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Xcode 11’s dark and light colourschemes, now for Vim!

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akifoezkan/vim-colors-xcode-mustang

 
 

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xcodewwdc-mustang

xcodewwdc is simplified and colors are modified to resemble mustang color scheme ( https://github.com/croaker/mustang-vim.git

my preferred options:
let g:xcodewwdc_green_comments = 0
let g:xcodewwdc_emph_types = 0
let g:xcodewwdc_emph_funcs = 1
let g:xcodewwdc_emph_idents = 0
let g:xcodewwdc_match_paren_style = 0
let g:xcodewwdc_dim_punctuation = 1
colorscheme xcodewwdc-mustang

vim-colors-xcode

A number of Xcode 11’s colourschemes, now for Vim!

made in Colortemplate, the Toolkit for Vim Colourscheme Designers

Screenshots

High contrast variants are available
xcodedark xcodedarkhc (high-contrast)

xcodelight xcodelighthc (high-contrast)
Installation

Use your favorite runtimepath/plugin manager. If you don’t have one, I recommend Plug:

Plug 'arzg/vim-colors-xcode'

Or, alternatively, you can install the old-fashioned way by copying the relevant directories right into ~/.vim:

$ git clone https://github.com/arzg/vim-colors-xcode.git
$ cp -r vim-colors-xcode/{autoload,colors,doc} ~/.vim
Language Support

These colourschemes have been carefully tuned for the following language plugins:

Plugin Support

These plugins are specifically supported:

To get the closest experience to Xcode it is recommended that you use the following configuration for Signify:

let g:signify_sign_add    = ''
let g:signify_sign_change = ''
let g:signify_sign_delete = ''

let g:signify_sign_show_count = 0 " Don’t show the number of deleted lines.

Xcode updates its Git gutter signs immediately upon editing. To achieve this you can add the following to your vimrc:

" Update Git signs every time the text is changed
autocmd User SignifySetup
            \ execute 'autocmd! signify' |
            \ autocmd signify TextChanged,TextChangedI * call sy#start()
Options

Use :help xcode<variant>, where variant is either dark, darkhc, light, lighthc, or wwdc, to view a list of all the possible options and their default values. Add g:xcode<variant>_ in front of every option name for use. For example, emph_funcs would turn into g:xcodedarkhc_emph_funcs if you want it to apply to the dark high contrast variant and g:xcodelight_emph_funcs for the light version.

Note that I’ve only added screenshots of the light and dark variants for the options below for reasons of brevity.

Comment Style
  • This option does not exist in the WWDC colourscheme
  • The default value is 0
green_comments Dark Light
0
1
Punctuation Dimming
  • This option is available in all colourschemes
  • The default value is 1
dim_punctuation Dark Light
0
1
Syntax Item Emphasis
  • This option is available in all colourschemes
  • The default values are 1, 0 and 0, for emph_types, emph_funcs and emph_idents respectively
emph_types, emph_funcs, emph_idents Dark Light
1,
0,
0
0,
1,
0
0,
1,
1
MatchParen style
  • This option is available in all colourschemes
  • The default value is 0
match_paren_style Dark Light
0
1
Usage

First, add one of the following lines to your Vim configuration:

colorscheme xcodedark
colorscheme xcodedarkhc
colorscheme xcodelight
colorscheme xcodelighthc
colorscheme xcodewwdc

If you’re using a GUI, then this is all the setup you need. However, if you’re planning to use vim-colors-xcode in a terminal, the terminal must support 24-bit colour, also known as True Colour. This can be enabled through the use of the following setting:

set termguicolors

If you want other terminal output to match with vim-colors-xcode, then set its colours to match the ones below:

Dark Palette
Colour Normal Bright
Black #414453 #7f8c98
Red #ff8170 #ff8170
Green #78c2b3 #acf2e4
Yellow #d9c97c #ffa14f
Blue #4eb0cc #6bdfff
Magenta #ff7ab2 #ff7ab2
Cyan #b281eb #dabaff
White #dfdfe0 #dfdfe0
Foreground #dfdfe0
Background #292a30
Dark High Contrast Palette
Colour Normal Bright
Black #43454b #838991
Red #ff8a7a #ff8a7a
Green #83c9bc #b1faeb
Yellow #d9c668 #ffa14f
Blue #4ec4e6 #6bdfff
Magenta #ff85b8 #ff85b8
Cyan #cda1ff #e5cfff
White #ffffff #ffffff
Foreground #ffffff
Background #1f1f24
Light Palette
Colour Normal Bright
Black #b4d8fd #8a99a6
Red #d12f1b #d12f1b
Green #3e8087 #23575c
Yellow #78492a #78492a
Blue #0f68a0 #0b4f79
Magenta #ad3da4 #ad3da4
Cyan #804fb8 #4b21b0
White #262626 #262626
Foreground #262626
Background #ffffff
Light High Contrast Palette
Colour Normal Bright
Black #b4d8fd #8a99a6
Red #ad1805 #ad1805
Green #355d61 #174145
Yellow #78492a #78492a
Blue #0058a1 #003f73
Magenta #9c2191 #9c2191
Cyan #703daa #441ea1
White #000000 #000000
Foreground #000000
Background #ffffff
WWDC Palette
Colour Normal Bright
Black #494d5c #7f869e
Red #bb383a #bb383a
Green #94c66e #94c66e
Yellow #d28e5d #d28e5d
Blue #8884c5 #8884c5
Magenta #b73999 #b73999
Cyan #00aba4 #00aba4
White #e7e8eb #e7e8eb
Foreground #e7e8eb
Background #292c36

iTerm presets for all these palettes are included with this repository.

If you would like to have italic comments, add the following to your vimrc:

augroup vim-colors-xcode
    autocmd!
augroup END

autocmd vim-colors-xcode ColorScheme * hi Comment        cterm=italic gui=italic
autocmd vim-colors-xcode ColorScheme * hi SpecialComment cterm=italic gui=italic

The font in the screenshots is SF Mono, which you can download from Apple’s website.

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