A vibrant and refreshing Neovim colorscheme inspired by the bright and juicy colors of citrus fruits.
citruszest.nvim is a Lua-based colorscheme for Neovim that provides a visually stimulating coding environment using a vibrant palette of oranges, yellows, and greens reminiscent of citrus fruits. It is designed to reduce eye strain and enhance focus during long coding sessions. The colorscheme includes extensive plugin support, terminal integration, and customization options.
Neovim users who prefer vibrant, high-contrast color palettes and developers seeking a colorscheme that aims to reduce eye fatigue. It is particularly suited for those who use popular Neovim plugins like nvim-cmp, Telescope, and Nvimtree.
Developers choose citruszest.nvim for its unique, attention-grabbing citrus-inspired color palette that is both aesthetically pleasing and functional. It stands out with built-in support for numerous Neovim plugins and terminal emulators, along with customizable options for transparency and text styling.
A vibrant and refreshing neovim colorscheme inspired by citrus fruits.
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Features bright oranges, yellows, and greens carefully selected to reduce eye strain, as showcased in the palette image and screenshots, providing a refreshing visual experience.
Includes dedicated styling for over 10 popular Neovim plugins like nvim-cmp, Telescope, and Nvimtree, ensuring seamless integration without manual tweaks.
Provides ready-to-use theme files for multiple terminals including Kitty, Alacritty, and Wezterm, allowing consistent theme application across different environments.
Supports configuration for transparency, bold, italic text, and custom highlight overrides via a Lua setup table, offering flexibility for personal preferences.
Requires Neovim >= v0.9.1 and Treesitter > v0.9.2, which may exclude users on older or less updated systems, as stated in the README requirements.
Only supports a specific set of plugins; users with unsupported or niche plugins may need manual highlight adjustments or experience inconsistent styling.
Customizing highlights requires using the 'Inspect' command and manually editing the setup table, which can be tedious and error-prone for non-advanced users.