Manuel Pear
Text_Highlighter
Provides functionality to perform syntax highlighting for different file formats.
Introduction
With Text_Highlighter it is possible to create syntax highlighted versions of different file formats.
Currently, the following formats are supported:
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ABAP
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C++
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CSS
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output of diff(1)
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DTD
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HTML
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Java
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Javascript
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MySQL
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Perl
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PHP
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Python
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Ruby
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sh
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SQL
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VBScript
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XML
There are different options for getting the results of the highlighting, through the use of renderers. The list of renderers is as follows.
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Array
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Console
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HTML - using span-tags containing a CSS class name, this is the default renderer
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HTMLTags - using simple set of tags, only B, I and U, useful for devices that support only a subset of HTML (example is an iPod)
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JSON
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XML
Usage
The class Text_Highlighter contains all necessary functionality to perform the syntax highlighting except for the actual highlighting rules for the different formats. These rules are defined in subclasses of Text_Highlighter, but one must not directly instantiate these subclasses. Instead the object-oriented factory pattern is used to create a highlighter object depending on the format:
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Exemple 64-7. Highlighting a SQL query
This code generates a highlighted version of the SQL SELECT-query that is passed to Text_Highlighter::highlight in HTML. It is possible to customize the output to e.g. instead generate output suitable for usage on a console. This is described in the section Output Customization. |
In order to produce syntax highlighting for other formats, one must replace the argument value SQL of Text_Highlighter::factory with one of ABAP, CPP, CSS, DIFF, DTD, HTML, JAVA, JAVASCRIPT, MYSQL, PERL, PHP, PYTHON, RUBY, SQL, or XML.
Output Customization
The default behaviour of Text_Highlighter is to generate a syntax highlighted HTML version of the input.
It is possible to instead generate output that is suitable for being displayed on color-capable terminals such as xterm or through less(1) by telling Text_Highlighter to use another renderer:
Also it is possible to further customize the output of both the HTML- and the console-renderer by passing an associative array of options to the constructor:
The following options are applicable:
Tableau 64-1. Possible options for the renderer classes
| Name | Description | Available in HTML renderer | Available in console renderer | Hints |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| numbers | Line numbering style | yes | yes | In the console renderer, this option takes just TRUE or FALSE in order to denote if line numbers should be displayed or not. The HTML rendered accepts three different values: HL_NUMBERS_LI instructs the class to number the lines using the <ol /> HTML tag, while HL_NUMBERS_TABLE uses a two-column table with the line numbers in the first and the source code in the second column. Setting the value to FALSE turns line numbering off in the HTML renderer. |
| tabsize | Tab width | yes | yes | |
| colors | Additional colors | no | yes | An associate array of additional colors for color-enabled consoles. The key of each array entry must be the name of the color and the corresponding value must be the escape sequence for it. (Example: \033[1;31mRed.) |
Remonter 
