home/doc/manpages/highlighters
2016-02-03 19:15:35 +02:00

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KAKOUNE(1)
==========
NAME
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highlighters - a
Description
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Manipulation of the displayed text is done through highlighters, which can be added or removed with the following
commands:
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addhl <highlighter_name> <highlighter_parameters> ...
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and
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*rmhl* <highlighter_id>
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*highlighter_id* is a name generated by the highlighter specified with *highlighter_name*, possibly dependent on
the parameters. Use command completion in a prompt on the *rmhl* command to see the existing highlighters ids.
General highlighters
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*regex* <ex> <capture_id>:<face> ...::
highlight a regex, takes the regex as first parameter, followed by any number of face parameters. For example:
addhl regex //(\hTODO:)?[^\n] 0:cyan 1:yellow,red
will highlight C++ style comments in cyan, with an eventual 'TODO:' in yellow on red background
*dynregex*::
Similar to regex, but expand (like a command paramater would) the given expression before building a regex from the result
*flag_lines* <flag> <option_name>::
add a column in front of text, and display the given flag in it for everly line contained in the int-list option named <option_name>
*show_matching*::
highlight matching char of the character under the selections cursor using MatchingChar face
*number_lines* [options]::
show line numbers, with the following *options*:
*-relative*:::
show line numbers relative to the main cursor line
*-hlcursor*:::
highlight the cursor line with a separate face
*-separator* <separator text>:::
specify a string to separate the line numbers column with the rest of the buffer (default is '|')
*fill* <face>::
fill using the given *face*, mostly useful with regions highlighters
Highlighting Groups
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The group highlighter is a container for other highlighters. You can add a group to the current window using
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addhl group <name>
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The *-group* switch of the *addhl* command provides a mean to add highlighters inside this group:
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addhl -group <name> <type> <params>...
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Groups can contain other groups, the *-group* switch can be used to define a path as follows:
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addhl -group <name> group <subname>
addhl -group <name>/<subname> <type> <params>...
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Regions highlighters
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A special highlighter provides a way to segment the buffer into regions, which are to be highlighted differently.
*name*::
user defined, used to identify the region
*opening*::
regex that defines the region start text
*closing*::
regex that defines the region end text
*recurse*::
regex that defines the text that matches recursively an end token into the region
The *recurse* option is useful for regions that can be nested, for example the following contruct:
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%sh{ ... }
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accepts nested braces scopes ('{ ... }') so the following string is valid:
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%sh{ ... { ... } ... }
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This region can be defined with:
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shell_expand %sh\{ \} \{
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Regions are used in the regions highlighter which can take any number of regions.
The following command:
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
addhl regions <name> <region_name1> <opening1> <closing1> <recurse1>
<region_name2> <opening2> <closing2> <recurse2>...
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
defines multiple regions in which other highlighters can be added as follows:
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addhl -group <name>/<region_name> ...
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Regions are matched using the left-most rule: the left-most region opening starts a new region. When a region closes, the closest next opening start another region.
That matches the rule governing most programming language parsing.
Regions also supports a *-default <default_region>* switch to define the default region, when no other region matches the current buffer range.
Most programming languages can then be properly highlighted using a regions highlighter as root:
-----------------------------------------------------------------
addhl regions -default code <lang> \
string <str_opening> <str_closing> <str_recurse> \
comment <comment_opening> <comment_closing> <comment_recurse>
addhl -group <lang>/code ...
addhl -group <lang>/string ...
addhl -group <lang>/comment ...
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Shared Highlighters
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Highlighters are often defined for a specific filetype, and it makes then sense to share the highlighters between all the windows on the same filetypes.
A shared highlighter can be defined with the following command:
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addhl -group /<group_name> ...
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When the group switch values starts with a '/', it references a group in the shared highlighters, rather than the window highlighters.
The common case would be to create a named shared group, and then fill it with highlighters:
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addhl -group / group <name>
addhl -group /name regex ...
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It can then be referenced in a window using the ref highlighter.
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addhl ref <name>
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The ref can reference any named highlighter in the shared namespace.