pygments.rb 1.2.1 → 2.2.0

This diff represents the content of publicly available package versions that have been released to one of the supported registries. The information contained in this diff is provided for informational purposes only and reflects changes between package versions as they appear in their respective public registries.
Files changed (386) hide show
  1. checksums.yaml +5 -5
  2. data/.github/dependabot.yml +13 -0
  3. data/.github/workflows/ci.yml +40 -0
  4. data/.github/workflows/release.yml +24 -0
  5. data/.gitignore +4 -6
  6. data/.rubocop.yml +16 -0
  7. data/CHANGELOG.adoc +137 -0
  8. data/Gemfile +3 -1
  9. data/LICENSE +1 -1
  10. data/README.adoc +159 -0
  11. data/Rakefile +8 -32
  12. data/bench.rb +14 -8
  13. data/lib/pygments.rb +16 -14
  14. data/lib/pygments/lexer.rb +87 -65
  15. data/lib/pygments/mentos.py +23 -110
  16. data/lib/pygments/popen.rb +188 -284
  17. data/lib/pygments/version.rb +2 -2
  18. data/pygments.rb.gemspec +20 -13
  19. data/test/test_pygments.rb +50 -110
  20. data/vendor/pygments-main/{AUTHORS → Pygments-2.8.1.dist-info/AUTHORS} +26 -3
  21. data/vendor/pygments-main/Pygments-2.8.1.dist-info/INSTALLER +1 -0
  22. data/vendor/pygments-main/{LICENSE → Pygments-2.8.1.dist-info/LICENSE} +1 -1
  23. data/vendor/pygments-main/Pygments-2.8.1.dist-info/METADATA +48 -0
  24. data/vendor/pygments-main/Pygments-2.8.1.dist-info/RECORD +494 -0
  25. data/vendor/pygments-main/Pygments-2.8.1.dist-info/REQUESTED +0 -0
  26. data/vendor/pygments-main/Pygments-2.8.1.dist-info/WHEEL +5 -0
  27. data/vendor/pygments-main/Pygments-2.8.1.dist-info/entry_points.txt +3 -0
  28. data/vendor/pygments-main/Pygments-2.8.1.dist-info/top_level.txt +1 -0
  29. data/vendor/pygments-main/bin/pygmentize +8 -0
  30. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/__init__.py +6 -12
  31. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/__main__.py +17 -0
  32. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/cmdline.py +213 -184
  33. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/console.py +6 -10
  34. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/filter.py +4 -7
  35. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/filters/__init__.py +609 -22
  36. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatter.py +4 -5
  37. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/__init__.py +10 -10
  38. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/_mapping.py +1 -4
  39. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/bbcode.py +1 -2
  40. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/html.py +242 -139
  41. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/img.py +91 -50
  42. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/irc.py +39 -40
  43. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/latex.py +62 -33
  44. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/other.py +18 -17
  45. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/rtf.py +29 -30
  46. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/svg.py +40 -5
  47. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/terminal.py +25 -32
  48. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/formatters/terminal256.py +45 -14
  49. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexer.py +47 -44
  50. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/__init__.py +341 -0
  51. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_asy_builtins.py +1644 -0
  52. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_cl_builtins.py +231 -0
  53. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_cocoa_builtins.py +75 -0
  54. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_csound_builtins.py +1724 -0
  55. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_lasso_builtins.py +5326 -0
  56. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_lua_builtins.py +292 -0
  57. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_mapping.py +554 -0
  58. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_mql_builtins.py +1171 -0
  59. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_mysql_builtins.py +1281 -0
  60. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_openedge_builtins.py +2600 -0
  61. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_php_builtins.py +4752 -0
  62. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_postgres_builtins.py +677 -0
  63. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_scilab_builtins.py +3093 -0
  64. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_sourcemod_builtins.py +1160 -0
  65. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_stan_builtins.py +557 -0
  66. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_stata_builtins.py +457 -0
  67. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_tsql_builtins.py +1003 -0
  68. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_usd_builtins.py +112 -0
  69. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_vbscript_builtins.py +279 -0
  70. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/_vim_builtins.py +1938 -0
  71. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/actionscript.py +244 -0
  72. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/agile.py +23 -0
  73. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/algebra.py +239 -0
  74. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/ambient.py +75 -0
  75. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/amdgpu.py +48 -0
  76. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/ampl.py +86 -0
  77. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/apl.py +100 -0
  78. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/archetype.py +317 -0
  79. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/arrow.py +116 -0
  80. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/asm.py +1004 -0
  81. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/automation.py +379 -0
  82. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/bare.py +103 -0
  83. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/basic.py +661 -0
  84. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/bibtex.py +159 -0
  85. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/boa.py +101 -0
  86. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/business.py +626 -0
  87. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/c_cpp.py +342 -0
  88. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/c_like.py +565 -0
  89. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/capnproto.py +77 -0
  90. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/cddl.py +190 -0
  91. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/chapel.py +111 -0
  92. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/clean.py +178 -0
  93. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/compiled.py +33 -0
  94. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/configs.py +985 -0
  95. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/console.py +113 -0
  96. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/crystal.py +366 -0
  97. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/csound.py +466 -0
  98. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/css.py +694 -0
  99. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/d.py +255 -0
  100. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/dalvik.py +124 -0
  101. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/data.py +697 -0
  102. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/devicetree.py +108 -0
  103. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/diff.py +164 -0
  104. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/dotnet.py +706 -0
  105. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/dsls.py +959 -0
  106. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/dylan.py +286 -0
  107. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/ecl.py +137 -0
  108. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/eiffel.py +64 -0
  109. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/elm.py +120 -0
  110. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/email.py +150 -0
  111. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/erlang.py +529 -0
  112. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/esoteric.py +303 -0
  113. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/ezhil.py +76 -0
  114. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/factor.py +343 -0
  115. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/fantom.py +249 -0
  116. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/felix.py +272 -0
  117. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/floscript.py +82 -0
  118. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/forth.py +177 -0
  119. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/fortran.py +208 -0
  120. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/foxpro.py +427 -0
  121. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/freefem.py +897 -0
  122. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/functional.py +20 -0
  123. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/futhark.py +110 -0
  124. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/gdscript.py +345 -0
  125. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/go.py +100 -0
  126. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/grammar_notation.py +269 -0
  127. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/graph.py +84 -0
  128. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/graphics.py +799 -0
  129. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/graphviz.py +57 -0
  130. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/haskell.py +869 -0
  131. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/haxe.py +935 -0
  132. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/hdl.py +468 -0
  133. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/hexdump.py +102 -0
  134. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/html.py +613 -0
  135. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/idl.py +280 -0
  136. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/igor.py +419 -0
  137. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/inferno.py +95 -0
  138. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/installers.py +321 -0
  139. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/int_fiction.py +1367 -0
  140. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/iolang.py +62 -0
  141. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/j.py +145 -0
  142. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/javascript.py +1536 -0
  143. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/julia.py +330 -0
  144. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/jvm.py +1739 -0
  145. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/lisp.py +2698 -0
  146. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/make.py +205 -0
  147. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/markup.py +762 -0
  148. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/math.py +20 -0
  149. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/matlab.py +3280 -0
  150. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/mime.py +225 -0
  151. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/ml.py +957 -0
  152. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/modeling.py +365 -0
  153. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/modula2.py +1579 -0
  154. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/monte.py +203 -0
  155. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/mosel.py +447 -0
  156. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/ncl.py +893 -0
  157. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/nimrod.py +158 -0
  158. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/nit.py +63 -0
  159. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/nix.py +135 -0
  160. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/oberon.py +120 -0
  161. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/objective.py +503 -0
  162. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/ooc.py +84 -0
  163. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/other.py +40 -0
  164. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/parasail.py +78 -0
  165. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/parsers.py +799 -0
  166. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/pascal.py +643 -0
  167. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/pawn.py +202 -0
  168. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/perl.py +731 -0
  169. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/php.py +320 -0
  170. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/pointless.py +70 -0
  171. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/pony.py +93 -0
  172. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/praat.py +301 -0
  173. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/prolog.py +305 -0
  174. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/promql.py +182 -0
  175. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/python.py +1158 -0
  176. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/qvt.py +151 -0
  177. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/r.py +190 -0
  178. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/rdf.py +462 -0
  179. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/rebol.py +430 -0
  180. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/resource.py +84 -0
  181. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/ride.py +138 -0
  182. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/rnc.py +66 -0
  183. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/roboconf.py +81 -0
  184. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/robotframework.py +551 -0
  185. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/ruby.py +523 -0
  186. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/rust.py +223 -0
  187. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/sas.py +227 -0
  188. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/scdoc.py +82 -0
  189. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/scripting.py +1283 -0
  190. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/sgf.py +60 -0
  191. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/shell.py +909 -0
  192. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/sieve.py +68 -0
  193. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/slash.py +184 -0
  194. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/smalltalk.py +194 -0
  195. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/smv.py +78 -0
  196. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/snobol.py +82 -0
  197. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/solidity.py +91 -0
  198. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/special.py +106 -0
  199. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/sql.py +832 -0
  200. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/stata.py +170 -0
  201. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/supercollider.py +94 -0
  202. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/tcl.py +144 -0
  203. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/templates.py +2263 -0
  204. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/teraterm.py +334 -0
  205. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/testing.py +206 -0
  206. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/text.py +25 -0
  207. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/textedit.py +168 -0
  208. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/textfmts.py +429 -0
  209. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/theorem.py +476 -0
  210. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/tnt.py +262 -0
  211. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/trafficscript.py +53 -0
  212. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/typoscript.py +218 -0
  213. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/unicon.py +411 -0
  214. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/urbi.py +145 -0
  215. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/usd.py +89 -0
  216. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/varnish.py +189 -0
  217. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/verification.py +113 -0
  218. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/web.py +23 -0
  219. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/webidl.py +298 -0
  220. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/webmisc.py +991 -0
  221. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/whiley.py +115 -0
  222. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/x10.py +68 -0
  223. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/xorg.py +36 -0
  224. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/yang.py +103 -0
  225. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/lexers/zig.py +123 -0
  226. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/modeline.py +1 -2
  227. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/plugin.py +4 -3
  228. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/regexopt.py +1 -2
  229. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/scanner.py +2 -3
  230. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/sphinxext.py +2 -5
  231. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/style.py +61 -25
  232. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/__init__.py +12 -5
  233. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/abap.py +1 -2
  234. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/algol.py +1 -2
  235. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/algol_nu.py +1 -2
  236. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/arduino.py +2 -3
  237. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/autumn.py +1 -2
  238. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/borland.py +1 -2
  239. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/bw.py +1 -2
  240. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/colorful.py +1 -2
  241. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/default.py +1 -2
  242. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/emacs.py +1 -2
  243. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/friendly.py +1 -2
  244. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/fruity.py +1 -2
  245. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/igor.py +1 -2
  246. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/inkpot.py +66 -0
  247. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/lovelace.py +1 -2
  248. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/manni.py +1 -2
  249. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/material.py +118 -0
  250. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/monokai.py +4 -4
  251. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/murphy.py +1 -2
  252. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/native.py +1 -2
  253. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/paraiso_dark.py +1 -2
  254. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/paraiso_light.py +1 -2
  255. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/pastie.py +1 -2
  256. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/perldoc.py +1 -2
  257. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/rainbow_dash.py +1 -2
  258. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/rrt.py +1 -2
  259. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/sas.py +1 -2
  260. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/solarized.py +136 -0
  261. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/stata_dark.py +40 -0
  262. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/{stata.py → stata_light.py} +14 -16
  263. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/tango.py +1 -2
  264. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/trac.py +1 -2
  265. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/vim.py +1 -2
  266. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/vs.py +1 -2
  267. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/xcode.py +1 -2
  268. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/styles/zenburn.py +80 -0
  269. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/token.py +1 -2
  270. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/unistring.py +47 -109
  271. data/vendor/pygments-main/pygments/util.py +16 -96
  272. metadata +81 -139
  273. data/CHANGELOG.md +0 -111
  274. data/README.md +0 -121
  275. data/cache-lexers.rb +0 -8
  276. data/circle.yml +0 -20
  277. data/test/test_data.c +0 -2581
  278. data/test/test_data.py +0 -514
  279. data/test/test_data_generated +0 -2582
  280. data/vendor/custom_lexers/github.py +0 -565
  281. data/vendor/pygments-main/CHANGES +0 -1186
  282. data/vendor/pygments-main/MANIFEST.in +0 -6
  283. data/vendor/pygments-main/Makefile +0 -65
  284. data/vendor/pygments-main/README.rst +0 -39
  285. data/vendor/pygments-main/REVISION +0 -1
  286. data/vendor/pygments-main/TODO +0 -12
  287. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/Makefile +0 -153
  288. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_static/favicon.ico +0 -0
  289. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_static/logo_new.png +0 -0
  290. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_static/logo_only.png +0 -0
  291. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_templates/docssidebar.html +0 -3
  292. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_templates/indexsidebar.html +0 -25
  293. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_themes/pygments14/layout.html +0 -98
  294. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_themes/pygments14/static/bodybg.png +0 -0
  295. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_themes/pygments14/static/docbg.png +0 -0
  296. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_themes/pygments14/static/listitem.png +0 -0
  297. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_themes/pygments14/static/logo.png +0 -0
  298. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_themes/pygments14/static/pocoo.png +0 -0
  299. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_themes/pygments14/static/pygments14.css_t +0 -401
  300. data/vendor/pygments-main/doc/_themes/pygments14/theme.conf +0 -15
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@@ -1,48 +0,0 @@
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- .. -*- mode: rst -*-
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-
3
- ====================
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- Available formatters
5
- ====================
6
-
7
- This page lists all builtin formatters.
8
-
9
- Common options
10
- ==============
11
-
12
- All formatters support these options:
13
-
14
- `encoding`
15
- If given, must be an encoding name (such as ``"utf-8"``). This will
16
- be used to convert the token strings (which are Unicode strings)
17
- to byte strings in the output (default: ``None``).
18
- It will also be written in an encoding declaration suitable for the
19
- document format if the `full` option is given (e.g. a ``meta
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- content-type`` directive in HTML or an invocation of the `inputenc`
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- package in LaTeX).
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-
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- If this is ``""`` or ``None``, Unicode strings will be written
24
- to the output file, which most file-like objects do not support.
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- For example, `pygments.highlight()` will return a Unicode string if
26
- called with no `outfile` argument and a formatter that has `encoding`
27
- set to ``None`` because it uses a `StringIO.StringIO` object that
28
- supports Unicode arguments to `write()`. Using a regular file object
29
- wouldn't work.
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-
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- .. versionadded:: 0.6
32
-
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- `outencoding`
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- When using Pygments from the command line, any `encoding` option given is
35
- passed to the lexer and the formatter. This is sometimes not desirable,
36
- for example if you want to set the input encoding to ``"guess"``.
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- Therefore, `outencoding` has been introduced which overrides `encoding`
38
- for the formatter if given.
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-
40
- .. versionadded:: 0.7
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-
42
-
43
- Formatter classes
44
- =================
45
-
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- All these classes are importable from :mod:`pygments.formatters`.
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-
48
- .. pygmentsdoc:: formatters
@@ -1,66 +0,0 @@
1
- Pygments documentation
2
- ======================
3
-
4
- **Starting with Pygments**
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-
6
- .. toctree::
7
- :maxdepth: 1
8
-
9
- ../download
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- quickstart
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- cmdline
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-
13
- **Builtin components**
14
-
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- .. toctree::
16
- :maxdepth: 1
17
-
18
- lexers
19
- filters
20
- formatters
21
- styles
22
-
23
- **Reference**
24
-
25
- .. toctree::
26
- :maxdepth: 1
27
-
28
- unicode
29
- tokens
30
- api
31
-
32
- **Hacking for Pygments**
33
-
34
- .. toctree::
35
- :maxdepth: 1
36
-
37
- lexerdevelopment
38
- formatterdevelopment
39
- filterdevelopment
40
- plugins
41
-
42
- **Hints and tricks**
43
-
44
- .. toctree::
45
- :maxdepth: 1
46
-
47
- rstdirective
48
- moinmoin
49
- java
50
- integrate
51
-
52
- **About Pygments**
53
-
54
- .. toctree::
55
- :maxdepth: 1
56
-
57
- changelog
58
- authors
59
-
60
-
61
- If you find bugs or have suggestions for the documentation, please look
62
- :ref:`here <contribute>` for info on how to contact the team.
63
-
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- .. XXX You can download an offline version of this documentation from the
65
- :doc:`download page </download>`.
66
-
@@ -1,40 +0,0 @@
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- .. -*- mode: rst -*-
2
-
3
- ===================================
4
- Using Pygments in various scenarios
5
- ===================================
6
-
7
- Markdown
8
- --------
9
-
10
- Since Pygments 0.9, the distribution ships Markdown_ preprocessor sample code
11
- that uses Pygments to render source code in
12
- :file:`external/markdown-processor.py`. You can copy and adapt it to your
13
- liking.
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-
15
- .. _Markdown: http://www.freewisdom.org/projects/python-markdown/
16
-
17
- TextMate
18
- --------
19
-
20
- Antonio Cangiano has created a Pygments bundle for TextMate that allows to
21
- colorize code via a simple menu option. It can be found here_.
22
-
23
- .. _here: http://antoniocangiano.com/2008/10/28/pygments-textmate-bundle/
24
-
25
- Bash completion
26
- ---------------
27
-
28
- The source distribution contains a file ``external/pygments.bashcomp`` that
29
- sets up completion for the ``pygmentize`` command in bash.
30
-
31
- Wrappers for other languages
32
- ----------------------------
33
-
34
- These libraries provide Pygments highlighting for users of other languages
35
- than Python:
36
-
37
- * `pygments.rb <https://github.com/tmm1/pygments.rb>`_, a pygments wrapper for Ruby
38
- * `Clygments <https://github.com/bfontaine/clygments>`_, a pygments wrapper for
39
- Clojure
40
- * `PHPygments <https://github.com/capynet/PHPygments>`_, a pygments wrapper for PHP
@@ -1,70 +0,0 @@
1
- =====================
2
- Use Pygments in Java
3
- =====================
4
-
5
- Thanks to `Jython <http://www.jython.org>`_ it is possible to use Pygments in
6
- Java.
7
-
8
- This page is a simple tutorial to get an idea of how this works. You can
9
- then look at the `Jython documentation <http://www.jython.org/docs/>`_ for more
10
- advanced uses.
11
-
12
- Since version 1.5, Pygments is deployed on `Maven Central
13
- <http://repo1.maven.org/maven2/org/pygments/pygments/>`_ as a JAR, as is Jython
14
- which makes it a lot easier to create a Java project.
15
-
16
- Here is an example of a `Maven <http://www.maven.org>`_ ``pom.xml`` file for a
17
- project running Pygments:
18
-
19
- .. sourcecode:: xml
20
-
21
- <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
22
-
23
- <project xmlns="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0"
24
- xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
25
- xsi:schemaLocation="http://maven.apache.org/POM/4.0.0
26
- http://maven.apache.org/maven-v4_0_0.xsd">
27
- <modelVersion>4.0.0</modelVersion>
28
- <groupId>example</groupId>
29
- <artifactId>example</artifactId>
30
- <version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
31
- <dependencies>
32
- <dependency>
33
- <groupId>org.python</groupId>
34
- <artifactId>jython-standalone</artifactId>
35
- <version>2.5.3</version>
36
- </dependency>
37
- <dependency>
38
- <groupId>org.pygments</groupId>
39
- <artifactId>pygments</artifactId>
40
- <version>1.5</version>
41
- <scope>runtime</scope>
42
- </dependency>
43
- </dependencies>
44
- </project>
45
-
46
- The following Java example:
47
-
48
- .. sourcecode:: java
49
-
50
- PythonInterpreter interpreter = new PythonInterpreter();
51
-
52
- // Set a variable with the content you want to work with
53
- interpreter.set("code", code);
54
-
55
- // Simple use Pygments as you would in Python
56
- interpreter.exec("from pygments import highlight\n"
57
- + "from pygments.lexers import PythonLexer\n"
58
- + "from pygments.formatters import HtmlFormatter\n"
59
- + "\nresult = highlight(code, PythonLexer(), HtmlFormatter())");
60
-
61
- // Get the result that has been set in a variable
62
- System.out.println(interpreter.get("result", String.class));
63
-
64
- will print something like:
65
-
66
- .. sourcecode:: html
67
-
68
- <div class="highlight">
69
- <pre><span class="k">print</span> <span class="s">&quot;Hello World&quot;</span></pre>
70
- </div>
@@ -1,728 +0,0 @@
1
- .. -*- mode: rst -*-
2
-
3
- .. highlight:: python
4
-
5
- ====================
6
- Write your own lexer
7
- ====================
8
-
9
- If a lexer for your favorite language is missing in the Pygments package, you
10
- can easily write your own and extend Pygments.
11
-
12
- All you need can be found inside the :mod:`pygments.lexer` module. As you can
13
- read in the :doc:`API documentation <api>`, a lexer is a class that is
14
- initialized with some keyword arguments (the lexer options) and that provides a
15
- :meth:`.get_tokens_unprocessed()` method which is given a string or unicode
16
- object with the data to lex.
17
-
18
- The :meth:`.get_tokens_unprocessed()` method must return an iterator or iterable
19
- containing tuples in the form ``(index, token, value)``. Normally you don't
20
- need to do this since there are base lexers that do most of the work and that
21
- you can subclass.
22
-
23
-
24
- RegexLexer
25
- ==========
26
-
27
- The lexer base class used by almost all of Pygments' lexers is the
28
- :class:`RegexLexer`. This class allows you to define lexing rules in terms of
29
- *regular expressions* for different *states*.
30
-
31
- States are groups of regular expressions that are matched against the input
32
- string at the *current position*. If one of these expressions matches, a
33
- corresponding action is performed (such as yielding a token with a specific
34
- type, or changing state), the current position is set to where the last match
35
- ended and the matching process continues with the first regex of the current
36
- state.
37
-
38
- Lexer states are kept on a stack: each time a new state is entered, the new
39
- state is pushed onto the stack. The most basic lexers (like the `DiffLexer`)
40
- just need one state.
41
-
42
- Each state is defined as a list of tuples in the form (`regex`, `action`,
43
- `new_state`) where the last item is optional. In the most basic form, `action`
44
- is a token type (like `Name.Builtin`). That means: When `regex` matches, emit a
45
- token with the match text and type `tokentype` and push `new_state` on the state
46
- stack. If the new state is ``'#pop'``, the topmost state is popped from the
47
- stack instead. To pop more than one state, use ``'#pop:2'`` and so on.
48
- ``'#push'`` is a synonym for pushing the current state on the stack.
49
-
50
- The following example shows the `DiffLexer` from the builtin lexers. Note that
51
- it contains some additional attributes `name`, `aliases` and `filenames` which
52
- aren't required for a lexer. They are used by the builtin lexer lookup
53
- functions. ::
54
-
55
- from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer
56
- from pygments.token import *
57
-
58
- class DiffLexer(RegexLexer):
59
- name = 'Diff'
60
- aliases = ['diff']
61
- filenames = ['*.diff']
62
-
63
- tokens = {
64
- 'root': [
65
- (r' .*\n', Text),
66
- (r'\+.*\n', Generic.Inserted),
67
- (r'-.*\n', Generic.Deleted),
68
- (r'@.*\n', Generic.Subheading),
69
- (r'Index.*\n', Generic.Heading),
70
- (r'=.*\n', Generic.Heading),
71
- (r'.*\n', Text),
72
- ]
73
- }
74
-
75
- As you can see this lexer only uses one state. When the lexer starts scanning
76
- the text, it first checks if the current character is a space. If this is true
77
- it scans everything until newline and returns the data as a `Text` token (which
78
- is the "no special highlighting" token).
79
-
80
- If this rule doesn't match, it checks if the current char is a plus sign. And
81
- so on.
82
-
83
- If no rule matches at the current position, the current char is emitted as an
84
- `Error` token that indicates a lexing error, and the position is increased by
85
- one.
86
-
87
-
88
- Adding and testing a new lexer
89
- ==============================
90
-
91
- The easiest way to use a new lexer is to use Pygments' support for loading
92
- the lexer from a file relative to your current directory.
93
-
94
- First, change the name of your lexer class to CustomLexer:
95
-
96
- .. code-block:: python
97
-
98
- from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer
99
- from pygments.token import *
100
-
101
- class CustomLexer(RegexLexer):
102
- """All your lexer code goes here!"""
103
-
104
- Then you can load the lexer from the command line with the additional
105
- flag ``-x``:
106
-
107
- .. code-block:: console
108
-
109
- $ pygmentize -l your_lexer_file.py -x
110
-
111
- To specify a class name other than CustomLexer, append it with a colon:
112
-
113
- .. code-block:: console
114
-
115
- $ pygmentize -l your_lexer.py:SomeLexer -x
116
-
117
- Or, using the Python API:
118
-
119
- .. code-block:: python
120
-
121
- # For a lexer named CustomLexer
122
- your_lexer = load_lexer_from_file(filename, **options)
123
-
124
- # For a lexer named MyNewLexer
125
- your_named_lexer = load_lexer_from_file(filename, "MyNewLexer", **options)
126
-
127
- When loading custom lexers and formatters, be extremely careful to use only
128
- trusted files; Pygments will perform the equivalent of ``eval`` on them.
129
-
130
- If you only want to use your lexer with the Pygments API, you can import and
131
- instantiate the lexer yourself, then pass it to :func:`pygments.highlight`.
132
-
133
- To prepare your new lexer for inclusion in the Pygments distribution, so that it
134
- will be found when passing filenames or lexer aliases from the command line, you
135
- have to perform the following steps.
136
-
137
- First, change to the current directory containing the Pygments source code. You
138
- will need to have either an unpacked source tarball, or (preferably) a copy
139
- cloned from BitBucket.
140
-
141
- .. code-block:: console
142
-
143
- $ cd .../pygments-main
144
-
145
- Select a matching module under ``pygments/lexers``, or create a new module for
146
- your lexer class.
147
-
148
- Next, make sure the lexer is known from outside of the module. All modules in
149
- the ``pygments.lexers`` package specify ``__all__``. For example,
150
- ``esoteric.py`` sets::
151
-
152
- __all__ = ['BrainfuckLexer', 'BefungeLexer', ...]
153
-
154
- Add the name of your lexer class to this list (or create the list if your lexer
155
- is the only class in the module).
156
-
157
- Finally the lexer can be made publicly known by rebuilding the lexer mapping:
158
-
159
- .. code-block:: console
160
-
161
- $ make mapfiles
162
-
163
- To test the new lexer, store an example file with the proper extension in
164
- ``tests/examplefiles``. For example, to test your ``DiffLexer``, add a
165
- ``tests/examplefiles/example.diff`` containing a sample diff output.
166
-
167
- Now you can use pygmentize to render your example to HTML:
168
-
169
- .. code-block:: console
170
-
171
- $ ./pygmentize -O full -f html -o /tmp/example.html tests/examplefiles/example.diff
172
-
173
- Note that this explicitly calls the ``pygmentize`` in the current directory
174
- by preceding it with ``./``. This ensures your modifications are used.
175
- Otherwise a possibly already installed, unmodified version without your new
176
- lexer would have been called from the system search path (``$PATH``).
177
-
178
- To view the result, open ``/tmp/example.html`` in your browser.
179
-
180
- Once the example renders as expected, you should run the complete test suite:
181
-
182
- .. code-block:: console
183
-
184
- $ make test
185
-
186
- It also tests that your lexer fulfills the lexer API and certain invariants,
187
- such as that the concatenation of all token text is the same as the input text.
188
-
189
-
190
- Regex Flags
191
- ===========
192
-
193
- You can either define regex flags locally in the regex (``r'(?x)foo bar'``) or
194
- globally by adding a `flags` attribute to your lexer class. If no attribute is
195
- defined, it defaults to `re.MULTILINE`. For more information about regular
196
- expression flags see the page about `regular expressions`_ in the Python
197
- documentation.
198
-
199
- .. _regular expressions: http://docs.python.org/library/re.html#regular-expression-syntax
200
-
201
-
202
- Scanning multiple tokens at once
203
- ================================
204
-
205
- So far, the `action` element in the rule tuple of regex, action and state has
206
- been a single token type. Now we look at the first of several other possible
207
- values.
208
-
209
- Here is a more complex lexer that highlights INI files. INI files consist of
210
- sections, comments and ``key = value`` pairs::
211
-
212
- from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer, bygroups
213
- from pygments.token import *
214
-
215
- class IniLexer(RegexLexer):
216
- name = 'INI'
217
- aliases = ['ini', 'cfg']
218
- filenames = ['*.ini', '*.cfg']
219
-
220
- tokens = {
221
- 'root': [
222
- (r'\s+', Text),
223
- (r';.*?$', Comment),
224
- (r'\[.*?\]$', Keyword),
225
- (r'(.*?)(\s*)(=)(\s*)(.*?)$',
226
- bygroups(Name.Attribute, Text, Operator, Text, String))
227
- ]
228
- }
229
-
230
- The lexer first looks for whitespace, comments and section names. Later it
231
- looks for a line that looks like a key, value pair, separated by an ``'='``
232
- sign, and optional whitespace.
233
-
234
- The `bygroups` helper yields each capturing group in the regex with a different
235
- token type. First the `Name.Attribute` token, then a `Text` token for the
236
- optional whitespace, after that a `Operator` token for the equals sign. Then a
237
- `Text` token for the whitespace again. The rest of the line is returned as
238
- `String`.
239
-
240
- Note that for this to work, every part of the match must be inside a capturing
241
- group (a ``(...)``), and there must not be any nested capturing groups. If you
242
- nevertheless need a group, use a non-capturing group defined using this syntax:
243
- ``(?:some|words|here)`` (note the ``?:`` after the beginning parenthesis).
244
-
245
- If you find yourself needing a capturing group inside the regex which shouldn't
246
- be part of the output but is used in the regular expressions for backreferencing
247
- (eg: ``r'(<(foo|bar)>)(.*?)(</\2>)'``), you can pass `None` to the bygroups
248
- function and that group will be skipped in the output.
249
-
250
-
251
- Changing states
252
- ===============
253
-
254
- Many lexers need multiple states to work as expected. For example, some
255
- languages allow multiline comments to be nested. Since this is a recursive
256
- pattern it's impossible to lex just using regular expressions.
257
-
258
- Here is a lexer that recognizes C++ style comments (multi-line with ``/* */``
259
- and single-line with ``//`` until end of line)::
260
-
261
- from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer
262
- from pygments.token import *
263
-
264
- class CppCommentLexer(RegexLexer):
265
- name = 'Example Lexer with states'
266
-
267
- tokens = {
268
- 'root': [
269
- (r'[^/]+', Text),
270
- (r'/\*', Comment.Multiline, 'comment'),
271
- (r'//.*?$', Comment.Singleline),
272
- (r'/', Text)
273
- ],
274
- 'comment': [
275
- (r'[^*/]', Comment.Multiline),
276
- (r'/\*', Comment.Multiline, '#push'),
277
- (r'\*/', Comment.Multiline, '#pop'),
278
- (r'[*/]', Comment.Multiline)
279
- ]
280
- }
281
-
282
- This lexer starts lexing in the ``'root'`` state. It tries to match as much as
283
- possible until it finds a slash (``'/'``). If the next character after the slash
284
- is an asterisk (``'*'``) the `RegexLexer` sends those two characters to the
285
- output stream marked as `Comment.Multiline` and continues lexing with the rules
286
- defined in the ``'comment'`` state.
287
-
288
- If there wasn't an asterisk after the slash, the `RegexLexer` checks if it's a
289
- Singleline comment (i.e. followed by a second slash). If this also wasn't the
290
- case it must be a single slash, which is not a comment starter (the separate
291
- regex for a single slash must also be given, else the slash would be marked as
292
- an error token).
293
-
294
- Inside the ``'comment'`` state, we do the same thing again. Scan until the
295
- lexer finds a star or slash. If it's the opening of a multiline comment, push
296
- the ``'comment'`` state on the stack and continue scanning, again in the
297
- ``'comment'`` state. Else, check if it's the end of the multiline comment. If
298
- yes, pop one state from the stack.
299
-
300
- Note: If you pop from an empty stack you'll get an `IndexError`. (There is an
301
- easy way to prevent this from happening: don't ``'#pop'`` in the root state).
302
-
303
- If the `RegexLexer` encounters a newline that is flagged as an error token, the
304
- stack is emptied and the lexer continues scanning in the ``'root'`` state. This
305
- can help producing error-tolerant highlighting for erroneous input, e.g. when a
306
- single-line string is not closed.
307
-
308
-
309
- Advanced state tricks
310
- =====================
311
-
312
- There are a few more things you can do with states:
313
-
314
- - You can push multiple states onto the stack if you give a tuple instead of a
315
- simple string as the third item in a rule tuple. For example, if you want to
316
- match a comment containing a directive, something like:
317
-
318
- .. code-block:: text
319
-
320
- /* <processing directive> rest of comment */
321
-
322
- you can use this rule::
323
-
324
- tokens = {
325
- 'root': [
326
- (r'/\* <', Comment, ('comment', 'directive')),
327
- ...
328
- ],
329
- 'directive': [
330
- (r'[^>]*', Comment.Directive),
331
- (r'>', Comment, '#pop'),
332
- ],
333
- 'comment': [
334
- (r'[^*]+', Comment),
335
- (r'\*/', Comment, '#pop'),
336
- (r'\*', Comment),
337
- ]
338
- }
339
-
340
- When this encounters the above sample, first ``'comment'`` and ``'directive'``
341
- are pushed onto the stack, then the lexer continues in the directive state
342
- until it finds the closing ``>``, then it continues in the comment state until
343
- the closing ``*/``. Then, both states are popped from the stack again and
344
- lexing continues in the root state.
345
-
346
- .. versionadded:: 0.9
347
- The tuple can contain the special ``'#push'`` and ``'#pop'`` (but not
348
- ``'#pop:n'``) directives.
349
-
350
-
351
- - You can include the rules of a state in the definition of another. This is
352
- done by using `include` from `pygments.lexer`::
353
-
354
- from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer, bygroups, include
355
- from pygments.token import *
356
-
357
- class ExampleLexer(RegexLexer):
358
- tokens = {
359
- 'comments': [
360
- (r'/\*.*?\*/', Comment),
361
- (r'//.*?\n', Comment),
362
- ],
363
- 'root': [
364
- include('comments'),
365
- (r'(function )(\w+)( {)',
366
- bygroups(Keyword, Name, Keyword), 'function'),
367
- (r'.', Text),
368
- ],
369
- 'function': [
370
- (r'[^}/]+', Text),
371
- include('comments'),
372
- (r'/', Text),
373
- (r'\}', Keyword, '#pop'),
374
- ]
375
- }
376
-
377
- This is a hypothetical lexer for a language that consist of functions and
378
- comments. Because comments can occur at toplevel and in functions, we need
379
- rules for comments in both states. As you can see, the `include` helper saves
380
- repeating rules that occur more than once (in this example, the state
381
- ``'comment'`` will never be entered by the lexer, as it's only there to be
382
- included in ``'root'`` and ``'function'``).
383
-
384
- - Sometimes, you may want to "combine" a state from existing ones. This is
385
- possible with the `combined` helper from `pygments.lexer`.
386
-
387
- If you, instead of a new state, write ``combined('state1', 'state2')`` as the
388
- third item of a rule tuple, a new anonymous state will be formed from state1
389
- and state2 and if the rule matches, the lexer will enter this state.
390
-
391
- This is not used very often, but can be helpful in some cases, such as the
392
- `PythonLexer`'s string literal processing.
393
-
394
- - If you want your lexer to start lexing in a different state you can modify the
395
- stack by overriding the `get_tokens_unprocessed()` method::
396
-
397
- from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer
398
-
399
- class ExampleLexer(RegexLexer):
400
- tokens = {...}
401
-
402
- def get_tokens_unprocessed(self, text, stack=('root', 'otherstate')):
403
- for item in RegexLexer.get_tokens_unprocessed(self, text, stack):
404
- yield item
405
-
406
- Some lexers like the `PhpLexer` use this to make the leading ``<?php``
407
- preprocessor comments optional. Note that you can crash the lexer easily by
408
- putting values into the stack that don't exist in the token map. Also
409
- removing ``'root'`` from the stack can result in strange errors!
410
-
411
- - In some lexers, a state should be popped if anything is encountered that isn't
412
- matched by a rule in the state. You could use an empty regex at the end of
413
- the state list, but Pygments provides a more obvious way of spelling that:
414
- ``default('#pop')`` is equivalent to ``('', Text, '#pop')``.
415
-
416
- .. versionadded:: 2.0
417
-
418
-
419
- Subclassing lexers derived from RegexLexer
420
- ==========================================
421
-
422
- .. versionadded:: 1.6
423
-
424
- Sometimes multiple languages are very similar, but should still be lexed by
425
- different lexer classes.
426
-
427
- When subclassing a lexer derived from RegexLexer, the ``tokens`` dictionaries
428
- defined in the parent and child class are merged. For example::
429
-
430
- from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer, inherit
431
- from pygments.token import *
432
-
433
- class BaseLexer(RegexLexer):
434
- tokens = {
435
- 'root': [
436
- ('[a-z]+', Name),
437
- (r'/\*', Comment, 'comment'),
438
- ('"', String, 'string'),
439
- ('\s+', Text),
440
- ],
441
- 'string': [
442
- ('[^"]+', String),
443
- ('"', String, '#pop'),
444
- ],
445
- 'comment': [
446
- ...
447
- ],
448
- }
449
-
450
- class DerivedLexer(BaseLexer):
451
- tokens = {
452
- 'root': [
453
- ('[0-9]+', Number),
454
- inherit,
455
- ],
456
- 'string': [
457
- (r'[^"\\]+', String),
458
- (r'\\.', String.Escape),
459
- ('"', String, '#pop'),
460
- ],
461
- }
462
-
463
- The `BaseLexer` defines two states, lexing names and strings. The
464
- `DerivedLexer` defines its own tokens dictionary, which extends the definitions
465
- of the base lexer:
466
-
467
- * The "root" state has an additional rule and then the special object `inherit`,
468
- which tells Pygments to insert the token definitions of the parent class at
469
- that point.
470
-
471
- * The "string" state is replaced entirely, since there is not `inherit` rule.
472
-
473
- * The "comment" state is inherited entirely.
474
-
475
-
476
- Using multiple lexers
477
- =====================
478
-
479
- Using multiple lexers for the same input can be tricky. One of the easiest
480
- combination techniques is shown here: You can replace the action entry in a rule
481
- tuple with a lexer class. The matched text will then be lexed with that lexer,
482
- and the resulting tokens will be yielded.
483
-
484
- For example, look at this stripped-down HTML lexer::
485
-
486
- from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer, bygroups, using
487
- from pygments.token import *
488
- from pygments.lexers.javascript import JavascriptLexer
489
-
490
- class HtmlLexer(RegexLexer):
491
- name = 'HTML'
492
- aliases = ['html']
493
- filenames = ['*.html', '*.htm']
494
-
495
- flags = re.IGNORECASE | re.DOTALL
496
- tokens = {
497
- 'root': [
498
- ('[^<&]+', Text),
499
- ('&.*?;', Name.Entity),
500
- (r'<\s*script\s*', Name.Tag, ('script-content', 'tag')),
501
- (r'<\s*[a-zA-Z0-9:]+', Name.Tag, 'tag'),
502
- (r'<\s*/\s*[a-zA-Z0-9:]+\s*>', Name.Tag),
503
- ],
504
- 'script-content': [
505
- (r'(.+?)(<\s*/\s*script\s*>)',
506
- bygroups(using(JavascriptLexer), Name.Tag),
507
- '#pop'),
508
- ]
509
- }
510
-
511
- Here the content of a ``<script>`` tag is passed to a newly created instance of
512
- a `JavascriptLexer` and not processed by the `HtmlLexer`. This is done using
513
- the `using` helper that takes the other lexer class as its parameter.
514
-
515
- Note the combination of `bygroups` and `using`. This makes sure that the
516
- content up to the ``</script>`` end tag is processed by the `JavascriptLexer`,
517
- while the end tag is yielded as a normal token with the `Name.Tag` type.
518
-
519
- Also note the ``(r'<\s*script\s*', Name.Tag, ('script-content', 'tag'))`` rule.
520
- Here, two states are pushed onto the state stack, ``'script-content'`` and
521
- ``'tag'``. That means that first ``'tag'`` is processed, which will lex
522
- attributes and the closing ``>``, then the ``'tag'`` state is popped and the
523
- next state on top of the stack will be ``'script-content'``.
524
-
525
- Since you cannot refer to the class currently being defined, use `this`
526
- (imported from `pygments.lexer`) to refer to the current lexer class, i.e.
527
- ``using(this)``. This construct may seem unnecessary, but this is often the
528
- most obvious way of lexing arbitrary syntax between fixed delimiters without
529
- introducing deeply nested states.
530
-
531
- The `using()` helper has a special keyword argument, `state`, which works as
532
- follows: if given, the lexer to use initially is not in the ``"root"`` state,
533
- but in the state given by this argument. This does not work with advanced
534
- `RegexLexer` subclasses such as `ExtendedRegexLexer` (see below).
535
-
536
- Any other keywords arguments passed to `using()` are added to the keyword
537
- arguments used to create the lexer.
538
-
539
-
540
- Delegating Lexer
541
- ================
542
-
543
- Another approach for nested lexers is the `DelegatingLexer` which is for example
544
- used for the template engine lexers. It takes two lexers as arguments on
545
- initialisation: a `root_lexer` and a `language_lexer`.
546
-
547
- The input is processed as follows: First, the whole text is lexed with the
548
- `language_lexer`. All tokens yielded with the special type of ``Other`` are
549
- then concatenated and given to the `root_lexer`. The language tokens of the
550
- `language_lexer` are then inserted into the `root_lexer`'s token stream at the
551
- appropriate positions. ::
552
-
553
- from pygments.lexer import DelegatingLexer
554
- from pygments.lexers.web import HtmlLexer, PhpLexer
555
-
556
- class HtmlPhpLexer(DelegatingLexer):
557
- def __init__(self, **options):
558
- super(HtmlPhpLexer, self).__init__(HtmlLexer, PhpLexer, **options)
559
-
560
- This procedure ensures that e.g. HTML with template tags in it is highlighted
561
- correctly even if the template tags are put into HTML tags or attributes.
562
-
563
- If you want to change the needle token ``Other`` to something else, you can give
564
- the lexer another token type as the third parameter::
565
-
566
- DelegatingLexer.__init__(MyLexer, OtherLexer, Text, **options)
567
-
568
-
569
- Callbacks
570
- =========
571
-
572
- Sometimes the grammar of a language is so complex that a lexer would be unable
573
- to process it just by using regular expressions and stacks.
574
-
575
- For this, the `RegexLexer` allows callbacks to be given in rule tuples, instead
576
- of token types (`bygroups` and `using` are nothing else but preimplemented
577
- callbacks). The callback must be a function taking two arguments:
578
-
579
- * the lexer itself
580
- * the match object for the last matched rule
581
-
582
- The callback must then return an iterable of (or simply yield) ``(index,
583
- tokentype, value)`` tuples, which are then just passed through by
584
- `get_tokens_unprocessed()`. The ``index`` here is the position of the token in
585
- the input string, ``tokentype`` is the normal token type (like `Name.Builtin`),
586
- and ``value`` the associated part of the input string.
587
-
588
- You can see an example here::
589
-
590
- from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer
591
- from pygments.token import Generic
592
-
593
- class HypotheticLexer(RegexLexer):
594
-
595
- def headline_callback(lexer, match):
596
- equal_signs = match.group(1)
597
- text = match.group(2)
598
- yield match.start(), Generic.Headline, equal_signs + text + equal_signs
599
-
600
- tokens = {
601
- 'root': [
602
- (r'(=+)(.*?)(\1)', headline_callback)
603
- ]
604
- }
605
-
606
- If the regex for the `headline_callback` matches, the function is called with
607
- the match object. Note that after the callback is done, processing continues
608
- normally, that is, after the end of the previous match. The callback has no
609
- possibility to influence the position.
610
-
611
- There are not really any simple examples for lexer callbacks, but you can see
612
- them in action e.g. in the `SMLLexer` class in `ml.py`_.
613
-
614
- .. _ml.py: http://bitbucket.org/birkenfeld/pygments-main/src/tip/pygments/lexers/ml.py
615
-
616
-
617
- The ExtendedRegexLexer class
618
- ============================
619
-
620
- The `RegexLexer`, even with callbacks, unfortunately isn't powerful enough for
621
- the funky syntax rules of languages such as Ruby.
622
-
623
- But fear not; even then you don't have to abandon the regular expression
624
- approach: Pygments has a subclass of `RegexLexer`, the `ExtendedRegexLexer`.
625
- All features known from RegexLexers are available here too, and the tokens are
626
- specified in exactly the same way, *except* for one detail:
627
-
628
- The `get_tokens_unprocessed()` method holds its internal state data not as local
629
- variables, but in an instance of the `pygments.lexer.LexerContext` class, and
630
- that instance is passed to callbacks as a third argument. This means that you
631
- can modify the lexer state in callbacks.
632
-
633
- The `LexerContext` class has the following members:
634
-
635
- * `text` -- the input text
636
- * `pos` -- the current starting position that is used for matching regexes
637
- * `stack` -- a list containing the state stack
638
- * `end` -- the maximum position to which regexes are matched, this defaults to
639
- the length of `text`
640
-
641
- Additionally, the `get_tokens_unprocessed()` method can be given a
642
- `LexerContext` instead of a string and will then process this context instead of
643
- creating a new one for the string argument.
644
-
645
- Note that because you can set the current position to anything in the callback,
646
- it won't be automatically be set by the caller after the callback is finished.
647
- For example, this is how the hypothetical lexer above would be written with the
648
- `ExtendedRegexLexer`::
649
-
650
- from pygments.lexer import ExtendedRegexLexer
651
- from pygments.token import Generic
652
-
653
- class ExHypotheticLexer(ExtendedRegexLexer):
654
-
655
- def headline_callback(lexer, match, ctx):
656
- equal_signs = match.group(1)
657
- text = match.group(2)
658
- yield match.start(), Generic.Headline, equal_signs + text + equal_signs
659
- ctx.pos = match.end()
660
-
661
- tokens = {
662
- 'root': [
663
- (r'(=+)(.*?)(\1)', headline_callback)
664
- ]
665
- }
666
-
667
- This might sound confusing (and it can really be). But it is needed, and for an
668
- example look at the Ruby lexer in `ruby.py`_.
669
-
670
- .. _ruby.py: https://bitbucket.org/birkenfeld/pygments-main/src/tip/pygments/lexers/ruby.py
671
-
672
-
673
- Handling Lists of Keywords
674
- ==========================
675
-
676
- For a relatively short list (hundreds) you can construct an optimized regular
677
- expression directly using ``words()`` (longer lists, see next section). This
678
- function handles a few things for you automatically, including escaping
679
- metacharacters and Python's first-match rather than longest-match in
680
- alternations. Feel free to put the lists themselves in
681
- ``pygments/lexers/_$lang_builtins.py`` (see examples there), and generated by
682
- code if possible.
683
-
684
- An example of using ``words()`` is something like::
685
-
686
- from pygments.lexer import RegexLexer, words, Name
687
-
688
- class MyLexer(RegexLexer):
689
-
690
- tokens = {
691
- 'root': [
692
- (words(('else', 'elseif'), suffix=r'\b'), Name.Builtin),
693
- (r'\w+', Name),
694
- ],
695
- }
696
-
697
- As you can see, you can add ``prefix`` and ``suffix`` parts to the constructed
698
- regex.
699
-
700
-
701
- Modifying Token Streams
702
- =======================
703
-
704
- Some languages ship a lot of builtin functions (for example PHP). The total
705
- amount of those functions differs from system to system because not everybody
706
- has every extension installed. In the case of PHP there are over 3000 builtin
707
- functions. That's an incredibly huge amount of functions, much more than you
708
- want to put into a regular expression.
709
-
710
- But because only `Name` tokens can be function names this is solvable by
711
- overriding the ``get_tokens_unprocessed()`` method. The following lexer
712
- subclasses the `PythonLexer` so that it highlights some additional names as
713
- pseudo keywords::
714
-
715
- from pygments.lexers.python import PythonLexer
716
- from pygments.token import Name, Keyword
717
-
718
- class MyPythonLexer(PythonLexer):
719
- EXTRA_KEYWORDS = set(('foo', 'bar', 'foobar', 'barfoo', 'spam', 'eggs'))
720
-
721
- def get_tokens_unprocessed(self, text):
722
- for index, token, value in PythonLexer.get_tokens_unprocessed(self, text):
723
- if token is Name and value in self.EXTRA_KEYWORDS:
724
- yield index, Keyword.Pseudo, value
725
- else:
726
- yield index, token, value
727
-
728
- The `PhpLexer` and `LuaLexer` use this method to resolve builtin functions.