1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677787980818283848586878889909192939495969798 |
- *dev_theme.txt* Nvim
- NVIM REFERENCE MANUAL
- Nvim colorscheme guidelines *dev-theme*
- Style guidelines for developing Nvim's default colorscheme.
- License: CC-By 3.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
- Type |gO| to see the table of contents.
- ==============================================================================
- Design
- - Be "Neovim branded", i.e. have mostly "green-blue" feel plus one or two
- colors reserved for very occasional user attention.
- - Be oriented for 'termguicolors' (true colors) while being extra minimal for
- 'notermguicolors' (16 colors) as fallback.
- - Be accessible, i.e. have high enough contrast ratio (as defined in
- https://www.w3.org/TR/2008/REC-WCAG20-20081211/#contrast-ratiodef).
- This means to have value at least 7 for |hl-Normal| and 4.5 for some common
- cases (|hl-Visual|, `Comment` with set 'cursorline', colored syntax, `Diff*`,
- |hl-Search|).
- - Be suitable for dark and light backgrounds via exchange of dark and light
- palettes.
- - Be usable, i.e. provide enough visual feedback for common objects.
- ==============================================================================
- Palettes
- - There are two separate palettes: dark and light. They all contain the same
- set of colors exported as `NvimDark*` and `NvimLight*` colors respectively.
- - The dark palette is used for background in the dark color scheme and for
- foreground in the light color scheme; and vice versa. This introduces
- recognizable visual system without too standing out.
- - Actual computation of palettes should be done in a perceptually uniform
- color space. Oklch is a good choice.
- - Each palette has the following colors (descriptions are for dark background;
- reverse for light one):
- - Four shades of colored "cold" greys for general UI.
- - Dark ones (from darkest to lightest) are reserved as background for
- |hl-NormalFloat| (considered as "black"), |hl-Normal| (background),
- |hl-CursorLine|, |hl-Visual|.
- - Light ones (also from darkest to lightest) are reserved for
- `Comment`, |hl-StatusLine|/|hl-TabLine|, |hl-Normal| (foreground),
- and color considered as "white".
- - Six colors to provide enough terminal colors: red, yellow, green, cyan,
- blue, magenta.
- They should have (reasonably) similar lightness and chroma to make them
- visually coherent. Lightness should be as equal to the palette's basic grey
- (which is used for |hl-Normal|) as possible. They should have (reasonably)
- different hues to make them visually separable.
- - For 16 colors:
- - Greys are not used and are replaced with the foreground and background
- colors of the terminal emulator.
- - Non-grey colors fall back to terminal colors as ordered in ANSI codes
- (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ANSI_escape_code#3-bit_and_4-bit),
- that is red (1, 9), green (2, 10), yellow (3, 11), blue (4, 12),
- magenta (5, 13), cyan (6, 14).
- To increase contrast, colors 1-6 are used for light background and 9-14
- for dark background.
- ==============================================================================
- Highlight groups
- Use:
- - Grey shades for general UI according to their design.
- - Bold text for keywords (`Statement` highlight group). This is an important
- choice to increase accessibility for people with color deficiencies, as it
- doesn't rely on actual color.
- - Green for strings, |hl-DiffAdd| (as background), |hl-DiagnosticOk|, and some
- minor text UI elements.
- - Cyan as main syntax color, i.e. for function usage (`Function` highlight
- group), |hl-DiffText|, |hl-DiagnosticInfo|, and some minor text UI elements.
- - Red to generally mean high user attention, i.e. errors; in particular for
- |hl-ErrorMsg|, |hl-DiffDelete|, |hl-DiagnosticError|.
- - Yellow very sparingly to mean mild user attention, i.e. warnings. That is,
- |hl-DiagnosticWarn| and |hl-WarningMsg|.
- - Blue very sparingly as |hl-DiagnosticHint| and some additional important
- syntax group (like `Identifier`).
- - Magenta very carefully (if at all).
- In case of 16 colors:
- - Rely on the assumption "Background color can be used as background; other
- colors can be used as foreground". This means that in any
- foreground/background combination there should be background and one
- non-background color.
- - Use 0 (black) or 15 (bright white) as foreground for non-grey background,
- depending on whether normal background is light or dark.
- vim:tw=78:ts=8:et:ft=help:norl:
|