A designer Neovim theme with light and dark variants, built with lush.nvim for comprehensive syntax highlighting and plugin support.
Bluloco.nvim is a sophisticated color theme for Neovim, ported from the popular Visual Studio Code Bluloco themes. It provides both light and dark variants with a focus on aesthetics, contrast, and readability, offering extensive syntax scope coverage and consistent coloring. The theme is designed to work well with blue light filters and supports a wide range of popular Neovim plugins out of the box.
Neovim users who prioritize visual design, readability, and a cohesive, aesthetically pleasing editing environment, especially those who use many popular Neovim plugins and want a theme that supports them without configuration.
Developers choose Bluloco.nvim for its comprehensive plugin support, automatic style switching between light and dark modes, and its carefully crafted color palette that maintains readability while being visually harmonious. It offers high configurability for transparency and italics while working seamlessly without extensive setup.
bluloco theme for neovim
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Out-of-the-box theming for over 30 popular Neovim plugins like treesitter, telescope, and lualine, as listed in the README, reducing configuration hassle.
Seamlessly adjusts between light and dark variants based on vim.o.background, with integration options for OS-level dark mode tools like auto-dark-mode.nvim.
Designed to work well with filters like Night Shift or f.lux, as stated in the README, making it suitable for prolonged coding sessions.
Offers toggleable options for transparency, italics, and cursor styling, allowing personalization without editing theme files directly.
Provides terminal emulator color schemes in the repository, ensuring consistent styling outside Neovim for a unified workflow.
Requires lush.nvim for building and customization, adding an extra layer of setup and potential maintenance overhead compared to standalone themes.
Beyond config options, significant changes require knowledge of lush.nvim or editing the theme source, which isn't straightforward for average users.
Enabling terminal colors can disrupt terminal-specific behaviors, such as bold text display, as noted in the README, which might annoy some users.
The comprehensive plugin support and features may introduce unnecessary complexity for users with simple Neovim setups who prefer leaner themes.