Neovim plugin to collect and view information on battery power in your status line.
This is a cross platform Neovim plugin to provide battery information including percent charge remaining, number of batteries and whether the power cable is connected or not. The information is then provided as a programmatic API you can call from Lua and also suitable to add to your status line.
I was working on a small 12" laptop and there's not a lot of screen real estate, so I tended to maximize my terminal window when editing code. Unfortunately, that means I can't see the battery status, and don't know how long I've got without switching windows. I decided to fix that by adding it to the the statusline and this plugin was born.
The plugin is written in Lua and depends heavily on the Plenary library for its excellent support for processes (Jobs). When you start the plugin (by calling require"battery".setup({})
) it runs a job in the background every 5 minutes (or however often you want, see config) and updates the battery status. Then you can call require"battery".get_status_line()
in your statusline plugin to show the battery percentage and an appropriate icon.
- Gracefully handle no battery (either remove battery info from the status line or just show a desktop icon)
- Show charge level and whether there is a power cable attached or not via icons (requires nvim-tree/nvim-web-devicons)
- Configurable update rate
- Support for Microsoft Windows, Linux and Apple macOS.
NOTICE Please check the nvim-web-devicons repo for information on breaking changes to Nerd Fonts. This dependency is used to show the icons in this plugin and requires a compatible font. Thank you to Github user @david-0609 for bringing this to my attention and updating the icons used in this application. Should you encounter missing icons please upgrade the font you are using so it is using 2.3 or 3.0.
If you do not wish to upgrade your font you can pin to a previous version of the plugin using tag v0.8.0 instead of the main branch.
On Windows and macOS, PowerShell and pmset are used to obtain battery status respectively.
For Linux acpi
is used, and may not be installed by default on your distribution. See How to handle acpi events on Linux. The package must be correctly installed and in your executable path.
Use your package manager to add the dependencies and the plugin.
Plug 'nvim-lua/plenary.nvim'
Plug 'nvim-tree/nvim-web-devicons'
Plug 'justinhj/battery.nvim'
use { 'justinhj/battery.nvim', requires = {{'nvim-tree/nvim-web-devicons'}, {'nvim-lua/plenary.nvim'}}}
Once installed you need to run the setup function and pass in an optional config. This starts the internal timer so that the battery status is updated periodically. Since the process to get the battery can take a second or two, even though it happens in the background, I don't recommend setting it below about 10 seconds, and several minutes should be fine for most purposes. Running setup
will always refresh the battery status.
There are some configuration options.
lua << END
local battery = require("battery")
battery.setup({
update_rate_seconds = 30, -- Number of seconds between checking battery status
show_status_when_no_battery = true, -- Don't show any icon or text when no battery found (desktop for example)
show_plugged_icon = true, -- If true show a cable icon alongside the battery icon when plugged in
show_unplugged_icon = true, -- When true show a diconnected cable icon when not plugged in
show_percent = true, -- Whether or not to show the percent charge remaining in digits
vertical_icons = true, -- When true icons are vertical, otherwise shows horizontal battery icon
multiple_battery_selection = 1, -- Which battery to choose when multiple found. "max" or "maximum", "min" or "minimum" or a number to pick the nth battery found (currently linux acpi only)
})
END
Adding to lualine
Ensure minimal setup in your config.
lua require"battery".setup({})
In your lualine config add the following.
local nvimbattery = {
function()
return require("battery").get_status_line()
end,
color = { fg = colors.violet, bg = colors.bg },
}
Add it where you want it, something like below.
sections = { lualine_a = nvimbattery }
Adding to galaxyline
Add this to your galaxy line config in the section you want:
local gl = require 'galaxyline'
local gls = gl.section
-- in this example 5th section on the right, change as needed!
gls.right[5] = {
BatteryNvim = {
provider = function()
-- note that battery.nvim uses format specifiers such as %% instead of %
-- which is needed for other status line plugins like lualine and staline.
-- galaxy line expects a formatted string so we must format it here...
local status = require("battery").get_status_line()
local formatted = string.format(status)
return formatted
end,
separator = '',
separator_highlight = { colors.bg, colors.purple },
highlight = { colors.grey, colors.purple },
},
}
If something breaks you should see a standard Vim error telling you what the problem is. There is some info logging you will find wherever your Neovim cache is :h stdpath
.
For more than just info,warn and error logging you can enable debug logs which show a more verbose behaviour of the plugin using the following command to launch nvim.
DEBUG_PLENARY=true nvim
Inspired by lambdalisue/battery.vim, which in turn uses code from b4b4r07/dotfiles.
Copyright (c) 2022-2024 Justin Heyes-Jones