According to the maintainer of `rustaceanvim` (see his comment [here](https://github.com/LazyVim/LazyVim/pull/2198#issuecomment-1999475044)) he says > To pick up on this: There's a good reason rustaceanvim doesn't automatically pick up a mason.nvim installation. It will most likely be built with a different toolchain than the one your project uses, often leading to discrepancies and subtle bugs. It's easy to configure rustaceanvim to use mason.nvim if you really want it, but I generally adhere to the YAGNI principle. I tried locally and the removal of `rust-analyzer` from `nvim-lspconfig` doesn't seem to have any effect on how `rustaceanvim` behaves. I propose to remove all instances of `rust-analyzer` from `nvim-lspconfig` to avoid any possible issues from users that don't have `rust-analyzer` installed in their toolchain (in this case it would pick up Mason's $PATH I believe), since they will think that since `rust-analyzer` is installed by Mason, there shouldn't be a problem and report issues as bugs. |
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.github | ||
doc | ||
lua/lazyvim | ||
queries/lua | ||
.gitignore | ||
.neoconf.json | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
init.lua | ||
LICENSE | ||
NEWS.md | ||
README-CN.md | ||
README-DE.md | ||
README.md | ||
stylua.toml |

Install · Configure · Docs
LazyVim is a Neovim setup powered by 💤 lazy.nvim to make it easy to customize and extend your config. Rather than having to choose between starting from scratch or using a pre-made distro, LazyVim offers the best of both worlds - the flexibility to tweak your config as needed, along with the convenience of a pre-configured setup.
✨ Features
- 🔥 Transform your Neovim into a full-fledged IDE
- 💤 Easily customize and extend your config with lazy.nvim
- 🚀 Blazingly fast
- 🧹 Sane default settings for options, autocmds, and keymaps
- 📦 Comes with a wealth of plugins pre-configured and ready to use
⚡️ Requirements
- Neovim >= 0.9.0 (needs to be built with LuaJIT)
- Git >= 2.19.0 (for partial clones support)
- a Nerd Font (optional)
- a C compiler for
nvim-treesitter
. See here
🚀 Getting Started
You can find a starter template for LazyVim here
Try it with Docker
docker run -w /root -it --rm alpine:edge sh -uelic '
apk add git lazygit neovim ripgrep alpine-sdk --update
git clone https://github.com/LazyVim/starter ~/.config/nvim
cd ~/.config/nvim
nvim
'
Install the LazyVim Starter
-
Make a backup of your current Neovim files:
mv ~/.config/nvim ~/.config/nvim.bak mv ~/.local/share/nvim ~/.local/share/nvim.bak
-
Clone the starter
git clone https://github.com/LazyVim/starter ~/.config/nvim
-
Remove the
.git
folder, so you can add it to your own repo laterrm -rf ~/.config/nvim/.git
-
Start Neovim!
nvim
Refer to the comments in the files on how to customize LazyVim.
There's a great video created by @elijahmanor with a walkthrough to get started.
📂 File Structure
The files under config will be automatically loaded at the appropriate time, so you don't need to require those files manually. LazyVim comes with a set of default config files that will be loaded before your own. See here
You can add your custom plugin specs under lua/plugins/
. All files there
will be automatically loaded by lazy.nvim
~/.config/nvim ├── lua │ ├── config │ │ ├── autocmds.lua │ │ ├── keymaps.lua │ │ ├── lazy.lua │ │ └── options.lua │ └── plugins │ ├── spec1.lua │ ├── ** │ └── spec2.lua └── init.lua
⚙️ Configuration
Refer to the docs