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aerial.mp4
- Neovim 0.5+
- One or more of the following:
- A working LSP setup (see nvim-lspconfig)
- nvim-treesitter with languages installed
aerial supports all the usual plugin managers
Packer
require('packer').startup(function()
use {'stevearc/aerial.nvim'}
end)
Paq
require "paq" {
{'stevearc/aerial.nvim'};
}
vim-plug
Plug 'stevearc/aerial.nvim'
dein
call dein#add('stevearc/aerial.nvim')
Pathogen
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/stevearc/aerial.nvim.git ~/.vim/bundle/
Neovim native package
git clone --depth=1 https://github.com/stevearc/aerial.nvim.git \
"${XDG_DATA_HOME:-$HOME/.local/share}"/nvim/site/pack/aerial/start/aerial.nvim
Aerial can display document symbols from a couple of sources. You will need to
use at least one of the. You can configure which one to use or your preferred
source with the backends
option (see Options). The default is to
prefer LSP when it's available, and fall back to Treesitter.
First ensure you have a functioning LSP setup (see
nvim-lspconfig). Once complete, add
the aerial on_attach
callback to your config:
-- Set up your LSP clients here, using the aerial on_attach method
require'lspconfig'.vimls.setup{
on_attach = aerial.on_attach,
}
-- Repeat this for each language server you have configured
The treesitter backend is in Alpha status
Please do try it out, and file an issue if you encounter any problems.
First ensure you have nvim-treesitter installed and configured for all languages you want to support. That's all! Aerial will automatically fetch symbols from treesitter.
Supported languages
- c
- c_sharp
- cpp
- go
- java
- javascript
- json
- lua
- python
- rst
- ruby
- rust
- typescript
- vim
Don't see your language here? Request support for it
Since it looks like it may be a while until we get a treesitter parser for markdown, there is a simple backend that does rudimentary parsing of markdown headers. It should work well enough in most cases.
While not required, you may want to add some keymaps for aerial. The best way to
do this is with register_attach_cb()
:
local aerial = require'aerial'
-- Aerial does not set any mappings by default, so you'll want to set some up
aerial.register_attach_cb(function(bufnr)
-- Toggle the aerial window with <leader>a
vim.api.nvim_buf_set_keymap(bufnr, 'n', '<leader>a', '<cmd>AerialToggle!<CR>', {})
-- Jump forwards/backwards with '{' and '}'
vim.api.nvim_buf_set_keymap(bufnr, 'n', '{', '<cmd>AerialPrev<CR>', {})
vim.api.nvim_buf_set_keymap(bufnr, 'n', '}', '<cmd>AerialNext<CR>', {})
-- Jump up the tree with '[[' or ']]'
vim.api.nvim_buf_set_keymap(bufnr, 'n', '[[', '<cmd>AerialPrevUp<CR>', {})
vim.api.nvim_buf_set_keymap(bufnr, 'n', ']]', '<cmd>AerialNextUp<CR>', {})
end)
Command | arg | description |
---|---|---|
AerialToggle[!] |
left /right |
Open or close the aerial window. With [!] cursor stays in current window |
AerialOpen[!] |
left /right |
Open the aerial window. With [!] cursor stays in current window |
AerialClose |
Close the aerial window | |
AerialPrev |
N=1 | Jump backwards N symbols |
AerialNext |
N=1 | Jump forwards N symbols |
AerialPrevUp |
N=1 | Jump up the tree N levels, moving backwards |
AerialNextUp |
N=1 | Jump up the tree N levels, moving forwards |
AerialGo |
N=1, v /h |
Jump to the Nth symbol |
AerialTreeOpen[!] |
Expand tree at current location. [!] makes it recursive. |
|
AerialTreeClose[!] |
Collapse tree at current location. [!] makes it recursive. |
|
AerialTreeToggle[!] |
Toggle tree at current location. [!] makes it recursive. |
|
AerialTreeOpenAll |
Open all tree nodes | |
AerialTreeCloseAll |
Collapse all tree nodes | |
AerialTreeSyncFolds |
Sync code folding with current tree state | |
AerialInfo |
Print out debug info related to aerial |
vim.g.aerial = {
-- Priority list of preferred backends for aerial
backends = { "lsp", "treesitter", "markdown" },
-- Enum: persist, close, auto, global
-- persist - aerial window will stay open until closed
-- close - aerial window will close when original file is no longer visible
-- auto - aerial window will stay open as long as there is a visible
-- buffer to attach to
-- global - same as 'persist', and will always show symbols for the current buffer
close_behavior = "auto",
-- Set to false to remove the default keybindings for the aerial buffer
default_bindings = true,
-- Enum: prefer_right, prefer_left, right, left
-- Determines the default direction to open the aerial window. The 'prefer'
-- options will open the window in the other direction *if* there is a
-- different buffer in the way of the preferred direction
default_direction = "prefer_right",
-- A list of all symbols to display. Set to false to display all symbols.
filter_kind = {
"Class",
"Constructor",
"Enum",
"Function",
"Interface",
"Method",
"Struct",
},
-- Enum: split_width, full_width, last, none
-- Determines line highlighting mode when multiple buffers are visible
highlight_mode = "split_width",
-- When jumping to a symbol, highlight the line for this many ms
-- Set to 0 or false to disable
highlight_on_jump = 300,
-- Fold code when folding the tree. Only works when manage_folds is enabled
link_tree_to_folds = true,
-- Fold the tree when folding code. Only works when manage_folds is enabled
link_folds_to_tree = false,
-- Use symbol tree for folding. Set to true or false to enable/disable
-- 'auto' will manage folds if your previous foldmethod was 'manual'
manage_folds = "auto",
-- The maximum width of the aerial window
max_width = 40,
-- The minimum width of the aerial window.
-- To disable dynamic resizing, set this to be equal to max_width
min_width = 10,
-- Set default symbol icons to use Nerd Font icons (see https://www.nerdfonts.com/)
nerd_font = "auto",
-- Whether to open aerial automatically when entering a buffer.
-- Can also be specified per-filetype as a map (see below)
open_automatic = false,
-- If open_automatic is true, only open aerial if the source buffer is at
-- least this long
open_automatic_min_lines = 0,
-- If open_automatic is true, only open aerial if there are at least this many symbols
open_automatic_min_symbols = 0,
-- Set to true to only open aerial at the far right/left of the editor
-- Default behavior opens aerial relative to current window
placement_editor_edge = false,
-- Run this command after jumping to a symbol (false will disable)
post_jump_cmd = "normal! zz",
lsp = {
-- Fetch document symbols when LSP diagnostics change.
-- If you set this to false, you will need to manually fetch symbols
diagnostics_trigger_update = true,
-- Set to false to not update the symbols when there are LSP errors
update_when_errors = true,
},
treesitter = {
-- How long to wait (in ms) after a buffer change before updating
update_delay = 300,
},
markdown = {
-- How long to wait (in ms) after a buffer change before updating
update_delay = 300,
},
}
-- open_automatic can be specified as a filetype map. For example, the below
-- configuration will open automatically in all filetypes except python and rust
vim.g.aerial = {
open_automatic = {
-- use underscore to specify the default behavior
['_'] = true,
python = false,
rust = false,
}
}
-- backends can also be specified as a filetype map.
vim.g.aerial = {
backends = {
-- use underscore to specify the default behavior
['_'] = {'lsp', 'treesitter'},
python = {'treesitter'},
rust = {'lsp'},
}
}
-- filter_kind can also be specified as a filetype map.
vim.g.aerial = {
filter_kind = {
-- use underscore to specify the default behavior
['_'] = {"Class", "Function", "Interface", "Method", "Struct"},
c = {"Namespace", "Function", "Struct", "Enum"}
}
}
-- You can also override the default icons.
vim.g.aerial = {
icons = {
Class = '';
-- The icon to use when a class has been collapsed in the tree
ClassCollapsed = '喇';
Function = '';
Constant = '[c]'
-- The default icon to use when any symbol is collapsed in the tree
Collapsed = '▶';
}
}
Setting options in vimscript works the same way
" You can specify with global variables prefixed with 'aerial_'
let g:aerial_default_direction = 'left'
" Or you can set the g:aerial dict all at once
let g:aerial = {
\ 'default_direction': 'left',
\}
All possible SymbolKind values can be found in the LSP spec. These are the values used for configuring icons, highlight groups, and filtering.
The default keybindings in the aerial window. You can add your own in
ftplugin/aerial.vim
, and remove these by setting g:aerial_default_bindings = 0
.
Key | Command |
---|---|
<CR> |
Jump to the symbol under the cursor |
<C-v> |
Jump to the symbol in a vertical split |
<C-s> |
Jump to the symbol in a horizontal split |
<p> |
Scroll to the symbol (stay in aerial buffer) |
<C-j> |
Go down one line and scroll to that symbol |
<C-k> |
Go up one line and scroll to that symbol |
{ |
Jump to the previous symbol |
} |
Jump to the next symbol |
[[ |
Jump up the tree, moving backwards |
]] |
Jump up the tree, moving forwards |
q |
Close the aerial window |
o /za |
Toggle the symbol under the cursor open/closed |
O /zA |
Recursive toggle the symbol under the cursor open/closed |
l /zo |
Expand the symbol under the cursor |
L /zO |
Recursive expand the symbol under the cursor |
h /zc |
Collapse the symbol under the cursor |
H /zC |
Recursive collapse the symbol under the cursor |
zM |
Collapse all nodes in the tree |
zR |
Expand all nodes in the tree |
zx /zX |
Sync code folding to the tree (useful if they get out of sync) |
If you have telescope
installed, there is an extension for fuzzy finding and jumping to symbols. It
functions similarly to the builtin lsp_document_symbols
picker.
You can activate the picker with :Telescope aerial
If you want the command to autocomplete, you can load the extension first:
require('telescope').load_extension('aerial')
If you have fzf installed you can trigger
fuzzy finding with :call aerial#fzf()
. To create a mapping:
nmap <silent> <leader>ds <cmd>call aerial#fzf()<cr>
There are highlight groups created for each SymbolKind
. There will be one for
the name of the symbol (Aerial<SymbolKind>
, and one for the icon
(Aerial<SymbolKind>Icon
). For example:
hi link AerialClass Type
hi link AerialClassIcon Special
hi link AerialFunction Special
hi AerialFunctionIcon guifg=#cb4b16 guibg=NONE guisp=NONE gui=NONE cterm=NONE
" There's also this group for the cursor position
hi link AerialLine QuickFixLine
Q: I accidentally opened a file into the aerial window and it looks bad. How can I prevent this from happening?
Try installing stickybuf. It was designed to prevent exactly this problem.