Update: Based on the discussion here and in other places I added the following (well, technically I did something different in my colorscheme, but in the end it translates to that)
vim.api.nvim_set_hl(0, 'Normal', {})
This reverts the weird text and background colors to the previous behavior of … not setting them.
With update 0.10 Neovim behavior changed regarding text color and background color.
I use a color theme that does not set those and previously this worked perfectly fine. Neovim simply used the font color defined in the terminal and had a transparent background.
Now the background is #14161b
and the font color is #e0e2ea
. Neither of the colors is configured ANYWHERE in my whole setup. Neither in the colorscheme, nor in my terminal configuration, nor in my Neovim configuration.
Is there a sane way to revert this to the old behavior? (i.e. use the font color configured in the terminal’s configuration and use transparent background.)
:highlight Normal guifg=0 guibg=0
worked for me, at least when run interactively in anvim -u NORC
session.From the neovim 0.10 changelog:
So for me, i previously had
vim.cmd.hi 'Normal ctermbg=none'
as the method for disabling the background. But now, nvim was deciding to use gui colors for the terminal, and I was only setting terminal background to none.The options are:
vim.cmd.hi 'Normal ctermbg=none guibg=none'
(also none out the gui bg)vim.cmd.hi 'Normal bg=none'
(flat unconditional bg none)vim.opt.termguicolors = false
(just disable the now enabled by default function to go back to terminal colors)This looks fine when doing it manually, thanks. I wonder how to properly implementing this in my Lua-only setup without just wrapping it in
vim.cmd
.Its something like
vim.nvim_api_set_hl
I looked at material.nvim randomly, and they use
vim.api.nvim_set_hl
to set their colors. It seems that the equivalent of the above command is:lua vim.api.nvim_set_hl(0, "Normal", {})
.