πΈ Snapshot plugin with rich features that can make pretty code snapshots for Neovim
If you have installed v0.x before, this chapter will show you what break changes version v1.x introduced.
- The
CodeSnapPreviewOn
command is not supported, if you prefer live-preview, you can pinCodeSnap.nvim
version tov0.0.11
to continue using this command. - The
opacity
andpreview_title
config has been removed from v1.0.0 - The
editor_font_family
was renamed tocode_font_family
v1.x has a different architecture and better performance than v0.x, and v1.x can generate screenshots directly without an open browser. We recommend you upgrade to v1.x for a better experience.
- π€© Beautiful code snap template
- π Custom watermark and window style
- π» Beautiful Mac-style title bar
- π€ Generate snapshots using only a single command
- π Breadcrumbs for display file path
- π More beautiful background theme
- π’ [WIP] Column number
- Neovim 9.0+
We recommend using Lazy.nvim to install CodeSnap.nvim, but you can still use another plugin manager you prefer.
Lazy.nvim
{ "mistricky/codesnap.nvim", build = "make" },
Packer
use {'mistricky/codesnap.nvim', run = 'make'}
Vim-Plug
Plug 'mistricky/codesnap.nvim', { 'do': 'make' }
It's worth mentioning that the screenshot feature is implemented by a module called generator
written in Rust, when make
the project, the CodeSnap.nvim will mount a precompiled cross-compile generator
shared file into the plugin that depends on what OS you are using.
We precompiled the following targets:
- x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu
- x86_64-apple-darwin
- aarch64-apple-darwin
If your platform is in the above list, you can just run make
after the plugin is installed like the above examples do, CodeSnap.nvim will automatically mount the shared file into the plugin. This means you don't need any Rust utils to compile manually from source.
You need to install Rust development environment before compiling from source, you can refer Install Rust for more detail.
Please keep in mind, cross-compile to these platforms only helps a portion of users to have out-of-box experience, if your platform is not in the above targets list, you still need to compile from source using make build_generator
, for instance using Lazy:
{ "mistricky/codesnap.nvim", build = "make build_generator" },
We always recommend you to compile CodeSnap.nvim from source
instead of using the precompiled shared file, because the correctness and consistency of compiling from source are always higher than cross-compiling.
If you try to compile CodeSnap.nvim on ARM architecture, you may need to install additional dependencies to compile it, thanks @matteocavestri mentioned in mistricky#53 (comment)
export CC=gcc
sudo dnf install libuv libuv-devel # On RHEL based systems
sudo apt-get install libtool libuv1-dev # On Debian based systems
CodeSnap.nvim
provides the following two ways to take snapshots of currently selected code
To take a beautiful snapshot use CodeSnap.nvim, you can just use CodeSnap
command to generate a snapshot of the current selected code, then the CodeSnap.nvim
will write the snapshot into the clipboard, and you can paste it anywhere you want.
Clipboard.mov
Copy screenshots directly into the clipboard is cool, however, it doesn't work well on wl-clipboard, because the wl-clipboard can't paste the content which come from exited processes. As Hyprland document say:
When we copy something on Wayland (using wl-clipboard) and close the application we copied from, the copied data disappears from the clipboard and we cannot paste it anymore. So to fix this problem we can use a program called as wl-clip-persist which will preserve the data in the clipboard after the application is closed.
If you using CodeSnap.nvim on wl-clipboard, you can refer wl-clip-persist, it reads all the clipboard data into memory and then overwrites the clipboard with the data from our memory to persist copied data.
Of course, you can use CodeSnapSave
command to save the snapshot to path where you defined it in config.save_path
require("codesnap").setup({
-- The save_path must be ends with .png, unless when you specified a directory path,
-- CodeSnap will append an auto-generated filename to the specified directory path
-- For example:
-- save_path = "~/Pictures"
-- parsed: "~/Pictures/CodeSnap_y-m-d_at_h:m:s.png"
-- save_path = "~/Pictures/foo.png"
-- parsed: "~/Pictures/foo.png"
save_path = ...
})
Save.mov
In some scenarios, CodeSnap.nvim cannot auto-detect what language syntax should used to highlight code, for example, shell script can have no extension, they specify interpreters using shebang.
CodeSnap.nvim won't read the whole content of the file, thus cannot detect what language syntax is this, in this case, you can specify extension explicitly, for instance:
CodeSnapSave sh
CodeSnap sh
Breadcrumbs are something to display the current snapshot file path, you can open it through config has_breadcrumbs
:
require("codesnap").setup({
-- ...
has_breadcrumbs = true
})
The CodeSnap.nvim uses /
as the separator of the file path by default, of course, you can specify any symbol you prefer as the custom separator:
require("codesnap").setup({
-- ...
has_breadcrumbs = true
breadcrumbs_separator = "π"
})
The CodeSnap.nvim
comes with many beautiful backgrounds preset, you can set any background you like by setting bg_theme
to its name, just like:
require("codesnap").setup({
-- The "default" background is one you see at the beginning of the README
bg_theme = "default"
})
bamboo | sea |
---|---|
peach | grape |
dusk | summer |
If you prefer solid color background, you can set bg_color
to your preferred color. For example:
require("codesnap").setup({
-- ...
bg_color = "#535c68"
})
Watermark is something that makes screenshots more personalized, but if you don't like watermark just set it as an empty string to hide it.
require("codesnap").setup({
-- ...
watermark = ""
})
CodeSnap # Take a snapshot of the currently selected code and copy the snapshot into the clipboard
CodeSnapSave # Save the snapshot of the currently selected code and save it on the disk
Define your custom config using setup
function
require("codesnap").setup({...})
There is a default config:
{
mac_window_bar = true,
title = "CodeSnap.nvim",
code_font_family = "CaskaydiaCove Nerd Font",
watermark_font_family = "Pacifico",
watermark = "CodeSnap.nvim",
bg_theme = "default",
breadcrumbs_separator = "/",
has_breadcrumbs = false,
}
CodeSnap.nvim is a project that will be maintained for the long term, and we always accepts new contributors, please feel free to submit PR & issues.
The commit message convention of this project is following commitlint-wizardoc.
MIT.