A simple, vibrant dark theme for Vim and Neovim with light mode and terminal support.
Aquarium is a colorful, cozy dark color scheme designed for Vim and Neovim, offering a visually pleasing coding environment. It emphasizes vibrant syntax highlighting and a comfortable aesthetic to reduce eye strain during long sessions. The theme also includes a light mode and provides terminal integration for popular terminal emulators.
Vim and Neovim users seeking a visually comfortable, customizable color scheme with support for popular plugins and terminal emulators. It is particularly suited for developers who spend extended periods coding and want to minimize eye strain.
Developers choose Aquarium for its vibrant yet cozy aesthetic, dual dark/light mode support, and extensive compatibility with plugins and terminals. Its unique selling point is the combination of visual comfort, flexibility through customizable variables, and ready-to-use configurations for both editors and terminals.
🌊 Aquarium, a simple vibrant dark theme for vim 🗒
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Offers both dark and light variants with easy switching via the g:aquarium_style variable, providing flexibility for different environments as shown in the README.
Includes predefined styling for popular plugins like vim-airline, lightline, and nvim-treesitter, reducing manual configuration work for common tools.
Provides ready-to-use theme files for terminals such as Alacritty, Kitty, and iTerm, ensuring consistent theming across editor and shell environments.
Allows adjustments for bold text and transparency through simple Vim variables (g:aqua_bold, g:aqua_transparency), enabling personalization without code changes.
Some plugin supports, like for lualine.nvim and nvim-treesitter, require Neovim 5.0 or above, limiting compatibility for users on older versions.
Terminal integration requires manually copying config files from the extras directory, which is error-prone and less convenient than automated solutions.
The README contains typos and informal language, such as 'fujitive.vim' for fugitive.vim, which may confuse users and indicate less rigorous maintenance.