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456 lines
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456 lines
17 KiB
Plaintext
# $Id$
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Introduction
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============
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Text_Highlighter is a class for syntax highlighting. The main idea is to
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simplify creation of subclasses implementing syntax highlighting for
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particular language. Subclasses do not implement any new functioanality, they
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just provide syntax highlighting rules. The rules sources are in XML format.
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To create a highlighter for a language, there is no need to code a new class
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manually. Simply describe the rules in XML file and use Text_Highlighter_Generator
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to create a new class.
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This document does not contain a formal description of API - it is very
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simple, and I believe providing some examples of code is sufficient.
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Highlighter XML source
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======================
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Basics
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------
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Creating a new syntax highlighter begins with describing the highlighting
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rules. There are two basic elements: block and region. A block is just a
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portion of text matching a regular expression and highlighted with a single
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color. Keyword is an example of a block. A region is defined by two regular
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expressions: one for start of region, and another for the end. The main
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difference from a block is that a region can contain blocks and regions
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(including same-named regions). An example of a region is a group of
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statements enclosed in curly brackets (this is used in many languages, for
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example PHP and C). Also, characters matching start and end of a region may be
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highlighted with their own color, and region contents with another.
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Blocks and regions may be declared as contained. Contained blocks and regions
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can only appear inside regions. If a region or a block is not declared as
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contained, it can appear both on top level and inside regions. Block or region
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declared as not-contained can only appear on top level.
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For any region, a list of blocks and regions that can appear inside this
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region can be specified.
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In this document, the term "color group" is used. Chunks of text assigned to
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same color group will be highlighted with same color. Note that in versions
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prior 0.5.0 color goups were refered as CSS classes, but since 0.5.0 not only
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HTML output is supported, so "color group" is more appropriate term.
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Elements
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--------
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The toplevel element is <highlight>. Attribute lang is required and denotes
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the name of the language. Its value is used as a part of generated class name,
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and must only contain letters, digits and underscores. Optional attribute
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case, when given value yes, makes the language case sensitive (default is case
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insensitive). Allowed subelements are:
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* <authors>: Information about the authors of the file.
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<author>: Information about a single author of the file. (May be used
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multiple times, one per author.)
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- name="...": Author's name. Required.
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- email="...": Author's email address. Optional.
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* <default>: Default color group.
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- innerGroup="...": color group name. Required.
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* <region>: Region definition
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- name="...": Region name. Required.
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- innerGroup="...": Default color group of region contents. Required.
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- delimGroup="...": color group of start and end of region. Optional,
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defaults to value of innerGroup attribute.
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- start="...", end="...": Regular expression matching start and end
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of region. Required. Regular expression delimiters are optional, but
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if you need to specify delimiter, use /. The only case when the
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delimiters are needed, is specifying regular expression modifiers,
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such as m or U. Examples: \/\* or /$/m.
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- contained="yes": Marks region as contained.
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- never-contained="yes": Marks region as not-contained.
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- <contains>: Elements allowed inside this region.
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- all="yes" Region can contain any other region or block
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(except not-contained). May be used multiple times.
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- <but> Do not allow certain regions or blocks.
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- region="..." Name of region not allowed within
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current region.
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- block="..." Name of block not allowed within
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current region.
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- region="..." Name of region allowed within current region.
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- block="..." Name of block allowed within current region.
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- <onlyin> Only allow this region within certain regions. May be
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used multiple times.
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- block="..." Name of parent region
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* <block>: Block definition
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- name="...": Block name. Required.
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- innerGroup="...": color group of block contents. Optional. If not
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specified, color group of parent region or default color group will be
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used. One would only want to omit this attribute if there are
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keyword groups (see below) inherited from this block, and no special
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highlighting should apply when the block does not match the keyword.
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- match="..." Regular expression matching the block. Required.
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Regular expression delimiters are optional, but if you need to
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specify delimiter, use /. The only case when the delimiters are
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needed, is specifying regular expression modifiers, such as m or U.
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Examples: #|\/\/ or /$/m.
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- contained="yes": Marks block as contained.
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- never-contained="yes": Marks block as not-contained.
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- <onlyin> Only allow this block within certain regions. May be used
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multiple times.
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- block="..." Name of parent region
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- multiline="yes": Marks block as multi-line. By default, whole
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blocks are assumed to reside in a single line. This make the things
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faster. If you need to declare a multi-line block, use this
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attribute.
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- <partgroup>: Assigns another color group to a part of the block that
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matched a subpattern.
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- index="n": Subpattern index. Required.
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- innerGroup="...": color group name. Required.
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This is an example from CSS highlighter: the measure is matched as
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a whole, but the measurement units are highlighted with different
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color.
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<block name="measure" match="\d*\.?\d+(\%|em|ex|pc|pt|px|in|mm|cm)"
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innerGroup="number" contained="yes">
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<onlyin region="property"/>
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<partGroup index="1" innerGroup="string" />
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</block>
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* <keywords>: Keyword group definition. Keyword groups are useful when you
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want to highlight some words that match a condition for a block with a
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different color. Keywords are defined with literal match, not regular
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expressions. For example, you have a block named identifier matching a
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general identifier, and want to highlight reserved words (which match
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this block as well) with different color. You inherit a keyword group
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"reserved" from "identifier" block.
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- name="...": Keyword group. Required.
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- ifdef="...", ifndef="..." : Conditional declaration. See
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"Conditions" below.
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- inherits="...": Inherited block name. Required.
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- innerGroup="...": color group of keyword group. Required.
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- case="yes|no": Overrides case-sensitivity of the language.
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Optional, defaults to global value.
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- <keyword>: Single keyword definition.
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- match="..." The keyword. Note: this is not a regular
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expression, but literal match (possibly case insensitive).
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Note that for BC reasons element partClass is alias for partGroup, and
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attributes innerClass and delimClass are aliases of innerGroup and
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delimGroup, respectively.
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Conditions
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----------
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Conditional declarations allow enabling or disabling certain highlighting
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rules at runtime. For example, Java highlighter has a very big list of
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keywords matching Java standard classes. Finding a match in this list can take
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much time. For that reason, corresponding keyword group is declared with
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"ifdef" attribute :
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<keywords name="builtin" inherits="identifier" innerClass="builtin"
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case="yes" ifdef="java.builtins">
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<keyword match="AbstractAction" />
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<keyword match="AbstractBorder" />
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<keyword match="AbstractButton" />
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...
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...
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<keyword match="_Remote_Stub" />
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<keyword match="_ServantActivatorStub" />
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<keyword match="_ServantLocatorStub" />
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</keywords>
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This keyword group will be only enabled when "java.builtins" is passed as an
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element of "defines" option:
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$options = array(
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'defines' => array(
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'java.builtins',
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),
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'numbers' => HL_NUMBERS_TABLE,
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);
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$highlighter = Text_Highlighter::factory('java', $options);
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"ifndef" attribute has reverse meaning.
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Currently, "ifdef" and "ifndef" attributes are only supported for <keywords>
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tag.
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Class generation
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================
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Creating XML description of highlighting rules is the most complicated part of
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the process. To generate the class, you need just few lines of code:
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<?php
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require_once 'Text/Highlighter/Generator.php';
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$generator = new Text_Highlighter_Generator('php.xml');
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$generator->generate();
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$generator->saveCode('PHP.php');
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?>
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Command-line class generation tool
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==================================
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Example from previous section looks pretty simple, but it does not handle any
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errors which may occur during parsing of XML source. The package provides a
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command-line script to make generation of classes even more simple, and takes
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care of possible errors. It is called generate (on Unix/Linux) or generate.bat
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(on Windows). This script is able to process multiple files in one run, and
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also to process XML from standard input and write generated code to standard
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output.
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Usage:
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generate options
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Options:
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-x filename, --xml=filename
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source XML file. Multiple input files can be specified, in which
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case each -x option must be followed by -p unless -d is specified
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Defaults to stdin
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-p filename, --php=filename
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destination PHP file. Defaults to stdout. If specied multiple times,
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each -p must follow -x
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-d dirname, --dir=dirname
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Default destination directory. File names will be taken from XML input
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("lang" attribute of <highlight> tag)
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-h, --help
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This help
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Examples
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Read from php.xml, write to PHP.php
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generate -x php.xml -p PHP.php
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Read from php.xml, write to standard output
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generate -x php.xml
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Read from php.xml, write to PHP.php, read from xml.xml, write to XML.php
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generate -x php.xml -p PHP.php -x xml.xml -p XML.php
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Read from php.xml, write to /some/dir/PHP.php, read from xml.xml, write to
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/some/dir/XML.php (assuming that xml.xml contains <highlight lang="xml">, and
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php.xml contains <highlight lang="php">)
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generate -x php.xml -x xml.xml -d /some/dir/
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Renderers
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=========
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Introduction
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------------
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Text_Highlighter supports renderes. Using renderers, you can get output in
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different formats. Two renderers are included in the package:
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- HTML renderer. Generates HTML output. A style sheet should be linked to
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the document to display colored text
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- Console renderer. Can be used to output highlighted text to
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color-capable terminals, either directly or trough less -r
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Renderers API
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-------------
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Renderers are subclasses of Text_Highlighter_Renderer. Renderer should
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override at least two methods - acceptToken and getOutput. Overriding other
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methods is optional, depending on the nature of renderer's output and details
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of implementation.
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string reset()
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resets renderer state. This method is called every time before a new
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source file is highlighted.
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string preprocess(string $code)
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preprocesses code. Can be used, for example, to normalize whitespace
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before highlighting. Returns preprocessed string.
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void acceptToken(string $group, string $content)
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the core method of the renderer. Highlighter passes chunks of text to
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this method in $content, and color group in $group
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void finalize()
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signals the renderer that no more tokens are available.
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mixed getOutput()
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returns generated output.
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Setting renderer options
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--------------------------------
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Renderers accept an optional argument to their constructor - options array.
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Elements of this array are renderer-specific.
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HTML renderer
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-------------
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HTML renderer produces HTML output with optional line numbering. The renderer
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itself does not provide information about actual colors of highlighted text.
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Instead, <span class="hl-XXX"> is used, where XXX is replaced with color group
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name (hl-var, hl-string, etc.). It is up to you to create a CSS stylesheet.
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If 'use_language' option with value evaluating to true was passed, class names
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will be formatted as "LANG-hl-XXX", where LANG is language name as defined in
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highlighter XML source ("lang" attribute of <highlight> tag) in lower case.
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There are 3 special CSS classes:
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hl-main - this class applies to whole output or right table column,
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depending on 'numbers' option
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hl-gutter - applies to left column in table
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hl-table - applies to whole table
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HTML renderer accepts following options (each being optional):
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* numbers - line numbering style.
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0 - no numbering (default)
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HL_NUMBERS_LI - use <ol></ol> for line numbering
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HL_NUMBERS_TABLE - create a 2-column table, with line numbers in left
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column and highlighted text in right column
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* tabsize - tabulation size. Defaults to 4
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Example:
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require_once 'Text/Highlighter/Renderer/Html.php';
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$options = array(
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'numbers' => HL_NUMBERS_LI,
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'tabsize' => 8,
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);
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$renderer = new Text_Highlighter_Renderer_HTML($options);
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Console renderer
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----------------
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Console renderer produces output for displaying on a color-capable terminal,
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either directly or through less -r, using ANSI escape sequences. By default,
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this renderer only highlights most common color groups. Additional colors
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can be specified using 'colors' option. This renderer also accepts 'numbers'
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option - a boolean value, and 'tabsize' option.
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Example :
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require_once 'Text/Highlighter/Renderer/Console.php';
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$colors = array(
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'prepro' => "\033[35m",
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'types' => "\033[32m",
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);
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$options = array(
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'numbers' => true,
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'tabsize' => 8,
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'colors' => $colors,
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);
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$renderer = new Text_Highlighter_Renderer_Console($options);
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ANSI color escape sequences have the following format:
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ESC[#;#;....;#m
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where ESC is character with ASCII code 27 (033 octal, 0x1B hexadecimal). # is
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one of the following:
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0 for normal display
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1 for bold on
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4 underline (mono only)
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5 blink on
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7 reverse video on
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8 nondisplayed (invisible)
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30 black foreground
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31 red foreground
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32 green foreground
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33 yellow foreground
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34 blue foreground
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35 magenta foreground
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36 cyan foreground
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37 white foreground
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40 black background
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41 red background
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42 green background
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43 yellow background
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44 blue background
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45 magenta background
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46 cyan background
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47 white background
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How to use Text_Highlighter class
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=================================
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Creating a highlighter object
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-----------------------------
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To create a highlighter for a certain language, use Text_Highlighter::factory()
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static method:
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require_once 'Text/Highlighter.php';
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$hl = Text_Highlighter::factory('php');
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Setting a renderer
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------------------
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Actual output is produced by a renderer.
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require_once 'Text/Highlighter.php';
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require_once 'Text/Highlighter/Renderer/Html.php';
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$options = array(
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'numbers' => HL_NUMBERS_LI,
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'tabsize' => 8,
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);
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$renderer = new Text_Highlighter_Renderer_HTML($options);
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$hl = Text_Highlighter::factory('php');
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$hl->setRenderer($renderer);
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Note that for BC reasons, it is possible to use highlighter without setting a
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renderer. If no renderer is set, HTML renderer will be used by default. In
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this case, you should pass options as second parameter to factory method. The
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following example works exactly as previous one:
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require_once 'Text/Highlighter.php';
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$options = array(
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'numbers' => HL_NUMBERS_LI,
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'tabsize' => 8,
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);
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$hl = Text_Highlighter::factory('php', $options);
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Getting output
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--------------
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And finally, do the highlighting and get the output:
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require_once 'Text/Highlighter.php';
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require_once 'Text/Highlighter/Renderer/Html.php';
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$options = array(
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'numbers' => HL_NUMBERS_LI,
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'tabsize' => 8,
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);
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$renderer = new Text_Highlighter_Renderer_HTML($options);
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$hl = Text_Highlighter::factory('php');
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$hl->setRenderer($renderer);
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$html = $hl->highlight(file_get_contents('example.php'));
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# vim: set autoindent tabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 softtabstop=4 tw=78: */
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