Working with Syntax HighlightingOverviewSyntax Highlighting is what makes the editor automatically
display text in different styles/colors, depending on the function of
the string in relation to the purpose of the file. In program source
code for example, control statements may be rendered bold, while data
types and comments get different colors from the rest of the
text. This greatly enhances the readability of the text, and thus
helps the author to be more efficient and productive.A Perl function, rendered with syntax
highlighting.
A Perl function, rendered with syntax highlighting.
The same Perl function, without
highlighting.
The same Perl function, without highlighting.
Of the two examples, which is easiest to read?&kate; comes with a flexible, configurable and capable system
for doing syntax highlighting, and the standard distribution provides
definitions for a wide range of programming, scripting and markup
languages and other text file formats. In addition you can
provide your own definitions in simple &XML; files.&kate; will automatically detect the right syntax rules when you
open a file, based on the &MIME; Type of the file, determined by its
extension, or, if it has none, the contents. Should you experience a
bad choice, you can manually set the syntax to use from the
DocumentsHighlight
Mode menu.The styles and colors used by each syntax highlight definition
can be configured using the Appearance page of the
Config Dialog, while the &MIME; Types
it should be used for, are handeled by the Highlight
page.Syntax highlighting is there to enhance the readability of
correct text, but you cannot trust it to validate your text. Marking
text for syntax is difficult depending on the format you are using,
and in some cases the authors of the syntax rules will be proud if 98%
of text gets correctly rendered, though most often you need a rare
style to see the incorrect 2%.You can download updated or additional syntax highlight
definitions from the &kate; website by clicking the
Download button in the Highlight Page of the Config Dialog.The &kate; Syntax Highlight SystemThis section will discuss the &kate; syntax highlighting
mechanism in more detail. It is for you if you want to know about
it, or if you want to change or create syntax definitions.How it WorksWhenever you open a file, one of the first things the &kate;
editor does is detect which syntax definition to use for the
file. While reading the text of the file, and while you type away in
it, the syntax highlighting system will analyze the text using the
rules defined by the syntax definition and mark in it where different
contexts and styles begin and end.When you type in the document, the new text is analyzed and marked on the
fly, so that if you delete a character that is marked as the beginning or end
of a context, the style of surrounding text changes accordingly.The syntax definitions used by the &kate; Syntax Highlighting System are
&XML; files, containing
Rules for detecting the role of text, organized into context blocksKeyword listsStyle Item definitionsWhen analyzing the text, the detection rules are evaluated in
the order in which they are defined, and if the beginning of the
current string matches a rule, the related context is used. The start
point in the text is moved to the final point at which that rule
matched and a new loop of the rules begins, starting in the context
set by the matched rule.RulesThe detection rules are the heart of the highlighting detection
system. A rule is a string, character or regular expression against which
to match the text being analyzed. It contains information about which
style to use for the matching part of the text. It may switch the
working context of the system either to an explicitly mentioned
context or to the previous context used by the text.Rules are organized in context groups. A context group is used
for main text concepts within the format, for example quoted text
strings or comment blocks in program source code. This ensures that
the highlighting system does not need to loop through all rules when
it is not necessary, and that some character sequences in the text can
be treated differently depending on the current context.
Contexts may be generated dynamically to allow the usage of instance
specific data in rules.Context Styles and KeywordsIn some programming languages, integer numbers are treated
differently than floating point ones by the compiler (the program that
converts the source code to a binary executable), and there may be
characters having a special meaning within a quoted string. In such
cases, it makes sense to render them differently from the surroundings
so that they are easy to identify while reading the text. So even if
they do not represent special contexts, they may be seen as such by
the syntax highlighting system, so that they can be marked for
different rendering.A syntax definition may contain as many styles as required to
cover the concepts of the format it is used for.In many formats, there are lists of words that represent a
specific concept. For example in programming languages, the control
statements is one concept, data type names another, and built in
functions of the language a third. The &kate; Syntax Highlighting
System can use such lists to detect and mark words in the text to
emphasize concepts of the text formats.Default StylesIf you open a C++ source file, a &Java; source file and an
HTML document in &kate;, you will see that even
though the formats are different, and thus different words are chosen
for special treatment, the colors used are the same. This is because
&kate; has a predefined list of Default Styles which are employed by
the individual syntax definitions.This makes it easy to recognize similar concepts in different
text formats. For example comments are present in almost any
programming, scripting or markup language, and when they are rendered
using the same style in all languages, you do not have to stop and
think to identify them within the text.All styles in a syntax definition use one of the default
styles. A few syntax definitions use more styles that there are
defaults, so if you use a format often, it may be worth launching the
configuration dialog to see if some concepts are using the same
style. For example there is only one default style for strings, but as
the Perl programming language operates with two types of strings, you
can enhance the highlighting by configuring those to be slightly
different. All available default styles
will be explained later.The Highlight Definition &XML; FormatOverviewThis section is an overview of the Highlight Definition &XML;
format. Based on a small example it will describe the main components
and their meaning and usage. The next section will go into detail with
the highlight detection rules.The formal definition, aka the DTD is stored
in the file language.dtd which should be
installed on your system in the folder
$TDEDIR/share/apps/katepart/syntax.
Main sections of &kate; Highlight Definition filesA highlighting file contains a header that sets the XML version and the doctype:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE language SYSTEM "language.dtd">
The root of the definition file is the element language.
Available attributes are:Required attributes:name sets the name of the language. It appears in the menus and dialogs afterwards.section specifies the category.extensions defines file extensions, like "*.cpp;*.h"Optional attributes:mimetype associates files &MIME; Type based.version specifies the current version of the definition file.kateversion specifies the latest supported &kate; version.casesensitive defines, whether the keywords are casesensitiv or not.priority is necessary if another highlight definition file uses the same extensions. The higher priority will win.author contains the name of the author and his email-address.license contains the license, usually LGPL, Artistic, GPL and others.hidden defines, whether the name should appear in &kate;'s menus.So the next line may look like this:
<language name="C++" version="1.00" kateversion="2.4" section="Sources" extensions="*.cpp;*.h" />
Next comes the highlighting element, which
contains the optional element list and the required
elements contexts and itemDatas.list elements contain a list of keywords. In
this case the keywords are class and const.
You can add as many lists as you need.The contexts element contains all contexts.
The first context is by default the start of the highlighting. There are
two rules in the context Normal Text, which match
the list of keywords with the name somename and a
rule that detects a quote and switches the context to string.
To learn more about rules read the next chapter.The third part is the itemDatas element. It
contains all color and font styles needed by the contexts and rules.
In this example, the itemDataNormal Text,
String and Keyword are used.
<highlighting>
<list name="somename">
<item> class </item>
<item> const </item>
</list>
<contexts>
<context attribute="Normal Text" lineEndContext="#pop" name="Normal Text" >
<keyword attribute="Keyword" context="#stay" String="somename" />
<DetectChar attribute="String" context="string" char=""" />
</context>
<context attribute="String" lineEndContext="#stay" name="string" >
<DetectChar attribute="String" context="#pop" char=""" />
</context>
</contexts>
<itemDatas>
<itemData name="Normal Text" defStyleNum="dsNormal" />
<itemData name="Keyword" defStyleNum="dsKeyword" />
<itemData name="String" defStyleNum="dsString" />
</itemDatas>
</highlighting>
The last part of a highlight definition is the optional
general section. It may contain information
about keywords, code folding, comments and indentation.The comment section defines with what
string a single line comment is introduced. You also can define a
multiline comments using multiLine with the
additional attribute end. This is used if the
user presses the corresponding shortcut for comment/uncomment.The keywords section defines whether
keyword lists are casesensitive or not. Other attributes will be
explained later.
<general>
<comments>
<comment name="singleLine" start="#"/>
</comments>
<keywords casesensitive="1"/>
</general>
</language>
The Sections in DetailThis part will describe all available attributes for contexts,
itemDatas, keywords, comments, code folding and indentation.The element context belongs into the group
contexts. A context itself defines context specific
rules like what should happen if the highlight system reaches the end of a
line. Available attributes are:name the context name. Rules will use this name
to specify the context to switch to if the rule matches.lineEndContext defines the context the highlight
system switches to if it reaches the end of a line. This may either be a name
of another context, #stay to not switch the context
(eg. do nothing) or #pop which will cause to leave this
context. It is possible to use for example #pop#pop#pop
to pop three times.lineBeginContext defines the context if a begin
of a line is encountered. Default: #stay.fallthrough defines if the highlight system switches
to the context specified in fallthroughContext if no rule matches.
Default: false.fallthroughContext specifies the next context
if no rule matches.dynamic if true, the context
remembers strings/placeholders saved by dynamic rules. This is needed for HERE
documents for example. Default: false.The element itemData is in the group
itemDatas. It defines the font style and colors.
So it is possible to define your own styles and colors, however we
recommend to stick to the default styles if possible so that the user
will always see the same colors used in different languages. Though,
sometimes there is no other way and it is necessary to change color
and font attributes. The attributes name and defStyleNum are required,
the other optional. Available attributes are:name sets the name of the itemData.
Contexts and rules will use this name in their attribute
attribute to reference an itemData.defStyleNum defines which default style to use.
Available default styles are explained in detail later.color defines a color. Valid formats are
'#rrggbb' or '#rgb'.selColor defines the selection color.italic if true, the text will be italic.bold if true, the text will be bold.underline if true, the text will be underlined.strikeout if true, the text will be stroked out.The element keywords in the group
general defines keyword properties. Available attributes are:casesensitive may be true
or false. If true, all keywords
are matched casesensitiveweakDeliminator is a list of characters that
do not act as word delimiters. For example the dot '.'
is a word delimiter. Assume a keyword in a list contains
a dot, it will only match if you specify the dot as a weak delimiter.additionalDeliminator defines additional delimiters.wordWrapDeliminator defines characters after which a
line wrap may occur.Default delimiters and word wrap delimiters are the characters
.():!+,-<=>%&*/;?[]^{|}~\, space (' ')
and tabulator ('\t').The element comment in the group
comments defines comment properties which are used
for ToolsComment and
ToolsUncomment.
Available attributes are:name is either singleLine
or multiLine. If you choose multiLine
the attributes end and region are
required.start defines the string used to start a comment.
In C++ this would be "/*".end defines the string used to close a comment.
In C++ this would be "*/".region should be the name of the the foldable
multiline comment. Assume you have beginRegion="Comment"
... endRegion="Comment" in your rules, you should use
region="Comment". This way uncomment works even if you
do not select all the text of the multiline comment. The cursor only must be
in the multiline comment.The element folding in the group
general defines code folding properties.
Available attributes are:indentationsensitive if true, the code folding markers
will be added indentation based, like in the scripting language Python. Usually you
do not need to set it, as it defaults to false.The element indentation in the group
general defines which indenter will be used, however we strongly
recommend to omit this element, as the indenter usually will be set by either defining
a File Type or by adding a mode line to the text file. If you specify an indenter though,
you will force a specific indentation on the user, which he might not like at all.
Available attributes are:mode is the name of the indenter. Available indenters
right now are: normal, cstyle, csands, xml, python and
varindent.Available Default StylesDefault Styles were already explained,
as a short summary: Default styles are predefined font and color styles.So here only the list of available default styles:dsNormal, used for normal text.dsKeyword, used for keywords.dsDataType, used for data types.dsDecVal, used for decimal values.dsBaseN, used for values with a base other than 10.dsFloat, used for float values.dsChar, used for a character.dsString, used for strings.dsComment, used for comments.dsOthers, used for 'other' things.dsAlert, used for warning messages.dsFunction, used for function calls.dsRegionMarker, used for region markers.dsError, used for error highlighting and wrong syntax.Highlight Detection RulesThis section describes the syntax detection rules.Each rule can match zero or more characters at the beginning of
the string they are test against. If the rule matches, the matching
characters are assigned the style or attribute
defined by the rule, and a rule may ask that the current context is
switched.A rule looks like this:<RuleName attribute="(identifier)" context="(identifier)" [rule specific attributes] />The attribute identifies the style to use
for matched characters by name, and the context
identifies the context to use from here.The context can be identified by:An identifier, which is the name of the other
context.An order telling the engine to stay in the
current context (#stay), or to pop back to a
previous context used in the string (#pop).To go back more steps, the #pop keyword can be repeated:
#pop#pop#popSome rules can have child rules which are
then evaluated only if the parent rule matched. The entire matched
string will be given the attribute defined by the parent rule. A rule
with child rules looks like this:
<RuleName (attributes)>
<ChildRuleName (attributes) />
...
</RuleName>
Rule specific attributes varies and are described in the
following sections.Common attributesAll rules have the following attributes in common and are
available whenever (common attributes) appears.
attribute and context
are required attributes, all others are optional.
attribute: An attribute maps to a defined itemData.context: Specify the context to which the highlighting system switches if the rule matches.beginRegion: Start a code folding block. Default: unset.endRegion: Close a code folding block. Default: unset.lookAhead: If true, the
highlighting system will not process the matches length.
Default: false.firstNonSpace: Match only, if the string is
the first non-whitespace in the line. Default: false.column: Match only, if the column matches. Default: unset.Dynamic rulesSome rules allow the optional attribute dynamic
of type boolean that defaults to false. If dynamic is
true, a rule can use placeholders representing the text
matched by a regular expression rule that switched to the
current context in its string or
char attributes. In a string,
the placeholder %N (where N is a number) will be
replaced with the corresponding capture N
from the calling regular expression. In a
char the placeholer must be a number
N and it will be replaced with the first character of
the corresponding capture N from the calling regular
expression. Whenever a rule allows this attribute it will contain a
(dynamic).dynamic: may be (true|false).The Rules in DetailDetectCharDetect a single specific character. Commonly used for example to
find the ends of quoted strings.<DetectChar char="(character)" (common attributes) (dynamic) />The char attribute defines the character
to match.Detect2CharsDetect two specific characters in a defined order.<Detect2Chars char="(character)" char1="(character)" (common attributes) (dynamic) />The char attribute defines the first character to match,
char1 the second.AnyCharDetect one character of a set of specified characters.<AnyChar String="(string)" (common attributes) />The String attribute defines the set of
characters.StringDetectDetect an exact string.<StringDetect String="(string)" [insensitive="true|false"] (common attributes) (dynamic) />The String attribute defines the string
to match. The insensitive attribute defaults to
false and is passed to the string comparison
function. If the value is true insensitive
comparing is used.RegExprMatches against a regular expression.<RegExpr String="(string)" [insensitive="true|false"] [minimal="true|false"] (common attributes) (dynamic) />The String attribute defines the regular
expression.insensitive defaults to
false and is passed to the regular expression
engine.minimal defaults to
false and is passed to the regular expression
engine.Because the rules are always matched against the beginning of
the current string, a regular expression starting with a caret
(^) indicates that the rule should only be
matched against the start of a line.See Regular Expressions
for more information on those.keywordDetect a keyword from a specified list.<keyword String="(list name)" (common attributes) />The String attribute identifies the
keyword list by name. A list with that name must exist.IntDetect an integer number.<Int (common attributes) (dynamic) />This rule has no specific attributes. Child rules are typically
used to detect combinations of L and
U after the number, indicating the integer type
in program code. Actually all rules are allowed as child rules, though,
the DTD only allowes the child rule StringDetect.The following example matches integer numbers follows by the character 'L'.
<Int attribute="Decimal" context="#stay" >
<StringDetect attribute="Decimal" context="#stay" String="L" insensitive="true"/>
</Int>
FloatDetect a floating point number.<Float (common attributes) />This rule has no specific attributes. AnyChar is
allowed as a child rules and typically used to detect combinations, see rule
Int for reference.HlCOctDetect an octal point number representation.<HlCOct (common attributes) />This rule has no specific attributes.HlCHexDetect a hexadecimal number representation.<HlCHex (common attributes) />This rule has no specific attributes.HlCStringCharDetect an escaped character.<HlCStringChar (common attributes) />This rule has no specific attributes.It matches literal representations of characters commonly used in
program code, for example \n
(newline) or \t (TAB).The following characters will match if they follow a backslash
(\):
abefnrtv"'?\. Additionally, escaped
hexadecimal numbers like for example \xff and
escaped octal numbers, for example \033 will
match.HlCCharDetect an C character.<HlCChar (common attributes) />This rule has no specific attributes.It matches C characters enclosed in a tick (Example: 'c').
So in the ticks may be a simple character or an escaped character.
See HlCStringChar for matched escaped character sequences.RangeDetectDetect a string with defined start and end characters.<RangeDetect char="(character)" char1="(character)" (common attributes) />char defines the character starting the range,
char1 the character ending the range.Usefull to detect for example small quoted strings and the like, but
note that since the highlighting engine works on one line at a time, this
will not find strings spanning over a line break.LineContinueMatches at end of line.<LineContinue (common attributes) />This rule has no specific attributes.This rule is useful for switching context at end of line, if the last
character is a backslash ('\'). This is needed for
example in C/C++ to continue macros or strings.IncludeRulesInclude rules from another context or language/file.<IncludeRules context="contextlink" [includeAttrib="true|false"] />The context attribute defines which context to include.If it a simple string it includes all defined rules into the current context, example:
<IncludeRules context="anotherContext" />
If the string begins with ## the highlight system
will look for another language definition with the given name, example:
<IncludeRules context="##C++" />If includeAttrib attribute is
true, change the destination attribute to the one of
the source. This is required to make for example commenting work, if text
matched by the included context is a different highlight than the host
context.
DetectSpacesDetect whitespaces.<DetectSpaces (common attributes) />This rule has no specific attributes.Use this rule if you know that there can several whitespaces ahead,
for example in the beginning of indented lines. This rule will skip all
whitespace at once, instead of testing multiple rules and skipping one at the
time due to no match.DetectIdentifierDetect identifier strings (as a regular expression: [a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*).<DetectIdentifier (common attributes) />This rule has no specific attributes.Use this rule to skip a string of word characters at once, rather than
testing with multiple rules and skipping one at the time due to no match.Tips & TricksOnce you have understood how the context switching works it will be
easy to write highlight definitions. Though you should carefully check what
rule you choose in what situation. Regular expressions are very mighty, but
they are slow compared to the other rules. So you may consider the following
tips.
If you only match two characters use Detect2Chars
instead of StringDetect. The same applies to
DetectChar.Regular expressions are easy to use but often there is another much
faster way to achieve the same result. Consider you only want to match
the character '#' if it is the first character in the
line. A regular expression based solution would look like this:
<RegExpr attribute="Macro" context="macro" String="^\s*#" />
You can achieve the same much faster in using:
<DetectChar attribute="Macro" context="macro" char="#" firstNonSpace="true" />
If you want to match the regular expression '^#' you
can still use DetectChar with the attribute column="0".
The attribute column counts character based, so a tabulator still is only one character.
You can switch contexts without processing characters. Assume that you
want to switch context when you meet the string */, but
need to process that string in the next context. The below rule will match, and
the lookAhead attribute will cause the highlighter to
keep the matched string for the next context.
<Detect2Chars attribute="Comment" context="#pop" char="*" char1="/" lookAhead="true" />Use DetectSpaces if you know that many whitespaces occur.Use DetectIdentifier instead of the regular expression '[a-zA-Z_]\w*'.Use default styles whenever you can. This way the user will find a familiar environment.Look into other XML-files to see how other people implement tricky rules.You can validate every XML file by using the command
xmllint --dtdvalid language.dtd mySyntax.xml.If you repeat complex regular expression very often you can use
ENTITIES. Example:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE language SYSTEM "language.dtd"
[
<!ENTITY myref "[A-Za-z_:][\w.:_-]*">
]>
Now you can use &myref; instead of the regular
expression.