Configuration
xplr can be configured using Lua via a special file named init.lua
,
which can be placed in ~/.config/xplr/
(local to user) or /etc/xplr/
(global) depending on the use case.
When xplr loads, it first executes the built-in init.lua to set the default values, which is then overwritten by another config file, if found using the following lookup order:
--config /path/to/init.lua
~/.config/xplr/init.lua
/etc/xplr/init.lua
The first one found will be loaded by xplr and the lookup will stop.
The loaded config can be further extended using the -C
or --extra-config
command-line option.
Config
The xplr configuration, exposed via xplr.config
Lua API contains the
following sections.
See:
Function
While xplr.config
defines all the static parts of the configuration,
xplr.fn
defines all the dynamic parts using functions.
See: Lua Function Calls
As always, xplr.fn.builtin
is where the built-in functions are defined
that can be overwritten.
xplr.fn.builtin.fmt_general_table_row_cols_0
Renders the first column in the table
xplr.fn.builtin.fmt_general_table_row_cols_1
Renders the second column in the table
xplr.fn.builtin.fmt_general_table_row_cols_2
Renders the third column in the table
xplr.fn.builtin.fmt_general_table_row_cols_3
Renders the fourth column in the table
xplr.fn.builtin.fmt_general_table_row_cols_4
Renders the fifth column in the table
xplr.fn.custom
This is where the custom functions can be added.
There is currently no restriction on what kind of functions can be defined
in xplr.fn.custom
.
You can also use nested tables such as
xplr.fn.custom.my_plugin.my_function
to define custom functions.