MalcolmHunter
malcolm.hunter@gmx.co.uk
Conversion to British English
Working with Syntax Highlighting Overview Syntax Highlighting is what makes the editor automatically display text in different styles/colours, 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 colours 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 languages, markup and scripting 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 colours used by each syntax highlight definition, as well as which &MIME;types it should be used for, can be configured using the Highlight page of the Config Dialogue. 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 Dialogue. The &kate; Syntax Highlight System This section will discuss the &kate; syntax highlighting mechanism in more detail. It is for you if you want to know know about it, or if you want to change or create syntax definitions. How it Works Whenever 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 analyse 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 analysed 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, organised into context blocks Keyword lists Style Item definitions When analysing 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. Rules The 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 analysed. 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 organised 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. Context Styles and Keywords In 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 emphasise concepts of the text formats. Default Styles If 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 colours used are the same. This is because &kate; has a predefined list of Default Styles, that are employed by the individual syntax definitions. This makes it easy to recognise 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 dialogue 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. The Highlight Definition &XML; Format Overview This section is an overview of the Highlight Definition &XML; format. It will describe the main components and their meaning and usage, and go into detail with the 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/kate/syntax. Main components of &kate; Highlight Definitions The General Section The General Section contains information on the comment format of the described language, and defines whether keywords are case sensitive. Highlighting The Highlighting section contains all data required to analyse and render the text. This includes: ItemDatas Contains ItemData elements, each defining a style. Keyword lists Each list has a name, and may contain any number of items. Contexts Contains contexts, which again contain the syntax detection rules. Highlight Detection Rules This section describes the syntax detection rules. Each rule can match zero or more characters at the beginning of the string they are asked to test. 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. The attribute and context attributes are common to all rules. A rule looks like this: <RuleName attribute="(identifier)" context="(identifier|order)" [rule specific attributes] /> The attribute identifies the style to use for matched characters by name or index, and the context identifies the context to use from here. The attribute can be identified either by name, or by its zero-based index in the ItemDatas group. The context can be identified by: An identifier, currently only its zero-based index in the contexts group. 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#pop Some rules can have child rules which are then evaluated if and 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 list. The Rules in Detail DetectChar Detect a single specific character. Commonly used for example to find the ends of quoted strings. <DetectChar char="(character)" (common attributes) /> The char attribute defines the character to match. Detect2Chars Detect two specific characters in a defined order. <Detect2Chars char="(character)" char1="(character)" (common attributes) /> The char attribute defines the first character to match, char1 the second. AnyChar Detect one character of a set of specified characters. <AnyChar String="(string)" (common attributes) /> The String attribute defines the set of characters. StringDetect Detect an exact string. <StringDetect String="(string)" [insensitive="TRUE|FALSE;"] (common attributes) /> The String attribute defines the string to match. The insensitive attribute defaults to FALSE and is fed to the string comparison function. If the value is TRUE insensitive comparing is used. RegExpr Matches against a regular expression. <RegExpr String="(string)" [insensitive="TRUE|FALSE;"] [minimal="TRUE|FALSE"] (common attributes) /> The String attribute defines the regular expression. insensitive defaults to FALSE and is fed to the regular expression engine. minimal defaults to FALSE and is fed 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. Keyword Detect 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. Int Detect an integer number. <Int (common attributes) /> 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. Float Detect a floating point number. <Float (common attributes) /> This rule has no specific attributes. HlCOct Detect an octal point number representation. <HlCOct (common attributes) /> This rule has no specific attributes. HlCHex Detect a hexadecimal number representation. <Int (common attributes) /> This rule has no specific attributes. HlCStringChar Detect an escaped character. <HlCStringChar (common attributes) /> This rule has no specific attributes. It matches letteral representations of invisible 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. RangeDetect Detect a string with defined start and end characters. <RangeDetect char="(character)" char1="(character)" (common attributes) /> char defines the character starting the range, char2 the character ending the range. Useful to detect for example small quoted strings and the like, but note that since the hl engine works on one line at a time, this will not find strings spanning over a line break. LineContinue Matches at end of line. <LineContinue (common attributes) /> This rule has no specific attributes. This rule is useful for switching context at end of line.