Manipulation of the displayed text is done through highlighters, which can be added or removed with the following commands:
add-highlighter [-override] <path>/<name> <type> <parameters> ...
and
remove-highlighter <path>/<name>
path is the name of a highlighter group, it is expressed as a / separated path starting with a scope. Scopes are global, buffer, window and shared
name is the name of the highlighter, if name is omitted in
add-highlighter
(the path ends with a /
), it will be auto-generated
from the remaining parameters.
if -override
is specified and the given name already exists, that
highlighter is replaced with the new one.
- show-matching
-
highlight matching char of the character under the selections' cursor using
MatchingChar
face - show-whitespaces [options]
-
display symbols on top of whitespaces to make them more explicit using the
Whitespace
face, with the following options:- -lf <separator>
-
a one character long separator that will replace line feeds
- -spc <separator>
-
a one character long separator that will replace spaces
- -nbsp <separator>
-
a one character long separator that will replace non-breakable spaces
- -tab <separator>
-
a one character long separator that will replace tabulations
- -tabpad <separator>
-
a one character long separator that will be appended to tabulations to honor the tabstop option
- number-lines [options]
-
show line numbers using the
LineNumbers
,LineNumberCursor
andLineNumbersWrapped
faces, 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 from the rest of the buffer (default is '|')
- -min-digits <num>
-
always reserve room for at least num digits, so text doesn’t jump around as lines are added or removed (default is 2)
- wrap [options]
-
soft wrap buffer text at window width, with the following options:
- -word
-
wrap at word boundaries instead of codepoint boundaries.
- -indent
-
preserve line indent when wrapping.
- -width <max_width>
-
wrap text at max_width if the window is wider.
- -marker <marker_text>
-
prefix wrapped lines with marker_text; if -indent was given, the marker_text is displayed into the indentation if possible.
- fill <face>
-
fill using the given face, mostly useful with regions highlighters
- column <number> <face>
-
highlight column number with face face
- line <number> <face>
-
highlight line number with face face
- regex <regex> <capture_id>:<face> …
-
highlight a regex, takes the regex as first parameter, followed by any number of face parameters. This highlights C++ style comments in cyan, with an eventual 'TODO:' in yellow on red background:
add-highlighter window/ regex //\h*(TODO:)[^\n]* 0:cyan 1:yellow,red
capture_id can be either the capture number, or its name if a named capture is used in the regex (See <<regex#Groups, `:doc regex Groups`>>)
- dynregex <expression> <capture_id>:<face> …
-
similar to regex, but expand (like a command parameter would) the given expression before building a regex from the result. This highlights all the current search matches in italic:
add-highlighter window/ dynregex '%reg{/}' 0:+i
The following highlighters are useful to add indicators like lint warnings,
git blame output or spelling mistakes.
See :doc options types
for the format of line-specs
and range-specs
.
- flag-lines <face> <option_name>
-
add columns in front of the buffer, and display the flags specified in
line-specs
option, using <face>. In this example two words will be added in the gutter: a blue Foo at line 1 and a bold red/yellow Bar on line 3:
declare-option line-specs my_flags set-option window my_flags %val{timestamp} '1|Foo' '3|{red,yellow+b}Bar' add-highlighter window/ flag-lines blue my_flags
- ranges <option_name>
-
use the data in the
range-specs
option of the given name to highlight the buffer. The string part of each tuple of the range-specs is interpreted as a face to apply to the range. In this example the 3 first chars of the buffer will be colored in red:
declare-option range-specs my_range set-option window my_range %val{timestamp} '1.1,1.3|red' add-highlighter window/ ranges my_range
- replace-ranges <option_name>
-
use the data in the
range-specs
option of the given name to highlight the buffer. The string part of each tuple of the range-specs is interpreted as markup string (see:doc faces markup-strings
) and displayed in place of the range. Here, the 3 first chars of the buffer will be replaced by the word 'red':
declare-option range-specs my_range set-option window my_range %val{timestamp} '1.1,1.3|red' add-highlighter window/ replace-ranges my_range
The group highlighter is a container for other highlighters. A subgroup can be added to an existing group or scope using:
add-highlighter <path>/<name> group
Other highlighters can then be added to that group
add-highlighter <path>/<name> <type> <params>...
In order to specify which kinds of highlighters can be added to a given group, the -passes flag set can be passed along with the group name. Possible values for this option can be one or several (separated with a pipe sign) of colorize, move or wrap (default: colorize):
add-highlighter window/<name> group -passes colorize|move|wrap
A special highlighter provides a way to segment the buffer into regions, which are to be highlighted differently.
add-highlighter <path>/<name> regions
Individual region definitions can then be added to that highlighter
add-highlighter <path>/<name>/<region_name> region \ [-match-capture] [-recurse <recurse>] \ <opening> <closing> <type> <params>...
- 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, every match of recurse will consume a following match of end, preventing it from closing the region.
- type and params
-
A highlighter type, and associated params, as they would be passed to
add-highlighter
if they were not applied as a region.
If the -match-capture switch is passed, then region closing and recurse matches are considered valid for a given region opening match only if they matched the same content for the capture 1.
The recurse option is useful for regions that can be nested, for example the following construct:
%sh{ ... }
accepts nested braces scopes ('{ … }') so the following string is valid:
%sh{ ... { ... } ... }
This region can be defined with:
shell_expand -recurse \{ %sh\{ \}
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.
A default region, that will apply its given highlighter to the segments of the buffer that are not in any defined region, can be added with the default-region highlighter type.
add-highlighter <path>/<name>/<region_name> default-region <type> <params>...
Most programming languages can then be properly highlighted using a region highlighter as root:
add-highlighter <path>/<lang> regions add-highlighter <path>/<lang>/string '"' '"' fill string add-highlighter <path>/<lang>/comment '//' '$' fill comment add-highlighter <path>/<lang>/code default-region group add-highlighter <path>/<lang>/code/variable regex ... add-highlighter <path>/<lang>/code/function regex ...
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.
Highlighters can be put in the shared scope in order to make them reusable.
add-highlighter shared/<name> ...
The common case would be to create a named shared group, or regions and then fill it with highlighters:
add-highlighter shared/<name> group add-highlighter shared/<name>/ regex ...
It can then be referenced in a window using the ref highlighter.
add-highlighter window/ ref <name>
The ref can reference any named highlighter in the shared scope.