See more details in Features and help file.
⦿ This is a part of mini.nvim library. Please use this link if you want to mention this module.
⦿ All contributions (issues, pull requests, discussions, etc.) are done inside of 'mini.nvim'.
⦿ See the repository page to learn about common design principles and configuration recipes.
If you want to help this project grow but don't know where to start, check out contributing guides of 'mini.nvim' or leave a Github star for 'mini.nvim' project and/or any its standalone Git repositories.
demo-diff.mp4
-
Visualize difference between buffer text and its configurable reference interactively (updates as you type). This is done per line showing whether it is inside added, changed, or deleted part of difference (called hunk). Visualization can be with customizable colored signs or line numbers.
-
Special toggleable overlay view with more hunk details inside text area.
-
Completely configurable per buffer source of reference text used to keep it up to date and define interactions with it. By default uses buffer's file content in Git index.
-
Configurable mappings to manage diff hunks:
- Apply and reset hunks inside region (selected visually or with a dot-repeatable operator).
- "Hunk range under cursor" textobject to be used as operator target.
- Navigate to first/previous/next/last hunk.
What it doesn't do:
- Provide functionality to work directly with Git outside of visualizing and staging (applying) hunks with (default) Git source. In particular, unstaging hunks is not supported.
To read more information, see these tags in help file:
*MiniDiff-overview*
*MiniDiff-source-specification*
*MiniDiff-hunk-specification*
*MiniDiff-diff-summary*
The "diff" (short for "difference") is a result of computing how two text strings differ from one another. This is done on per line basis, i.e. the goal is to compute sequences of lines common to both files, interspersed with groups of differing lines (called "hunks").
Although computing diff is a general concept (used on its own, in Git, etc.), this module computes difference between current text in a buffer and some reference text which is kept up to date specifically for that buffer. For example, default reference text is computed as file content in Git index. This can be customized in config.source
.
- When entering proper (not already enabled, valid, showing text) buffer, it is attempted to be enabled for diff processing.
- During enabling, attempt attaching the source. This should set up how reference text is kept up to date.
- On every text change, diff computation is scheduled in debounced fashion after customizable delay (200 ms by default).
- After the diff is computed, do the following:
- Update visualization based on configurable style: either by placing colored text in sign column or coloring line numbers. Colors for both styles are defined per hunk type in corresponding
MiniDiffSign*
highlight group and sign text for "sign" style can be configured inconfig.view.signs
. - Update overlay view (if it is enabled).
- Update
vim.b.minidiff_summary
andvim.b.minidiff_summary_string
buffer-local variables. These can be used, for example, in statusline. - Trigger
MiniDiffUpdated
User
event. See*MiniDiff-diff-summary*
help tag for example of how to use it.
- Update visualization based on configurable style: either by placing colored text in sign column or coloring line numbers. Colors for both styles are defined per hunk type in corresponding
Notes:
- Use
:edit
to reset (disable and re-enable) current buffer.
Along with basic visualization, there is a special view called "overlay". Although it is meant for temporary overview of diff details and can be manually toggled via MiniDiff.toggle_overlay()
, text can be changed with overlay reacting accordingly.
It shows more diff details inside text area:
-
Added buffer lines are highlighted with
MiniDiffOverAdd
highlight group. -
Deleted reference lines are shown as virtual text and highlighted with
MiniDiffOverDelete
highlight group. -
Changed reference lines are shown as virtual text and highlighted with
MiniDiffOverChange
highlight group."Change" hunks with equal number of buffer and reference lines have special treatment and show "word diff". Reference line is shown next to its buffer counterpart and only changed parts of both lines are highlighted with
MiniDiffOverChange
. The rest of reference line hasMiniDiffOverContext
highlighting.This usually is the case when
config.options.linematch
is enabled.
This module provides mappings for common actions with diffs, like:
- Apply and reset hunks.
- "Hunk range under cursor" textobject.
- Go to first/previous/next/last hunk range.
Examples:
vip
followed bygh
/gH
applies/resets hunks inside current paragraph. Same can be achieved in operator formghip
/gHip
, which has the advantage of being dot-repeatable.gh_
/gH_
applies/resets current line (even if it is not a full hunk).ghgh
/gHgh
applies/resets hunk range under cursor.dgh
deletes hunk range under cursor.[H
/[h
/]h
/]H
navigate cursor to the first / previous / next / last hunk range of the current buffer.
Mappings for some functionality are assumed to be done manually. See tag *MiniDiff.operator()*
in help file.
Each enabled buffer has the following buffer-local variables which can be used in custom statusline to show an overview of hunks in current buffer:
-
vim.b.minidiff_summary
is a table with the following fields:source_name
- name of the source.n_ranges
- number of hunk ranges (sequences of contiguous hunks).add
- number of added lines.change
- number of changed lines.delete
- number of deleted lines.
-
vim.b.minidiff_summary_string
is a string representation of summary with a fixed format. It is expected to be used as is. To achieve different formatting, usevim.b.minidiff_summary
to construct one. The best way to do this is by overridingvim.b.minidiff_summary_string
in the callback forMiniDiffUpdated
event:local format_summary = function(data) local summary = vim.b[data.buf].minidiff_summary local t = {} if summary.add > 0 then table.insert(t, ' ' .. summary.add) end if summary.change > 0 then table.insert(t, '~' .. summary.change) end if summary.delete > 0 then table.insert(t, '-' .. summary.delete) end vim.b[data.buf].minidiff_summary_string = table.concat(t, ' ') end local au_opts = { pattern = 'MiniDiffUpdated', callback = format_summary } vim.api.nvim_create_autocmd('User', au_opts)
This plugin can be installed as part of 'mini.nvim' library (recommended) or as a standalone Git repository.
There are two branches to install from:
main
(default, recommended) will have latest development version of plugin. All changes since last stable release should be perceived as being in beta testing phase (meaning they already passed alpha-testing and are moderately settled).stable
will be updated only upon releases with code tested during public beta-testing phase inmain
branch.
Here are code snippets for some common installation methods (use only one):
With mini.deps
Github repo | Branch | Code snippet |
---|---|---|
'mini.nvim' library | Main | Follow recommended 'mini.deps' installation |
Stable | ||
Standalone plugin | Main | add('echasnovski/mini.diff') |
Stable | add({ source = 'echasnovski/mini.diff', checkout = 'stable' }) |
With folke/lazy.nvim
Github repo | Branch | Code snippet |
---|---|---|
'mini.nvim' library | Main | { 'echasnovski/mini.nvim', version = false }, |
Stable | { 'echasnovski/mini.nvim', version = '*' }, |
|
Standalone plugin | Main | { 'echasnovski/mini.diff', version = false }, |
Stable | { 'echasnovski/mini.diff', version = '*' }, |
With junegunn/vim-plug
Github repo | Branch | Code snippet |
---|---|---|
'mini.nvim' library | Main | Plug 'echasnovski/mini.nvim' |
Stable | Plug 'echasnovski/mini.nvim', { 'branch': 'stable' } |
|
Standalone plugin | Main | Plug 'echasnovski/mini.diff' |
Stable | Plug 'echasnovski/mini.diff', { 'branch': 'stable' } |
Important: don't forget to call require('mini.diff').setup()
to enable its functionality.
Note: if you are on Windows, there might be problems with too long file paths (like error: unable to create file <some file name>: Filename too long
). Try doing one of the following:
- Enable corresponding git global config value:
git config --system core.longpaths true
. Then try to reinstall.
-- No need to copy this inside `setup()`. Will be used automatically.
{
-- Options for how hunks are visualized
view = {
-- Visualization style. Possible values are 'sign' and 'number'.
-- Default: 'number' if line numbers are enabled, 'sign' otherwise.
style = vim.go.number and 'number' or 'sign',
-- Signs used for hunks with 'sign' view
signs = { add = '▒', change = '▒', delete = '▒' },
-- Priority of used visualization extmarks
priority = 199,
},
-- Source for how reference text is computed/updated/etc
-- Uses content from Git index by default
source = nil,
-- Delays (in ms) defining asynchronous processes
delay = {
-- How much to wait before update following every text change
text_change = 200,
},
-- Module mappings. Use `''` (empty string) to disable one.
mappings = {
-- Apply hunks inside a visual/operator region
apply = 'gh',
-- Reset hunks inside a visual/operator region
reset = 'gH',
-- Hunk range textobject to be used inside operator
-- Works also in Visual mode if mapping differs from apply and reset
textobject = 'gh',
-- Go to hunk range in corresponding direction
goto_first = '[H',
goto_prev = '[h',
goto_next = ']h',
goto_last = ']H',
},
-- Various options
options = {
-- Diff algorithm. See `:h vim.diff()`.
algorithm = 'histogram',
-- Whether to use "indent heuristic". See `:h vim.diff()`.
indent_heuristic = true,
-- The amount of second-stage diff to align lines (in Neovim>=0.9)
linematch = 60,
-- Whether to wrap around edges during hunk navigation
wrap_goto = false,
},
}