Vim / NeoVim theme that is a marriage of Tokyo Night and Nord Theme. And they went on honeymoon to Kyoto I guess. Dark, elegant, and easy on the eyes.
A dark, elegant, and easy on the eyes Neovim / Vim theme, based on Tokyo Night color palette, with support for bunch of plugins.
I'm aware that there already is a Tokyo Night NeoVim theme, but I find it a little too flashy. So, I decided to make my own, that would be closer to Enki's SublimeText Theme, and easier for the eyes. Added bonus is that this theme works in NeoVim as well as in regular Vim.
Colorscheme inspired by Enki Theme variant Tokyo Night, made using Tokyo Night color pallette. The theme's code is based on Nord Theme (because I suck at Lua and VimScript + Nord's tame color combinations is what I needed, at least initally).
Plug 'shrikecode/kyotonight.vim'
use 'shrikecode/kyotonight.vim'
All supported config options are basically ported from Nord Theme, below
is list of them with default values. Make sure these are configured
before calling colorscheme kyotonight
.
VimScript
let g:kyotonight_bold = 1
let g:kyotonight_underline = 1
let g:kyotonight_italic = 0
let g:kyotonight_italic_comments = 0
let g:kyotonight_uniform_status_lines = 0
let g:kyotonight_cursor_line_number_background = 0
let g:kyotonight_uniform_diff_background = 0
let g:kyotonight_lualine_bold = 1
colorscheme kyotonight
Lua
local g = vim.g
g.kyotonight_bold = 1
g.kyotonight_underline = 1
g.kyotonight_italic = 0
g.kyotonight_italic_comments = 0
g.kyotonight_uniform_status_lines = 0
g.kyotonight_bold_vertical_split_line = 0
g.kyotonight_cursor_line_number_background = 0
g.kyotonight_uniform_diff_background = 0
g.kyotonight_lualine_bold = 1
vim.cmd[[colorscheme kyotonight]]
Lua
require('lualine').setup {
options = {
theme = 'kyotonight'
}
}
Normally Lightline theme should be applied automatically if it isn't set in your configuration already.
VimScript
let g:lightline = {'colorscheme': 'kyotonight'}
Lua
vim.g.lightline = {colorscheme = 'kyotonight'}
As with Lightline, the theme should be applied together with colorscheme. You might set it manually as well.
VimScript
let g:airline_theme='kyotonight'
Lua
vim.g.airline_theme='kyotonight'
All of the theme colors can be overriden by setting correct variable.
Examples
VimScript
let g:kyotonight#red = ['#fff000', '1'] " hex color, then terminal color number
Lua
vim.g['kyotonight#red'] = {'#fff000', '1'} -- hex color, then terminal color number
List of color variables
VimScript
g:kyotonight#none
g:kyotonight#cl
g:kyotonight#hl
g:kyotonight#black0
g:kyotonight#bg
g:kyotonight#black1
g:kyotonight#grey0
g:kyotonight#grey1
g:kyotonight#fg
g:kyotonight#cream
g:kyotonight#cyan1
g:kyotonight#teal
g:kyotonight#blue1
g:kyotonight#blue0
g:kyotonight#cyan0
g:kyotonight#red
g:kyotonight#orange
g:kyotonight#yellow
g:kyotonight#green
g:kyotonight#magenta
Lua
vim.g['kyotonight#none']
vim.g['kyotonight#cl']
vim.g['kyotonight#hl']
vim.g['kyotonight#black0']
vim.g['kyotonight#bg']
vim.g['kyotonight#black1']
vim.g['kyotonight#grey0']
vim.g['kyotonight#grey1']
vim.g['kyotonight#fg']
vim.g['kyotonight#cream']
vim.g['kyotonight#cyan1']
vim.g['kyotonight#teal']
vim.g['kyotonight#blue1']
vim.g['kyotonight#blue0']
vim.g['kyotonight#cyan0']
vim.g['kyotonight#red']
vim.g['kyotonight#orange']
vim.g['kyotonight#yellow']
vim.g['kyotonight#green']
vim.g['kyotonight#magenta']