Pynvim: Python client to Neovim
Pynvim implements support for python plugins in Nvim. It also works as a library for connecting to and scripting Nvim processes through its msgpack-rpc API.
Supports python 3.7 or later.
pip3 install pynvim
You can install the package without being root by adding the --user flag.
Anytime you upgrade Neovim, make sure to upgrade pynvim as well:
pip3 install --upgrade pynvim
Alternatively, you can install the development version by cloning this repository and executing the following at the top level:
pip3 install .
Pynvim supports python remote plugins (via the language-agnostic Nvim rplugin
interface), as well as Vim plugins (via the :python3 interface). Thus when
pynvim is installed Neovim will report support for the +python3 Vim feature.
The rplugin interface allows plugins to handle vimL function calls as well as defining commands and autocommands, and such plugins can operate asynchronously without blocking nvim. For details on the new rplugin interface, see the Remote Plugin documentation.
Pynvim defines some extensions over the vim python API:
- Builtin and plugin vimL functions are available as
nvim.funcs - API functions are available as
vim.apiand for objects such asbuffer.api - Lua functions can be defined using
vim.exec_luaand called withvim.lua - Support for thread-safety and async requests.
See the Python Plugin API documentation for usage of this new functionality.
- Vim evaluates
'v:<bool>'to<class 'bool'>, whereas neovim evaluates to<class 'str'>. This is expected behaviour due to the way booleans are implemented in python as explained here.
Use (and activate) a local virtualenv, for example:
python3 -m virtualenv venv
source venv/bin/activate
If you change the code, you must reinstall for the changes to take effect:
pip install .
Use pytest to run the tests. Invoking with python -m prepends the current
directory to sys.path (otherwise pytest might find other versions!):
python -m pytest
For details about testing and troubleshooting, see the development documentation.
A number of different transports are supported, but the simplest way to get started is with the python REPL. First, start Nvim with a known address:
$ nvim --listen /tmp/nvim.sockOr alternatively, note the v:servername address of a running Nvim instance.
In another terminal, connect a python REPL to Nvim (note that the API is similar to the one exposed by the python-vim bridge):
>>> import pynvim
# Create a session attached to Nvim's address (`v:servername`).
>>> nvim = pynvim.attach('socket', path='/tmp/nvim.sock')
# Now do some work.
>>> buffer = nvim.current.buffer # Get the current buffer
>>> buffer[0] = 'replace first line'
>>> buffer[:] = ['replace whole buffer']
>>> nvim.command('vsplit')
>>> nvim.windows[1].width = 10
>>> nvim.vars['global_var'] = [1, 2, 3]
>>> nvim.eval('g:global_var')
[1, 2, 3]You can embed Neovim into your python application instead of connecting to a running Neovim instance.
>>> import pynvim
>>> nvim = pynvim.attach('child', argv=["/usr/bin/env", "nvim", "--embed", "--headless"])- The
--headlessargument tellsnvimnot to wait for a UI to connect. - Alternatively, use
--embedwithout--headlessif your client is a UI and you wantnvimto wait for your client tonvim_ui_attachbefore continuing startup.
See the tests for more examples.
- Create a release commit with title
Pynvim x.y.z- list significant changes in the commit message
- bump the version in
pynvim/_version.py
- Make a release on GitHub with the same commit/version tag and copy the message.
- Run
scripts/disable_log_statements.sh - Run
python -m build- diff the release tarball
dist/pynvim-x.y.z.tar.gzagainst the previous one.
- diff the release tarball
- Run
twine upload -r pypi dist/*- Assumes you have a pypi account with permissions.
- Run
scripts/enable_log_statements.shorgit reset --hardto restore the working dir. - Bump up to the next development version in
pynvim/_version.py, withprereleasesuffixdev0.