I’d like to make my statusline in vim more informative and interesting, and for that I need some ideas. How did you customize your statusline?
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5@paxdiablo: Sometimes it's worth spending the time to configure the tool to your need so you can make better use of it and thus save time while working. – DarkDust Mar 21 '11 at 8:29
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11This should be a community wiki as there is no correct answer. – Randy Morris Mar 21 '11 at 12:27
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5This isn't about opinions so much as leveraging the experience and expertise of more learned individuals. Questioner is looking for information that he can't guess, not asking for individuals to compete about what's best. Answers will generate a number of options which he didn't have before. Just because a question has more than one answer doesn't mean it's not a technical expertise based question. This question fits the SO format well and should remain open. – NeilG Aug 30 '19 at 5:57
Edit:-
Note vim-airline is gaining some traction as the new vimscript option as powerline has gone python.
Seems powerline is where it is at these days:-
Normal status line
Customised status lines for other plugins (e.g. ctrlp)
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3@Gavin how can I change to your power line segments? could u update some default segment modification scripts? cheers – Jerry Gao May 8 '12 at 8:22
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@Gavin I, too, would appreciate if you could share how you included things like your branch in vim-powerline – Eric Hu Sep 11 '12 at 19:12
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1Nothing special done, from: github.com/Lokaltog/vim-powerline#troubleshooting just make sure you have "let g:Powerline_symbols = 'fancy'" in your vimrc file and have patched fonts installed. – Gavin Gilmour Sep 16 '12 at 10:20
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this is a nice plugin. But my scrolling performance when i first open a file is very very bad because of this. – Ahmed Aeon Axan Apr 14 '13 at 20:06
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2@AhmedAeonAxan try airline, it starts fast (pure vimscript). And takes way less effort to setup, especially with Vundle or Pathogen. And once you install powerline font it more or less look like airline. github.com/Lokaltog/powerline-fonts – snowbound Apr 23 '14 at 13:46
Here's mine:
set statusline=
set statusline +=%1*\ %n\ %* "buffer number
set statusline +=%5*%{&ff}%* "file format
set statusline +=%3*%y%* "file type
set statusline +=%4*\ %<%F%* "full path
set statusline +=%2*%m%* "modified flag
set statusline +=%1*%=%5l%* "current line
set statusline +=%2*/%L%* "total lines
set statusline +=%1*%4v\ %* "virtual column number
set statusline +=%2*0x%04B\ %* "character under cursor
And here's the colors I used:
hi User1 guifg=#eea040 guibg=#222222
hi User2 guifg=#dd3333 guibg=#222222
hi User3 guifg=#ff66ff guibg=#222222
hi User4 guifg=#a0ee40 guibg=#222222
hi User5 guifg=#eeee40 guibg=#222222
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1c is actually the byte count, even if it is sometimes called column count even in vim help. You can use v to get what is usually meant by column number. – Ludwig Weinzierl Jan 3 '12 at 17:26
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11I love the clarity of the commenting each appended value on it's own line. If I had done that 7 years ago, I wouldn't have thrown it out when I did my last clean OS install. – Bruno Bronosky Mar 20 '13 at 2:32
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Sweeet! One thing I missing using this is the line that separates the splited session – Julio Marins Nov 15 '16 at 23:32
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1@trusktr Note that
guifg
andguibg
are forgvim
. If you are runningvim
in a terminal, tryctermfg
andctermbg
instead. You will also need different colors, the numbers 1-16 or 1-256 depending on how many colors you have enabled in vim. Corresponding colors for each number. – joelostblom Feb 11 '17 at 12:19
This is the one I use:
set statusline=
set statusline+=%7*\[%n] "buffernr
set statusline+=%1*\ %<%F\ "File+path
set statusline+=%2*\ %y\ "FileType
set statusline+=%3*\ %{''.(&fenc!=''?&fenc:&enc).''} "Encoding
set statusline+=%3*\ %{(&bomb?\",BOM\":\"\")}\ "Encoding2
set statusline+=%4*\ %{&ff}\ "FileFormat (dos/unix..)
set statusline+=%5*\ %{&spelllang}\%{HighlightSearch()}\ "Spellanguage & Highlight on?
set statusline+=%8*\ %=\ row:%l/%L\ (%03p%%)\ "Rownumber/total (%)
set statusline+=%9*\ col:%03c\ "Colnr
set statusline+=%0*\ \ %m%r%w\ %P\ \ "Modified? Readonly? Top/bot.
Highlight on? function:
function! HighlightSearch()
if &hls
return 'H'
else
return ''
endif
endfunction
Colors (adapted from ligh2011.vim):
hi User1 guifg=#ffdad8 guibg=#880c0e
hi User2 guifg=#000000 guibg=#F4905C
hi User3 guifg=#292b00 guibg=#f4f597
hi User4 guifg=#112605 guibg=#aefe7B
hi User5 guifg=#051d00 guibg=#7dcc7d
hi User7 guifg=#ffffff guibg=#880c0e gui=bold
hi User8 guifg=#ffffff guibg=#5b7fbb
hi User9 guifg=#ffffff guibg=#810085
hi User0 guifg=#ffffff guibg=#094afe
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2Nice, this avoids the need to have the fancy status line plugins atleast for my use case, eye candy :) – Nishant Jun 29 '16 at 9:48
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1
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I tried putting this after any
colorscheme
was set, but I just see a dual-tone statusline. – trusktr Feb 5 '17 at 6:13 -
@trusktr, Not easy to explain....You need the put the first 2 blocks in your vimrc file and the colors block in your current colorscheme file. You can find your current colorscheme file with this command:
:colorscheme
– Reman Feb 5 '17 at 15:54 -
1Your highlight search would be shorter (without any function) just by using ternary operator like this ->
echo &hls ? 'H' : ''
in my case:let &stl.="%6*%01(%{&hls?'H':''}%)%0* "
– SergioAraujo Feb 21 '18 at 10:35
What I've found useful is to know which copy/paste buffer (register) is currently active: %{v:register}
. Otherwise, my complete status line looks almost exactly like the standard line.
:set statusline=%<%f\ %h%m%r\ %y%=%{v:register}\ %-14.(%l,%c%V%)\ %P
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2
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What does it mean for a register to be active? My (bad) understanding of registers is that they were basically clipboards to store text. – Roymunson Jul 12 '19 at 21:45
Some times less is more, do you really need to know the percentage through the file you are when coding? What about the type of file?
set statusline=%F%m%r%h%w\
set statusline+=%{fugitive#statusline()}\
set statusline+=[%{strlen(&fenc)?&fenc:&enc}]
set statusline+=\ [line\ %l\/%L]
set statusline+=%{rvm#statusline()}
I also prefer minimal color as not to distract from the code.
Taken from: https://github.com/krisleech/vimfiles
Note: rvm#statusline
is Ruby specific and fugitive#statusline
is git specific.
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1
I currently use this statusbar settings:
set laststatus=2
set statusline=\ %f%m%r%h%w\ %=%({%{&ff}\|%{(&fenc==\"\"?&enc:&fenc).((exists(\"+bomb\")\ &&\ &bomb)?\",B\":\"\")}%k\|%Y}%)\ %([%l,%v][%p%%]\ %)
My complete .vimrc file: http://gabriev82.altervista.org/projects/vim-configuration/
set statusline=%<%f%m\ \[%{&ff}:%{&fenc}:%Y]\ %{getcwd()}\ \ \[%{strftime('%Y/%b/%d\ %a\ %I:%M\ %p')}\]\ %=\ Line:%l\/%L\ Column:%c%V\ %P
This is mine, give as a suggestion