lazy.nvim/docs/spec/lazy_loading.md

2.1 KiB

Lazy Loading

lazy.nvim automagically lazy-loads Lua modules. This means that if you have a plugin A that is lazy-loaded and a plugin B that requires a module of plugin A, then plugin A will be loaded on demand as expected.

:::tip

You can configure lazy.nvim to lazy-load all plugins by default with config.defaults.lazy = true. Make sure you've configured lazy-loading, for your plugins to avoid unexpected behavior. Only do this if you know what you are doing, as it can lead to unexpected behavior.

:::

Additionally, you can also lazy-load on events, commands, file types and key mappings.

Plugins will be lazy-loaded when one of the following is true:

  • The plugin only exists as a dependency in your spec
  • It has an event, cmd, ft or keys key
  • config.defaults.lazy == true

🌈 Colorschemes

Colorscheme plugins can be configured with lazy=true. The plugin will automagically load when doing colorscheme foobar.

:::warning

since start plugins can possibly change existing highlight groups, it's important to make sure that your main colorscheme is loaded first. To ensure this you can use the priority=1000 field. (see the examples)

:::

⌨️ Lazy Key Mappings

The keys property can be a string or string[] for simple normal-mode mappings, or it can be a LazyKeysSpec table with the following key-value pairs:

  • [1]: (string) lhs (required)
  • [2]: (string|fun()) rhs (optional)
  • mode: (string|string[]) mode (optional, defaults to "n")
  • ft: (string|string[]) filetype for buffer-local keymaps (optional)
  • any other option valid for vim.keymap.set

Key mappings will load the plugin the first time they get executed.

When [2] is nil, then the real mapping has to be created by the config() function.

-- Example for neo-tree.nvim
{
  "nvim-neo-tree/neo-tree.nvim",
    keys = {
      { "<leader>ft", "<cmd>Neotree toggle<cr>", desc = "NeoTree" },
    },
    config = function()
      require("neo-tree").setup()
    end,
}