this post was submitted on 17 Feb 2024
105 points (99.1% liked)

Unixporn

15467 readers
6 users here now

Unixporn

Submit screenshots of all your *NIX desktops, themes, and nifty configurations, or submit anything else that will make themers happy. Maybe a server running on an Amiga, or a Thinkpad signed by Bjarne Stroustrup? Show the world how pretty your computer can be!

Rules

  1. Post On-Topic
  2. No Defaults
  3. Busy Screenshots
  4. Use High-Quality Images
  5. Include a Details Comment
  6. No NSFW
  7. No Racism or use of racist terms

founded 5 years ago
MODERATORS
 

The wallpaper is just a cropped image from the scans of the games manual found here, note these are spoilers!, Tunic is an absolutely lovely game I have been playing on my Switch and I highly recommend it to people who really enjoy the difficulty of older Nintendo games but want a more polished experience. The way the game integrates the "manual" is really intriguing

For a while I was experimenting with different plasma themes but I landed back on the good old reliable gruvbox dark theme.

Edit: my apologies for not perfectly aligning two of the images in Gimp, I forgot to press the button that aligns them horizontally and not just vertically :p

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Whooping_Seal 2 points 9 months ago* (last edited 9 months ago)

The plugin that brings the "starter" / "welcome" screen when nvim is called without a file is mini.starter, a lua module of the mini plugin. My primary use case for neovim is closer to a feature complete text editor rather than a full fledged IDE, although there definitely is some overlap in my setup.

My set of plugins are roughly as follows

  • vim-plug, I will likely replace this one with packer at some point
  • goyo.vim and limelight.vim for distraction free viewing and editing
  • nnn.nvim to integrate the nnn file manager into neovim
  • mini.nvim according to the Github, "Library of 35+ independent Lua modules improving overall Neovim (version 0.7 and higher) experience with minimal effort. They all share same configuration approaches and general design principles."
    • mini.surround feature rich surround actions
    • mini.statusline a very simple no-frills statusline
    • mini.starter aformentioned start screen
    • mini.pairs inserts the paired character, e.g typing ( will automatically place ) behind the cursors
    • mini.move move selections
    • mini.map has a little map of the file similar to VScode among many other IDEs & text editors
  • barbar.nvim Tabbar plugin
  • a whole bunch of LSP / autocomplete engines / snippets / git commit messages & signs
  • nvim-treesitter for syntax highlighting

And the remaining things in my init.lua file are just keybindings, setting up the plugins, and disabling the swapfile etc. when editing my password secrets in gopass among other 'secret' files