Warm Green Theme for Neovim and Beyond
bamboo.nvim
Dark green theme for Neovim $\ge$ 0.9 forked from OneDark.nvim. Theme written in Lua with Tree-sitter syntax highlighting and LSP semantic highlighting.
_For earlier versions of Neovim and/or Tree-sitter, pin the color scheme to this commit.
Features
- Blue and purple are used sparingly to help reduce eye strain
- Red, yellow, and green are prioritized more for the same reason
- Comments are colored specifically to be readable and have good contrast with
- Many semantic highlighting tokens are handled and colored nicely
- Light and dark variants
vim.o.background = 'light' (can also use
set background=light)
- Multiple plugins are supported with hand-picked, proper colors
- Colors, highlights, and code style of the theme can be customized as you like
- Integration with other applications (see the
extras
directory)
Regular (vulgaris)
Click to toggle previews
Greener (multiplex)
Click to toggle previews
Light Mode (light)
Click to toggle previews
[!NOTE]>
The above screenshots utilize Tree-sitter parsers forlua,luap,
comment,markdown,markdown_inline,mermaid, andlatex.
The lua file screenshot also uses a custom query to highlight the vim global as a builtin variable rather than a constant, changing it from pink to red. If you want this behavior, add the following to a queries/lua/highlights.scm file in your config directory (the extends comment is necessary):
; extends
((identifier) @variable.builtin
(#eq? @variable.builtin "vim")
(#set! "priority" 128))
Installation
Install via your favorite package manager:
-- Using lazy.nvim
{
'ribru17/bamboo.nvim',
lazy = false,
priority = 1000,
config = function()
require('bamboo').setup {
-- optional configuration here
}
require('bamboo').load()
end,
},
[!TIP]>
For best results, use (rounded) borders for float windows (or change their
background to a slightly different color than the main editor background).
Configuration
Enable theme
-- Lua
require('bamboo').load()
" Vim
colorscheme bamboo
Default Configuration
-- Lua
require('bamboo').setup {
-- Main options --
-- NOTE: to use the light theme, set vim.o.background = 'light'
style = 'vulgaris', -- Choose between 'vulgaris' (regular), 'multiplex' (greener), and 'light'
togglestylekey = nil, -- Keybind to toggle theme style. Leave it nil to disable it, or set it to a string, e.g. "<leader>ts"
togglestylelist = { 'vulgaris', 'multiplex', 'light' }, -- List of styles to toggle between
transparent = false, -- Show/hide background
dim_inactive = false, -- Dim inactive windows/buffers
term_colors = true, -- Change terminal color as per the selected theme style
ending_tildes = false, -- Show the end-of-buffer tildes. By default they are hidden
cmpitemkindreverse = false, -- reverse item kind highlights in cmp menu
-- Change code style --- -- Options are anything that can be passed to the vim.api.nvimsethl table -- You can also configure styles with a string, e.g. keywords = 'italic,bold' code_style = { comments = { italic = true }, conditionals = { italic = true }, keywords = {}, functions = {}, namespaces = { italic = true }, parameters = { italic = true }, strings = {}, variables = {}, },
-- Lualine options -- lualine = { transparent = false, -- lualine center bar transparency },
-- Custom Highlights -- colors = {}, -- Override default colors highlights = {}, -- Override highlight groups
-- Plugins Config -- diagnostics = { darker = false, -- darker colors for diagnostic undercurl = true, -- use undercurl instead of underline for diagnostics background = true, -- use background color for virtual text }, }
Vimscript Configuration
Bamboo can be configured also with Vimscript, using the global dictionary g:bamboo_config. NOTE: when setting boolean values use v:true and v:false instead of 0 and 1.
Example:
let g:bamboo_config = {
\ 'ending_tildes': v:true,
\ 'diagnostics': {
\ 'darker': v:true,
\ 'background': v:false,
\ },
\ }
colorscheme bamboo
Customization
Example using custom colors and highlights:
require('bamboo').setup {
colors = {
bright_orange = '#ff8800', -- define a new color
green = '#00ffaa', -- redefine an existing color
},
highlights = {
-- make comments blend nicely with background, similar to other color schemes
['@comment'] = { fg = '$grey' },
['@keyword'] = { fg = '$green' }, ['@string'] = { fg = '$bright_orange', bg = '#00ff00', fmt = 'bold' }, ['@function'] = { fg = '#0000ff', sp = '$cyan', fmt = 'underline,italic' }, ['@function.builtin'] = { fg = '#0059ff' }, }, }
Note that Tree-sitter keywords have been changed after Neovim version 0.8 and onwards. TS prefix is trimmed and lowercase words are separated with ..
The old way before neovim 0.8 looks like this. All highlights used in this colorscheme can be found in this file.
require('bamboo').setup {
colors = {
bright_orange = '#ff8800', -- define a new color
green = '#00ffaa', -- redefine an existing color
},
highlights = {
TSKeyword = { fg = '$green' },
TSString = { fg = '$bright_orange', bg = '#00ff00', fmt = 'bold' },
TSFunction = { fg = '#0000ff', sp = '$cyan', fmt = 'underline,italic' },
TSFuncBuiltin = { fg = '#0059ff' },
},
}
Plugins Supported
- Tree-sitter
- LSPDiagnostics
- NvimTree
- Telescope
- WhichKey
- Dashboard
- Lualine
- GitGutter
- GitSigns
- VimFugitive
- DiffView
- Hop
- Mini
- Neo-tree
- Neotest
- Barbecue
- ALE
- barbar.nvim
- nvim-cmp
- coc.nvim
- Indent Blankline
- dashboard-nvim
- aerial.nvim
- symbols-outline.nvim
- Every major rainbow bracket plugin
- Much more!