ChatGPT
is a Neovim plugin that allows you to effortlessly utilize the OpenAI ChatGPT API,
empowering you to generate natural language responses from OpenAI's ChatGPT directly within the editor in response to your inquiries.
- Interactive Q&A: Engage in interactive question-and-answer sessions with the powerful gpt model (ChatGPT) using an intuitive interface.
- Persona-based Conversations: Explore various perspectives and have conversations with different personas by selecting prompts from Awesome ChatGPT Prompts.
- Code Editing Assistance: Enhance your coding experience with an interactive editing window powered by the gpt model, offering instructions tailored for coding tasks.
- Code Completion: Enjoy the convenience of code completion similar to GitHub Copilot, leveraging the capabilities of the gpt model to suggest code snippets and completions based on context and programming patterns.
- Customizable Actions: Execute a range of actions utilizing the gpt model, such as grammar correction, translation, keyword generation, docstring creation, test addition, code optimization, summarization, bug fixing, code explanation, Roxygen editing, and code readability analysis. Additionally, you can define your own custom actions using a JSON file.
For a comprehensive understanding of the extension's functionality, you can watch a plugin showcase video
- Make sure you have
curl
installed. - Get an API key from OpenAI, which you can obtain here.
The OpenAI API key can be provided in one of the following two ways:
- In the configuration option
api_key_cmd
, provide the path and arguments to an executable that returns the API key via stdout. - Setting it via an environment variable called
$OPENAI_API_KEY
.
Custom OpenAI API host with the configuration option api_host_cmd
or
environment variable called $OPEN_API_HOST
. It's useful if you can't access
OpenAI driectly
-- Packer
use({
"jackMort/ChatGPT.nvim",
config = function()
require("chatgpt").setup()
end,
requires = {
"MunifTanjim/nui.nvim",
"nvim-lua/plenary.nvim",
"nvim-telescope/telescope.nvim"
}
})
-- Lazy
{
"jackMort/ChatGPT.nvim",
event = "VeryLazy",
config = function()
require("chatgpt").setup()
end,
dependencies = {
"MunifTanjim/nui.nvim",
"nvim-lua/plenary.nvim",
"nvim-telescope/telescope.nvim"
}
}
ChatGPT.nvim
comes with the following defaults, you can override them by passing config as setup param
{
api_key_cmd = nil,
yank_register = "+",
edit_with_instructions = {
diff = false,
keymaps = {
close = "<C-c>",
accept = "<C-y>",
toggle_diff = "<C-d>",
toggle_settings = "<C-o>",
cycle_windows = "<Tab>",
use_output_as_input = "<C-i>",
},
},
chat = {
welcome_message = WELCOME_MESSAGE,
loading_text = "Loading, please wait ...",
question_sign = "",
answer_sign = "ﮧ",
max_line_length = 120,
sessions_window = {
border = {
style = "rounded",
text = {
top = " Sessions ",
},
},
win_options = {
winhighlight = "Normal:Normal,FloatBorder:FloatBorder",
},
},
keymaps = {
close = { "<C-c>" },
yank_last = "<C-y>",
yank_last_code = "<C-k>",
scroll_up = "<C-u>",
scroll_down = "<C-d>",
new_session = "<C-n>",
cycle_windows = "<Tab>",
cycle_modes = "<C-f>",
select_session = "<Space>",
rename_session = "r",
delete_session = "d",
draft_message = "<C-d>",
toggle_settings = "<C-o>",
toggle_message_role = "<C-r>",
toggle_system_role_open = "<C-s>",
stop_generating = "<C-x>",
},
},
popup_layout = {
default = "center",
center = {
width = "80%",
height = "80%",
},
right = {
width = "30%",
width_settings_open = "50%",
},
},
popup_window = {
border = {
highlight = "FloatBorder",
style = "rounded",
text = {
top = " ChatGPT ",
},
},
win_options = {
wrap = true,
linebreak = true,
foldcolumn = "1",
winhighlight = "Normal:Normal,FloatBorder:FloatBorder",
},
buf_options = {
filetype = "markdown",
},
},
system_window = {
border = {
highlight = "FloatBorder",
style = "rounded",
text = {
top = " SYSTEM ",
},
},
win_options = {
wrap = true,
linebreak = true,
foldcolumn = "2",
winhighlight = "Normal:Normal,FloatBorder:FloatBorder",
},
},
popup_input = {
prompt = " ",
border = {
highlight = "FloatBorder",
style = "rounded",
text = {
top_align = "center",
top = " Prompt ",
},
},
win_options = {
winhighlight = "Normal:Normal,FloatBorder:FloatBorder",
},
submit = "<C-Enter>",
submit_n = "<Enter>",
max_visible_lines = 20
},
settings_window = {
border = {
style = "rounded",
text = {
top = " Settings ",
},
},
win_options = {
winhighlight = "Normal:Normal,FloatBorder:FloatBorder",
},
},
openai_params = {
model = "gpt-3.5-turbo",
frequency_penalty = 0,
presence_penalty = 0,
max_tokens = 300,
temperature = 0,
top_p = 1,
n = 1,
},
openai_edit_params = {
model = "code-davinci-edit-001",
temperature = 0,
top_p = 1,
n = 1,
},
actions_paths = {},
show_quickfixes_cmd = "Trouble quickfix",
predefined_chat_gpt_prompts = "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/f/awesome-chatgpt-prompts/main/prompts.csv",
}
Providing the OpenAI API key via an environment variable is dangerous, as it leaves the API key easily readable by any process that can access the environment variables of other processes. In addition, it encourages the user to store the credential in clear-text in a configuration file.
As an alternative to providing the API key via the OPENAI_API_KEY
environment
variable, the user is encouraged to use the api_key_cmd
configuration option.
The api_key_cmd
configuration option takes a string, which is executed at
startup, and whose output is used as the API key.
The following configuration would use 1Passwords CLI, op
, to fetch the API key
from the credential
field of the OpenAI
entry.
require("chatgpt").setup({
api_key_cmd = "op read op://private/OpenAI/credential --no-newline"
})
The following configuration would use GPG to decrypt a local file containing the API key
local home = vim.fn.expand("$HOME")
require("chatgpt").setup({
api_key_cmd = "gpg --decrypt " .. home .. "/secret.txt.gpg"
})
Plugin exposes following commands:
ChatGPT
command which opens interactive window using the gpt-3.5-turbo
model.
(also known as ChatGPT
)
ChatGPTActAs
command which opens a prompt selection from Awesome ChatGPT Prompts to be used with the gpt-3.5-turbo
model.
ChatGPTEditWithInstructions
command which opens interactive window to edit selected text or whole window using the code-davinci-edit-001
model (GPT 3.5 fine-tuned for coding).
You can map it using the Lua API, e.g. using which-key.nvim
:
local chatgpt = require("chatgpt")
wk.register({
p = {
name = "ChatGPT",
e = {
function()
chatgpt.edit_with_instructions()
end,
"Edit with instructions",
},
},
}, {
prefix = "<leader>",
mode = "v",
})
ChatGPTRun [action]
command which runs specific actions -- see actions.json
file for a detailed list. Available actions are:
grammar_correction
translate
keywords
docstring
add_tests
optimize_code
summarize
fix_bugs
explain_code
roxygen_edit
code_readability_analysis
-- see demo
All the above actions are using gpt-3.5-turbo
model.
It is possible to define custom actions with a JSON file. See actions.json
for an example. The path of custom actions can be set in the config (see actions_paths
field in the config example above).
An example of custom action may look like this: (#
marks comments)
{
"action_name": {
"type": "chat", # or "completion" or "edit"
"opts": {
"template": "A template using possible variable: {{filetype}} (neovim filetype), {{input}} (the selected text) an {{argument}} (provided on the command line)",
"strategy": "replace", # or "display" or "append" or "edit"
"params": { # parameters according to the official OpenAI API
"model": "gpt-3.5-turbo", # or any other model supported by `"type"` in the OpenAI API, use the playground for reference
"stop": [
"```" # a string used to stop the model
]
}
},
"args": {
"argument": {
"type": "strig",
"optional": "true",
"default": "some value"
}
}
}
}
The edit
strategy consists in showing the output side by side with the iput and
available for further editing requests.
For now, edit
strategy is implemented for chat
type only.
The display
strategy shows the output in a float window.
append
and replace
modify the text directly in the buffer.
When using ChatGPT
and ChatGPTEditWithInstructions
, the following
keybindings are available:
<C-Enter>
[Both] to submit.<C-y>
[Both] to copy/yank last answer.<C-o>
[Both] Toggle settings window.<Tab>
[Both] Cycle over windows.<C-f>
[Chat] Cycle over modes (center, stick to right).<C-c>
[Both] to close chat window.<C-u>
[Chat] scroll up chat window.<C-d>
[Chat] scroll down chat window.<C-k>
[Chat] to copy/yank code from last answer.<C-n>
[Chat] Start new session.<C-d>
[Chat] draft message (create message without submitting it to server)<C-r>
[Chat] switch role (switch between user and assistant role to define a workflow)<C-s>
[Both] Toggle system message window.<C-i>
[Edit Window] use response as input.<C-d>
[Edit Window] view the diff between left and right panes and use diff-mode commands
When the setting window is opened (with <C-o>
), settings can be modified by
pressing Enter
on the related config. Settings are saved across sections
Add these to your whichkey plugin mappings for convenient binds
c = {
name = "ChatGPT",
c = { "<cmd>ChatGPT<CR>", "ChatGPT" },
e = { "<cmd>ChatGPTEditWithInstruction<CR>", "Edit with instruction" },
g = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun grammar_correction<CR>", "Grammar Correction" },
t = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun translate<CR>", "Translate" },
k = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun keywords<CR>", "Keywords" },
d = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun docstring<CR>", "Docstring" },
a = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun add_tests<CR>", "Add Tests" },
o = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun optimize_code<CR>", "Optimize Code" },
s = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun summarize<CR>", "Summarize" },
f = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun fix_bugs<CR>", "Fix Bugs" },
x = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun explain_code<CR>", "Explain Code" },
r = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun roxygen_edit<CR>", "Roxygen Edit" },
l = { "<cmd>ChatGPTRun code_readability_analysis<CR>", "Code Readability Analysis" },
},