vim-which-key is vim port of emacs-which-key that displays available keybindings in popup.
emacs-which-key started as a rewrite of guide-key, very likely, vim-which-key heavily rewrote vim-leader-guide. The features of vim-which-key has evolved a lot since then.
Vim config in the screenshot is space-vim.
- Better UI, vim's
popup
and neovim'sfloating_win
are supported. - Show all mappings following a prefix, e.g.,
<leader>
,<localleader>
, etc. - Instant response for your every single input.
- Dynamic update on every call.
- Define group names and arbitrary descriptions.
Assuming you are using vim-plug:
Plug 'liuchengxu/vim-which-key'
" On-demand lazy load
Plug 'liuchengxu/vim-which-key', { 'on': ['WhichKey', 'WhichKey!'] }
" To register the descriptions when using the on-demand load feature,
" use the autocmd hook to call which_key#register(), e.g., register for the Space key:
" autocmd! User vim-which-key call which_key#register('<Space>', 'g:which_key_map')
For other plugin managers please refer to their document for more details.
$ mkdir -p ~/.vim/pack/git-plugins/start
$ git clone https://github.com/liuchengxu/vim-which-key.git --depth=1 ~/.vim/pack/git-plugins/start/vim-which-key
$ mkdir -p ~/.local/share/nvim/site/pack/git-plugins/start
$ git clone https://github.com/liuchengxu/vim-which-key.git --depth=1 ~/.local/share/nvim/site/pack/git-plugins/start/vim-which-key
vim-which-key requires option timeout
is on, see :h timeout
.
Since timeout
is on by default, all you need is not to set notimeout
in your .vimrc
.
Let's say SPC is your leader key and you use it to trigger vim-which-key:
nnoremap <silent> <leader> :WhichKey '<Space>'<CR>
After pressing leader the guide buffer will pop up when there are no further keystrokes within timeoutlen
.
" By default timeoutlen is 1000 ms
set timeoutlen=500
Pressing other keys within timeoutlen
will either complete the mapping or open a subgroup. In the screenshot above SPCb will open up the buffer menu.
Please note that no matter which mappings and menus you configure, your original leader mappings will remain unaffected. The key guide is an additional layer. It will only activate, when you do not complete your input during the timeoutlen duration.
- Use BS to show the upper level mappings.
- For neovim, nvim-whichkey-setup.lua provides a wrapper around vim-which-key to simplify configuration in lua.
It also solves issues (see #126) when the mapped command is more complex and makes it easy to also map
localleader
.
:WhichKey
and :WhichKeyVisual
are the primary way of interacting with this plugin.
Assuming your leader
and localleader
key are <Space>
and ,
, respectively, even no description dictionary has been registered, all <Space>
and ,
related mappings will be displayed regardless.
let g:mapleader = "\<Space>"
let g:maplocalleader = ','
nnoremap <silent> <leader> :<c-u>WhichKey '<Space>'<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <localleader> :<c-u>WhichKey ','<CR>
The raw content displayed is normally not adequate to serve as a cheatsheet. See the following section for configuring it properly.
If no description dictionary is available, the right-hand-side of all mappings will be displayed:
The dictionary configuration is necessary to provide group names or a description text:
let g:which_key_map = {}
let g:which_key_map['w'] = {
\ 'name' : '+windows' ,
\ 'w' : ['<C-W>w' , 'other-window'] ,
\ 'd' : ['<C-W>c' , 'delete-window'] ,
\ '-' : ['<C-W>s' , 'split-window-below'] ,
\ '|' : ['<C-W>v' , 'split-window-right'] ,
\ '2' : ['<C-W>v' , 'layout-double-columns'] ,
\ 'h' : ['<C-W>h' , 'window-left'] ,
\ 'j' : ['<C-W>j' , 'window-below'] ,
\ 'l' : ['<C-W>l' , 'window-right'] ,
\ 'k' : ['<C-W>k' , 'window-up'] ,
\ 'H' : ['<C-W>5<' , 'expand-window-left'] ,
\ 'J' : [':resize +5' , 'expand-window-below'] ,
\ 'L' : ['<C-W>5>' , 'expand-window-right'] ,
\ 'K' : [':resize -5' , 'expand-window-up'] ,
\ '=' : ['<C-W>=' , 'balance-window'] ,
\ 's' : ['<C-W>s' , 'split-window-below'] ,
\ 'v' : ['<C-W>v' , 'split-window-below'] ,
\ '?' : ['Windows' , 'fzf-window'] ,
\ }
call which_key#register('<Space>', "g:which_key_map")
If you wish to hide a mapping from the menu set it's description to 'which_key_ignore'
. Useful for instance, to hide a list of [1-9] window swapping mappings. For example the below mapping will not be shown in the menu.
nnoremap <leader>1 :1wincmd w<CR>
let g:which_key_map.1 = 'which_key_ignore'
If you want to hide a group of non-top level mappings, set the name
to 'which_key_ignore'
. For example,
nnoremap <leader>_a :echom '_a'<CR>
nnoremap <leader>_b :echom '_b'<CR>
let g:which_key_map['_'] = { 'name': 'which_key_ignore' }
If you want to hide all mappings outside of the elements of the description dictionary, use: let g:which_key_ignore_outside_mappings = 1
.
You can configure a Dict for each prefix so that the display is more readable.
To make the guide pop up Register the description dictionary for the prefix first. Assuming Space
is your leader key and the Dict for configuring Space
is g:which_key_map
:
nnoremap <silent> <leader> :<c-u>WhichKey '<Space>'<CR>
vnoremap <silent> <leader> :<c-u>WhichKeyVisual '<Space>'<CR>
call which_key#register('<Space>', "g:which_key_map")
The above registers the same description dictionary for both normal and visual modes. To use a separate description dictionary for each mode: add a third argument specifying which mode:
call which_key#register('<Space>', "g:which_key_map", 'n')
call which_key#register('<Space>', "g:which_key_map_visual", 'v')
The next step is to add items to g:which_key_map
:
" Define prefix dictionary
let g:which_key_map = {}
" Second level dictionaries:
" 'name' is a special field. It will define the name of the group, e.g., leader-f is the "+file" group.
" Unnamed groups will show a default empty string.
" =======================================================
" Create menus based on existing mappings
" =======================================================
" You can pass a descriptive text to an existing mapping.
let g:which_key_map.f = { 'name' : '+file' }
nnoremap <silent> <leader>fs :update<CR>
let g:which_key_map.f.s = 'save-file'
nnoremap <silent> <leader>fd :e $MYVIMRC<CR>
let g:which_key_map.f.d = 'open-vimrc'
nnoremap <silent> <leader>oq :copen<CR>
nnoremap <silent> <leader>ol :lopen<CR>
let g:which_key_map.o = {
\ 'name' : '+open',
\ 'q' : 'open-quickfix' ,
\ 'l' : 'open-locationlist',
\ }
" =======================================================
" Create menus not based on existing mappings:
" =======================================================
" Provide commands(ex-command, <Plug>/<C-W>/<C-d> mapping, etc.)
" and descriptions for the existing mappings.
"
" Note:
" Some complicated ex-cmd may not work as expected since they'll be
" feed into `feedkeys()`, in which case you have to define a decicated
" Command or function wrapper to make it work with vim-which-key.
" Ref issue #126, #133 etc.
let g:which_key_map.b = {
\ 'name' : '+buffer' ,
\ '1' : ['b1' , 'buffer 1'] ,
\ '2' : ['b2' , 'buffer 2'] ,
\ 'd' : ['bd' , 'delete-buffer'] ,
\ 'f' : ['bfirst' , 'first-buffer'] ,
\ 'h' : ['Startify' , 'home-buffer'] ,
\ 'l' : ['blast' , 'last-buffer'] ,
\ 'n' : ['bnext' , 'next-buffer'] ,
\ 'p' : ['bprevious' , 'previous-buffer'] ,
\ '?' : ['Buffers' , 'fzf-buffer'] ,
\ }
let g:which_key_map.l = {
\ 'name' : '+lsp',
\ 'f' : ['spacevim#lang#util#Format()' , 'formatting'] ,
\ 'r' : ['spacevim#lang#util#FindReferences()' , 'references'] ,
\ 'R' : ['spacevim#lang#util#Rename()' , 'rename'] ,
\ 's' : ['spacevim#lang#util#DocumentSymbol()' , 'document-symbol'] ,
\ 'S' : ['spacevim#lang#util#WorkspaceSymbol()' , 'workspace-symbol'] ,
\ 'g' : {
\ 'name': '+goto',
\ 'd' : ['spacevim#lang#util#Definition()' , 'definition'] ,
\ 't' : ['spacevim#lang#util#TypeDefinition()' , 'type-definition'] ,
\ 'i' : ['spacevim#lang#util#Implementation()' , 'implementation'] ,
\ },
\ }
The guide will be up to date at all times. Native vim mappings will always take precedence over dictionary-only mappings.
It is possible to call the guide for keys other than leader
:
nnoremap <localleader> :<c-u>WhichKey ','<CR>
vnoremap <localleader> :<c-u>WhichKeyVisual ','<CR>
- Refer to space-vim for more detailed example.
Since the theme of provided statusline is not flexible and all the information has been echoed already, I prefer to hide it.
autocmd! FileType which_key
autocmd FileType which_key set laststatus=0 noshowmode noruler
\| autocmd BufLeave <buffer> set laststatus=2 showmode ruler
See more details about commands and options via :h vim-which-key
.
Command | Description |
---|---|
:WhichKey {prefix} |
Open the guide window for the given prefix |
:WhichKey! {dict} |
Open the guide window for a given dictionary directly |
Variable | Default | Description |
---|---|---|
g:which_key_vertical |
0 | show popup vertically |
g:which_key_position |
botright |
split a window at the bottom |
g:which_key_hspace |
5 | minimum horizontal space between columns |
g:which_key_centered |
1 | make all keybindings centered in the middle |
See #178.
You may use BufEnter/BufLeave #132, a dictionary-function
#209, or [experimental] setup per buffer #48.
This is possible via nvim-whichkey-setup.lua. For example, if one wanted to map spectre's open
to <leader>S
, which in vimscipt would be nnoremap <leader>S <cmd>lua require('spectre').open()<CR>
, one could use the following in one's init.vim
:
lua<<EOF
local wk = require('whichkey_setup')
local keymap = {
S = {':lua require("spectre").open()<CR>', 'Search'},
}
wk.register_keymap('leader', keymap)
EOF
NB that keymaps can only be registered once. The entirety of one's vim-which-key
configuration must be ported to nvim-whichkey-setup.lua in order to enable this functionality.