HiFindTool = 'grep -H -EnrI --exclude-dir=.git'
Tools
let HiFindTool = 'ag --nocolor --noheading --column --nobreak'
let HiFindTool = 'rg -H --color=never --no-heading --column --smart-case'
let HiFindTool = 'ack -H --nocolor --noheading --column --smart-case'
let HiFindTool = 'sift --no-color --line-number --column --binary-skip --git --smart-case'
let HiFindTool = 'ggrep -H -EnrI --exclude-dir=.git'
let HiFindTool = 'git grep -EnI --no-color --column'
You can use general order of passing arguments to search tools:
:Hi/Find [options] expression [directories_or_files]
Tab
key completion for --long-options, directory and file names is supported.
Among various regular expression options in Vim, the plugin uses "very magic" style syntax which uses the standard regex syntax with fewer escape sequences.
Searching for "red" or "blue":
:Hi/Find red|blue
Pattern with spaces:
:Hi/Find "pattern with spaces"
Class types or variables that start with an uppercase letter A or S: Array, Set, String, Symbol...
:Hi/Find \b[AS]\w+
Fixed string or Literal option
This option treats the input as a literal string, which is useful when searching for codes with symbols.
ag, rg, grep, git -F --fixed-strings ack, sift -Q --literal
Example: searching for
item[i+1].size() * 2
:Hi/Find -F 'item[i+1].size() * 2'
When searching for parts of a string in a file as is, visual selection would be useful.
After selecting the part, press HiFind
key. The plugin will escape the pattern properly.
The following keys and functions are available in the Find window.
key | function |
---|---|
r | Resize / Rotate |
i | View |
s | Split and View |
Enter | Jump to position |
Ctrl+C | Stop searching |
Additional commands are supported to quickly navigate through search results.
Hi/next
and Hi/previous
commands jump directly to the location of the file.
Hi/older
and Hi/newer
commands navigate the search history.
It would be convenient to define key mappings for these commands for easy navigation. For example:
nn - <Cmd>Hi/next<CR>
nn _ <Cmd>Hi/previous<CR>
nn f<Left> <Cmd>Hi/older<CR>
nn f<Right> <Cmd>Hi/newer<CR>
Pressing the number
1
before theHi/next
command invokes a special function that jumps to the first item in the search results. For example, in the mapping above, entering1
-
will jump to the first item.
There is another type of highlight that is set in a specific location.
Unlike pattern-based highlighting, Positional Highlight is set to a specific position in the buffer. Thanks to new APIs in Vim and Neovim, it's similar to coloring over text with a highlighter. The position is updated when inserting or deleting the line above.
To set a Positional Highlight on a specific line, press the HiSetSL
key in normal or visual mode.
Multiline highlighting is now automatically set to positional highlighting.
Jump commands Hi{}
and Hi[]
are supported after setting.
Sometimes when you want to save highlights of the current window and reload them next time, you can use:
:Hi save
and when loading:
:Hi load
You can name the file when saving, and use tab-completion when loading. For example:
:Hi save name
:Hi load <Tab>
Highlight files are stored in a user configurable HiKeywords
directory.
To browse and manage files in the directory, you can open netrw using the command:
:Hi ls
relative path
You can also use relative paths. For example, to save and load a highlight file in the current directory:
:Hi save ./name
:Hi load ./<Tab>
The plugin supports three highlight sync mode commands.
For each single window highlighting mode:
:Hi =
To synchronize window highlighting on each tab-page:
:Hi ==
When synchronizing window highlighting across all tab-pages:
:Hi ===
The initial mode can be set using the
HiSyncMode
configuration variable.
The plugin provides two default color sets which are automatically loaded based on the current background
mode.
You can use the :hi
command to add, change, rearrange colors, and save them to the configuration file or color scheme.
Example 1
This example adds two custom colors in 256 or 24-bit colors mode.
If the plugin is installed and working, copy the following lines one by one, and then run it in the Vim's command window.
:hi HiColor21 ctermfg=20 ctermbg=159 guifg=#0000df guibg=#afffff :hi HiColor22 ctermfg=228 ctermbg=129 guifg=#ffff87 guibg=#af00ffNow, move the cursor to any word, and then input the number
21
andHiSet
key. Does it work? if you pressHiSet
key again, the nextHiColor22
will be set. You can try different values while seeing the results immediately.
Example 2
The following command changes the color of Find in Files Highlight
:hi HiFind ctermfg=52 ctermbg=182 guifg=#570707 guibg=#e7bfe7
Multiline highlight color numbers start at 80, HiColor80
.
Summary
.vim
" Unicode " set encoding=utf-8 " default key mappings " let HiSet = 'f<CR>' " let HiErase = 'f<BS>' " let HiClear = 'f<C-L>' " let HiFind = 'f<Tab>' " let HiSetSL = 't<CR>' " jump key mappings nn <CR> <Cmd>Hi><CR> nn g<CR> <Cmd>Hi<<CR> nn gl <Cmd>Hi}<CR> nn gh <Cmd>Hi{<CR> nn gj <Cmd>Hi]<CR> nn gk <Cmd>Hi[<CR> " find key mappings nn - <Cmd>Hi/next<CR> nn _ <Cmd>Hi/previous<CR> nn f<Left> <Cmd>Hi/older<CR> nn f<Right> <Cmd>Hi/newer<CR> " sync mode " let HiSyncMode = 1 " command abbreviations ca HL Hi:load ca HS Hi:save " directory to store highlight files " let HiKeywords = '~/.config/keywords' " additional highlight colors " hi HiColor21 ctermfg=52 ctermbg=181 guifg=#8f5f5f guibg=#d7cfbf cterm=bold gui=bold " hi HiColor22 ctermfg=254 ctermbg=246 guifg=#e7efef guibg=#979797 cterm=bold gui=bold
.lua
vim.cmd([[ " default key mappings " let HiSet = 'f<CR>' " let HiErase = 'f<BS>' " let HiClear = 'f<C-L>' " let HiFind = 'f<Tab>' " let HiSetSL = 't<CR>' " jump key mappings nn <CR> <Cmd>Hi><CR> nn g<CR> <Cmd>Hi<<CR> nn gl <Cmd>Hi}<CR> nn gh <Cmd>Hi{<CR> nn gj <Cmd>Hi]<CR> nn gk <Cmd>Hi[<CR> " find key mappings nn - <Cmd>Hi/next<CR> nn _ <Cmd>Hi/previous<CR> nn f<Left> <Cmd>Hi/older<CR> nn f<Right> <Cmd>Hi/newer<CR> " sync mode " let HiSyncMode = 1 " directory to store highlight files " let HiKeywords = '~/.config/keywords' " additional highlight colors " hi HiColor21 ctermfg=52 ctermbg=181 guifg=#8f5f5f guibg=#d7cfbf cterm=bold gui=bold " hi HiColor22 ctermfg=254 ctermbg=246 guifg=#e7efef guibg=#979797 cterm=bold gui=bold ]])
Color scheme
Highlight colors can also be included in a unified color scheme theme or saved as a separate file in your colors directory.~/.vim/colors
or~/vimfiles/colors
For example, you can create a 'sample.vim' file in the colors directory, and store some colors:hi HiColor21 ctermfg=52 ctermbg=181 guifg=#8f5f5f guibg=#d7cfbf cterm=bold gui=bold hi HiColor22 ctermfg=254 ctermbg=246 guifg=#e7efef guibg=#979797 cterm=bold gui=boldYou can now load colors using the
colorscheme
command::colorscheme sample
Multifunction keys for Find
The plugin'sHiFind()
function returns whether the Find window is visible. The idea is to define different actions for the keys depending on whether the Find window is displayed or not.The following example defines the
-
_
andf-
keys to execute the Hi command while the Find window is visible, otherwise execute the original function..vim
" find key mappings nn - <Cmd>call <SID>HiOptional('next', '-')<CR> nn _ <Cmd>call <SID>HiOptional('previous', '_')<CR> nn f- <Cmd>call <SID>HiOptional('close', 'f-')<CR> function s:HiOptional(cmd, key) if HiFind() exe "Hi" a:cmd else exe "normal!" a:key endif endfunction
.lua
-- find key mappings vim.cmd([[ nn - <Cmd>call v:lua.hi_optional('next', '-')<CR> nn _ <Cmd>call v:lua.hi_optional('previous', '_')<CR> nn f- <Cmd>call v:lua.hi_optional('close', 'f-')<CR> ]]) function _G.hi_optional(cmd, key) if vim.fn.HiFind() == 1 then vim.cmd('Hi '.. cmd) else vim.cmd('normal! '.. key) end end
Jump to Highlight with n and N keys
You can also define n and N keys for both the native search and the plugin's jump commands..vim
" jump key mappings nn n <Cmd>call HiSearch('n')<CR> nn N <Cmd>call HiSearch('N')<CR>While
hlsearch
is displayed, the function executes the native search command assigned to each key, otherwise, it executes theHi>
orHi<
command. When switching from native search to jump mode, you can simply turn offhlsearch
using the:noh
command. For example:nn <Esc>n <Cmd>noh<CR>
.lua
vim.cmd([[ " jump key mappings nn n <Cmd>call HiSearch('n')<CR> nn N <Cmd>call HiSearch('N')<CR> " :noh commmand mapping, if there isn't nn <Esc>n <Cmd>noh<CR> ]])
For more information about commands, configurable options, and functions, please see:
:h Hi
:h Hi-Options
:h Hi-Functions
If you have any issues that need fixing, comments or new features you would like to add, please feel free to open an issue.
MIT