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Back in October Kade Killary wrote, A Killer GUI For Neovim: VimR. VimR is an excellent Neovim GUI on macOS but ever since reading the article I've been meaning the write about the Neovim GUI I use on Linux: NeovimGtk.
NeovimGtk doesn't have quite as many bells and whistles as VimR (yet) but it does have a few. Like VimR, it's a native application (no Electron, etc.). It's developed in Rust, and as the name implies uses the GTK toolkit to feel right at home on a GNOME desktop.
I am a huge fan of the PragmataPro font, and one of NeovimGtk's killer features for me is support for font ligatures. This means it renders text with wonderful typographic beauty.
Ligature support was what initially drew me to NeovimGtk but since I've started using it, it's creator, daa84, and a handful of contributors have added several more features.
There is a file/project picker to open recent files and projects (directories). Checking the check box on a directory makes that item always available in the list for quick access.
One of the more recent additions was a plugin manager. It lists installed vim plugins and allows news ones to be added. Behind the scenes it uses the excellent vim-plug.
Another recent addition enabled support for wide glyphs. PragmataPro has a few of these in the non-Mono variant of the font. The extra width is used to make the glyph more legible. This makes devicons and Neomake warnings render nicely.
Native controls are used for the tab bar and pop-up menus.
So if you're a Neovim user on Linux I can certainly recommend you check out NeovimGtk. Installation currently requires building from source. However for Arch Linux users I have created an AUR package for easy installation.