This was a step I took from the plugin this colorscheme is forked from
(romainl/vim-rnb) but it turns out that it causes problems and doesn't
actually solve anything.
Taking out this line fixed a highlight group being cleared when it
should not have been, although interestingly not _all_ highlight groups
are being cleared consistently. So its just introducing inconsistency
into this plugin which I do not want.
SEE glepnir/galaxyline.nvim#88
This adds instructions on how to override highlight groups from `init.vim`,
as it seems this cannot be done with your average Neovim colorscheme.
Rather than just using `:hi!` in the `init.vim` (as one might be tempted
to do), it describes a process of adding the commands to an autocommand
event which will run them when the time is right.
SEE #9
This was caused by the index of `vim.g.terminal_color_X` beginning at 1
rather than 0. I thought initially that this would be translated by the
Lua metatable but I guess not!
CLOSES#8
For some reason, `tomlFloat` was linked to `Number`. There is a `Float`
highlight group dedicated for that.
Additionally, the `tomlDate` group was linked to `Constant`. I don't
think that's necessarily a fitting group, since a date is a literal,
and while literals _are_ constants it does not seem fitting. I gave it
the `Special` link instead, since `Special` is supposed to be used
whenever there is an "other" type in a language.
There are some more changes which should be made in order to maintain
consistency across environments. Directory is now used for file names,
and SpecialComment is used for the headers.
There were help syntax highlights scattered around. THis moves them to
one, dedicated spot.
Additionally, there were some incorrect settings for markdown help
blocks, and they were corrected.
The appearance of a lone `{}` was perhaps confusing to some. Behind the
scenes, whenever an attribute is missing from a table, it will be
defaulted to 'None'. Transiently, in using `{}` we are able to shortcut
directly to these defaults.
However, it does not read well. This commit introduces a constant that
makes it clear what is happening.
When using the self-referencial syntax to create new groups out of the
predefined attributes of another:
```lua
Foo = function(self) return {fg=self.Foo.fg, bg=self.Bar.bg} end
```
If either `Foo` or `Bar` were a highlight link, they would fail to be
resolved. This is now fixed.
One of this template's goals is to be visible in any range of blue
light. The other goal of the template is to be distinguishable
semantically. This commit brings us closer to that goal.
This updates the links to two plugins:
1. java-syntax.vim
2. rust.vim
java-syntax.vim hasn't had a commit in a few months, and is pending a
PR from me which will enable syntax highlighting of delimiters. For the
time being, it would be better to use that.
rust.vim has made the decision to not allow highlighting of user types,
and while I understand their reasoning, I completely disagree. For that
reason I will maintain the fork and merge any changes from upstream.