From ea4af5f29c5c28a85256fdd3691d4999169c2587 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Adrian Kummerlaender Date: Thu, 26 Apr 2018 22:37:45 +0200 Subject: Update vim configuration --- .../vim-color-akr/autoload/airline/themes/akr.vim | 100 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 100 insertions(+) create mode 100644 pkgs/vim/conf/vim-color-akr/autoload/airline/themes/akr.vim (limited to 'pkgs/vim/conf/vim-color-akr/autoload/airline/themes') diff --git a/pkgs/vim/conf/vim-color-akr/autoload/airline/themes/akr.vim b/pkgs/vim/conf/vim-color-akr/autoload/airline/themes/akr.vim new file mode 100644 index 0000000..32582c9 --- /dev/null +++ b/pkgs/vim/conf/vim-color-akr/autoload/airline/themes/akr.vim @@ -0,0 +1,100 @@ +" Each theme is contained in its own file and declares variables scoped to the +" file. These variables represent the possible "modes" that airline can +" detect. The mode is the return value of mode(), which gets converted to a +" readable string. The following is a list currently supported modes: normal, +" insert, replace, visual, and inactive. +" +" Each mode can also have overrides. These are small changes to the mode that +" don't require a completely different look. "modified" and "paste" are two +" such supported overrides. These are simply suffixed to the major mode, +" separated by an underscore. For example, "normal_modified" would be normal +" mode where the current buffer is modified. +" +" The theming algorithm is a 2-pass system where the mode will draw over all +" parts of the statusline, and then the override is applied after. This means +" it is possible to specify a subset of the theme in overrides, as it will +" simply overwrite the previous colors. If you want simultaneous overrides, +" then they will need to change different parts of the statusline so they do +" not conflict with each other. +" +" First, let's define an empty dictionary and assign it to the "palette" +" variable. The # is a separator that maps with the directory structure. If +" you get this wrong, Vim will complain loudly. +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette = {} + +" First let's define some arrays. The s: is just a VimL thing for scoping the +" variables to the current script. Without this, these variables would be +" declared globally. Now let's declare some colors for normal mode and add it +" to the dictionary. The array is in the format: +" [ guifg, guibg, ctermfg, ctermbg, opts ]. See "help attr-list" for valid +" values for the "opt" value. +let s:N1 = [ '#212121' , '#909636' , 0 , 10 ] +let s:N2 = [ '#909636' , '#212121' , 10 , 0 ] +let s:N3 = [ '#909636' , '#212121' , 10 , 0 ] +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.normal = airline#themes#generate_color_map(s:N1, s:N2, s:N3) + +" Here we define overrides for when the buffer is modified. This will be +" applied after g:airline#themes#akr#palette.normal, hence why only certain keys are +" declared. +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.normal_modified = { + \ 'airline_c': [ '#212121' , '#352F6A' , 0 , 4 , '' ] , + \ } + +let s:I1 = [ '#E4E093' , '#352F6A' , 3 , 4 ] +let s:I2 = [ '#909636' , '#212121' , 10 , 0 ] +let s:I3 = [ '#909636' , '#212121' , 10 , 0 ] +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.insert = airline#themes#generate_color_map(s:I1, s:I2, s:I3) +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.insert_modified = { + \ 'airline_c': [ '#212121' , '#352F6A' , 0 , 4 , '' ] , + \ } +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.insert_paste = { + \ 'airline_a': [ s:I1[0] , '#352F6A' , s:I1[2] , 4 , '' ] , + \ } + +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.replace = copy(g:airline#themes#akr#palette.insert) +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.replace.airline_a = [ s:I2[0] , '#af0000' , s:I2[2] , 124 , '' ] +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.replace_modified = g:airline#themes#akr#palette.insert_modified + + +let s:V1 = [ '#E4E093' , '#8C3346' , 3 , 1 ] +let s:V2 = [ '#909636' , '#212121' , 10 , 0 ] +let s:V3 = [ '#909636' , '#212121' , 10 , 0 ] +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.visual = airline#themes#generate_color_map(s:V1, s:V2, s:V3) +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.visual_modified = { + \ 'airline_c': [ '#212121' , '#8C3346' , 0 , 1 , '' ] , + \ } + + +let s:IA1 = [ '#605c5a' , '#212121' , 0 , 0 , '' ] +let s:IA2 = [ '#605c5a' , '#212121' , 0 , 0 , '' ] +let s:IA3 = [ '#605c5a' , '#212121' , 0 , 0 , '' ] +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.inactive = airline#themes#generate_color_map(s:IA1, s:IA2, s:IA3) +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.inactive_modified = { + \ 'airline_c': [ '' , '' , 97 , '' , '' ] , + \ } + + +" Accents are used to give parts within a section a slightly different look or +" color. Here we are defining a "red" accent, which is used by the 'readonly' +" part by default. Only the foreground colors are specified, so the background +" colors are automatically extracted from the underlying section colors. What +" this means is that regardless of which section the part is defined in, it +" will be red instead of the section's foreground color. You can also have +" multiple parts with accents within a section. +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.accents = { + \ 'red': [ '#ff0000' , '' , 9 , '' ] + \ } + + +" Here we define the color map for ctrlp. We check for the g:loaded_ctrlp +" variable so that related functionality is loaded iff the user is using +" ctrlp. Note that this is optional, and if you do not define ctrlp colors +" they will be chosen automatically from the existing palette. +if !get(g:, 'loaded_ctrlp', 0) + finish +endif +let g:airline#themes#akr#palette.ctrlp = airline#extensions#ctrlp#generate_color_map( + \ [ '#909636' , '#212121' , 10 , 0 , '' ], + \ [ '#909636' , '#212121' , 10 , 0 , '' ], + \ [ '#212121' , '#909636' , 0 , 10 , 'bold' ]) + -- cgit v1.2.3