A fork of the amazing shaunsingh/nord.nvim theme with some tweaks to better suit my taste.
These tweaks include darkening some background colors and brightening some foreground colors for better contrast.
Anything below this text is from the original README (most of it is relevant, and you can compare screenshots!)
Neovim theme based off of the Nord Color Palette.
Nord.nvim is meant to be a modern colorscheme written in lua for NeoVim that supports a lot of the new features added to NeoVim like built-in LSP and TreeSitter
-
Supported plugins:
- TreeSitter
- LSP Diagnostics
- Lsp Saga
- LSP Trouble
- Git Gutter
- git-messenger
- Git Signs
- Telescope.nvim
- Nvim-Tree.lua
- NERDTree
- vim-which-key
- Indent-Blankline.nvim
- Dashboard
- BufferLine
- Lualine
- Neogit
- vim-sneak
- lightspeed.nvim
- barbar.nvim
- nvim-notify
- leap.nvim
- mini.nvim
- aerial.nvim
- headlines.nvim
- rainbow-delimiters.nvim
-
Ability to change background on sidebar-like windows like Nvim-Tree, Packer, terminal etc.
- Neovim >= 0.5.0
Install via your favourite package manager:
" If you are using Vim-Plug
Plug 'shaunsingh/nord.nvim'-- If you are using Packer
use 'shaunsingh/nord.nvim'Enable the colorscheme:
"Vim-Script:
colorscheme nord--Lua:
vim.cmd[[colorscheme nord]]To enable the nord theme for Lualine, simply specify it in your lualine settings:
require('lualine').setup {
options = {
-- ... your lualine config
theme = 'nord'
-- ... your lualine config
}
}| Option | Default | Description |
|---|---|---|
| nord_contrast | false |
Make sidebars and popup menus like nvim-tree and telescope have a different background |
| nord_borders | false |
Enable the border between verticaly split windows visable |
| nord_disable_background | false |
Disable the setting of background color so that NeoVim can use your terminal background |
| nord_cursorline_transparent | false |
Set the cursorline transparent/visible |
| nord_enable_sidebar_background | false |
Re-enables the background of the sidebar if you disabled the background of everything |
| nord_italic | true |
enables/disables italics |
| nord_uniform_diff_background | false |
enables/disables colorful backgrounds when used in diff mode |
| nord_bold | true |
enables/disables bold |
-- Example config in lua
vim.g.nord_contrast = true
vim.g.nord_borders = false
vim.g.nord_disable_background = false
vim.g.nord_italic = false
vim.g.nord_uniform_diff_background = true
vim.g.nord_bold = false
-- Load the colorscheme
require('nord').set()" Example config in Vim-Script
let g:nord_contrast = v:true
let g:nord_borders = v:false
let g:nord_disable_background = v:false
let g:nord_italic = v:false
let g:nord_uniform_diff_background = v:true
let g:nord_bold = v:false
" Load the colorscheme
colorscheme nordTo support headlines, you should add these code to your settings:
require("headlines").setup({
markdown = {
headline_highlights = {
"Headline1",
"Headline2",
"Headline3",
"Headline4",
"Headline5",
"Headline6",
},
codeblock_highlight = "CodeBlock",
dash_highlight = "Dash",
quote_highlight = "Quote",
},
})
It should look like this
To support BufferLine, you can add these code to your settings:
local highlights = require("nord").bufferline.highlights({
italic = true,
bold = true,
})
require("bufferline").setup({
options = {
separator_style = "thin",
},
highlights = highlights,
})
It should look like this
or you want to use slant separatorlocal highlights = require("nord").bufferline.highlights({
italic = true,
bold = true,
fill = "#181c24"
})
require("bufferline").setup({
options = {
separator_style = "slant",
},
highlights = highlights,
})
The default setting of bufferline highlights is
{
fill = colors.nord0_gui,
indicator = colors.nord9_gui,
bg = colors.nord0_gui,
buffer_bg = colors.nord0_gui,
buffer_bg_selected = colors.nord1_gui,
buffer_bg_visible = "#2A2F3A",
bold = true,
italic = true,
}