feat: enable vim syntax fallback by default

Problem: languages without a treesitter parser (COBOL, Fortran, etc.)
got no syntax highlighting at all because `highlights.vim.enabled`
defaulted to `false`.

Solution: flip the default to `true`. The vim syntax path is already
deferred via `vim.schedule` so it never blocks the first paint.
This commit is contained in:
Barrett Ruth 2026-03-05 11:11:54 -05:00
parent e1d3b81607
commit 9cbf4492fa
2 changed files with 8 additions and 6 deletions

View file

@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ Configuration is done via `vim.g.diffs`. Set this before the plugin loads:
max_lines = 500,
},
vim = {
enabled = false,
enabled = true,
max_lines = 200,
},
intra = {
@ -204,7 +204,7 @@ Configuration is done via `vim.g.diffs`. Set this before the plugin loads:
See |diffs.TreesitterConfig| for fields.
{vim} (table, default: see below)
Vim syntax highlighting options (experimental).
Vim syntax fallback highlighting options.
See |diffs.VimConfig| for fields.
{intra} (table, default: see below)
@ -269,13 +269,15 @@ Configuration is done via `vim.g.diffs`. Set this before the plugin loads:
*diffs.VimConfig*
Vim config fields: ~
{enabled} (boolean, default: false)
{enabled} (boolean, default: true)
Use vim syntax highlighting as fallback when no
treesitter parser is available for a language.
Creates a scratch buffer, sets the filetype, and
queries |synID()| per character to extract
highlight groups. Slower than treesitter but
covers languages without a TS parser installed.
highlight groups. Deferred via |vim.schedule()|
so it never blocks the first paint. Slower than
treesitter but covers languages without a TS
parser installed (e.g., COBOL, Fortran).
{max_lines} (integer, default: 200)
Skip vim syntax highlighting for hunks larger than