A minimal, stylish and customizable statusline, statuscolumn, and winbar for Neovim
Active Window with macro and search indicators
Neovim, Feline and matching Tmux Theme
Configuration can be found in the following repo within feline.lua.
Feline is a Lua statusline, statuscolumn and winbar plugin that prioritizes speed, customizability and minimalism. It's fast and never gets in your way. Feline only provides you with the necessary tools that you need to configure these UI elements to your liking and avoids feature-bloat. It's also extremely customizable and allows you to configure it in any way you wish to. Feline also has reasonable defaults for those who don't want to configure things and just want a good out of the box experience.
The author of feline.nvim
has stepped down from maintaining this project. This
repository is the plugins new home as per
reddit discussion.
-
Ease-of-use.
-
Complete customizability over every component.
-
Built-in providers such as:
- Vi-mode
- File info
- Cursor position
- Diagnostics (using Neovim's built-in LSP)
- Git branch and diffs (using gitsigns.nvim)
and many more
-
Minimalistic, only provides the bare minimum and allows the user to build their own components very easily.
-
Winbar support.
-
Statuscolumn support.
- Necessary
- Neovim v0.9+
- 24-bit RGB color enabled in Neovim (do
:help 'termguicolors'
in Neovim for more info)
- Optional
- nvim-web-devicons - For icon support
- A patched font - For icon support
- gitsigns.nvim - For git providers
This plugin is available on LuaRocks:
:Rocks install feline.nvim
-- default
{
'freddiehaddad/feline.nvim',
opts = {}
}
-- with extras
{
'freddiehaddad/feline.nvim',
opts = {},
config = function(_, opts)
require('feline').setup()
require('feline').winbar.setup() -- to use winbar
require('feline').statuscolumn.setup() -- to use statuscolumn
require('feline').use_theme() -- to use a custom theme
end
}
use 'freddiehaddad/feline.nvim'
Plug 'freddiehaddad/feline.nvim'
Once you've installed Feline, it's extremely easy to get started with it. If you
don't mind using the default settings, you can just call Feline's setup()
function in your configuration. Like this:
require('feline').setup()
If you want to set up the 'winbar'
alongside the statusline, just add this
line next to the previous line:
require('feline').winbar.setup()
If you want to set up the 'statuscolumn'
alongside the statusline, just add
this line next to the previous line:
require('feline').statuscolumn.setup()
If the default configuration doesn't suit your needs, Feline provides plenty of
customization options enabling you to configure everything exactly how you want.
The only prerequisite is knowing the basics of Lua. Refer to the USAGE
documentation or use :help feline.txt
inside Neovim to read the USAGE docs.
Additionally, you may find it helpful to look at the community configurations.
This can be caused by conflicting plugins modifying the winbar, statuscolumn or statusbar along with Feline. The statusline is a core piece of functionality of Feline and can't easily be disabled. However, the optional components can be. If another plugin is modifying any of these components, then do not enable them in Feline.
If you have an issue that you can't find the fix to in the documentation or want to request a feature you think is absolutely necessary, feel free to open a new Issue and I will try my best to look into it. If you want to contribute to Feline, you can make a Pull Request. For more details, please see: CONTRIBUTING
Now, you might be thinking, why do we need another statusline plugin? We've already got a bunch of brilliant statusline plugins like galaxyline, airline, lualine, expressline etc. and all of them are excellent. So then, why Feline?
I'd like to preface this by saying that what I'm about to say can be (and probably is) very biased and opinionated. Take what's being said here with a grain of salt. All of this is purely my opinion and not a fact by any means, so it's fine to disagree. Moreover, any statement I make here may be incorrect or outdated. In which case, please feel free to open an Issue or Pull Request correcting it.
I think that despite those plugins being neat, each have their own shortcomings. I find those shortcomings as too much to ignore. For example, most of the statusline plugins are not very customizable and the plugins only provide a limited amount of tools and options for customization. Feline, on the other hand, is built for customizability from the ground up. You are not limited in any way by what the plugin provides. You can control every individual component and its location, appearance, everything about it.
Feline is also fast and never gets in your way. It lazy-loads most of its modules, which allows it to start up instantly. Statusline updates with Feline are also blazing fast, which provides for a really smooth experience.
Feline is minimal and only implements the bare minimum required for you to get started. It both expects and invites you to make your own components and providers, because nobody understands you better than yourself. To help you do that, Feline provides all the tools and options you would need while also giving you a solid foundation to build from. One could say that the real goal of Feline is to make creating your own statusline as easy for you as possible, while also providing reasonable defaults that should be enough for most people.
Documentation is another aspect where I found most statusline plugins to be very lacking. Feline is extremely easy to configure and well-documented, which allows anyone to be able to build their statusline as they wish to. It provides example for every option to allow anyone to easily understand the purpose of any option
Lastly, anyone is welcome to contribute to Feline, either by making an Issue or through a Pull Request (see CONTRIBUTING for further information). Any kind of contribution starting from fixing a minor typo to adding a massive new feature is welcome.
And this plugin is named after cats, you won't get that anywhere else.
NOTE: Some of these configurations may be outdated and may need to be changed prior to use. A few of the configurations are missing a link because the link to them was removed due to the link no longer being valid.
Config by rafamadriz (classic):
Config by rafamadriz (slant):
Config by rafamadriz (VSCode):
Config by EdenEast (Colors generated from applied colorscheme)
To share your configuration, start a discussion following this example.
Feline is licensed under GNU GPLv3. For more info, see: LICENSE.md.
The name of this plugin is a silly pun based on the convention of the names of statusline plugins ending with 'line', while also being named after cats. And in a way this statusline is supposed to be as quick as a cat's instincts, so I guess the name fits.