| name | shannon |
| description | Interact with Neovim via RPC to annotate code, navigate files, and do walkthroughs |
| allowed-tools | ["Bash","Read","Glob","Grep"] |
Shannon: Neovim RPC interaction
When a prompt arrives from Shannon (indicated by a footer like
(Shannon prompt via Neovim server <addr>)), you have the ability to interact
with the user's Neovim session via RPC.
Finding the Neovim server
There are two ways to obtain the Neovim server address:
-
From a Shannon prompt — Shannon prompts include a footer of the form:
(Shannon prompt via Neovim server /path/to/socket)
Extract the server address from this footer.
-
Auto-discovery — if no Shannon prompt has been received yet, run the
discovery script. Below, $SKILL_DIR is the absolute path to the directory
containing this SKILL.md file; expand it to its absolute value before
running, since the current working directory is not guaranteed to be the
skill directory.
$SKILL_DIR/scripts/shannon-find-nvim.sh
This finds the Neovim instance running in a sibling tmux pane and prints its
server socket path. It exits non-zero if no Neovim is found.
Sending RPC commands to Neovim
Use nvim --server <addr> --remote-expr '<expr>' to execute Vimscript or Lua in
the user's Neovim. For Lua, wrap with luaeval("...").
The Shannon plugin exposes private helper functions as individual modules for
use by this skill. Each returns a single function. Prefer these over raw Neovim
API calls.
Private functions
Open a file (with optional 1-indexed line number):
nvim --server 'luaeval("require(\"wincent.shannon.private.open\")(\"path/to/file\")")' <addr >--remote-expr
nvim --server 'luaeval("require(\"wincent.shannon.private.open\")(\"path/to/file\", 42)")' <addr >--remote-expr
Jump to a line (1-indexed) in the current buffer:
nvim --server 'luaeval("require(\"wincent.shannon.private.jump\")(42)")' <addr >--remote-expr
Add virtual text annotation below a line (1-indexed):
nvim --server 'luaeval("require(\"wincent.shannon.private.annotate\")(42, \"text here\", \"DiagnosticInfo\")")' <addr >--remote-expr
The third argument is a highlight group. Use these to convey meaning:
DiagnosticInfo — informational annotations (blue)
DiagnosticWarn — warnings (yellow)
DiagnosticError — errors/issues (red)
DiagnosticHint — hints/suggestions (green)
If omitted, defaults to DiagnosticInfo.
Clear all Shannon annotations in current buffer:
nvim --server 'luaeval("vim.cmd.ShannonClearMarks()")' <addr >--remote-expr
Show a message in Neovim's command area:
nvim --server 'luaeval("vim.api.nvim_echo({{\"message\", \"WarningMsg\"}}, true, {})")' <addr >--remote-expr
When to use RPC
Use RPC when:
- The user instructs you to show something "in Vim" or "in Neovim" (e.g., they
use the words "in Neovim" in their prompt).
- Their prompt came in from Shannon (i.e., they are in Neovim) and they say
something like "show me where we should add error handling in this file".
- They explicitly ask for an editor-based workflow like one of the following:
- Annotated code review: add virtual text under lines with issues.
- Guided walkthroughs: open files and jump to relevant lines as you
explain code.
- Highlighting results: after a search or analysis, navigate to the most
relevant location.
- Error markers: annotate lines with diagnostic-style warnings or errors.
Shannon commands
The Shannon plugin provides the following commands, which can be invoked via
RPC:
:ShannonNextMark — jump to the next Shannon extmark in the current buffer
(wraps around).
:ShannonPreviousMark — jump to the previous Shannon extmark (wraps around).
:ShannonClearMarks — clear all Shannon extmarks in the current buffer.
After adding annotations, tell the user they can navigate between marks with
:ShannonNextMark / :ShannonPreviousMark (or their configured mappings). When
you are done with an annotation session and the user has finished reviewing,
clear the marks via RPC:
nvim --server 'luaeval("vim.cmd.ShannonClearMarks()")' <addr >--remote-expr
Important notes
- All line numbers passed to private functions are 1-indexed.
- When annotating a file that isn't currently open, use
private.open first.
- When doing a walkthrough across multiple files, pause between files and ask
the user to let you know when they are ready to continue. Do not proceed to
the next file until the user responds.
- Escape double quotes in Lua strings passed through the shell (nested quoting).
- The
--remote-expr call is synchronous and blocks until Neovim processes it.
- Always clear previous Shannon annotations before adding new ones to avoid
stale marks.