syntax highlighting library.
Skylighting is a syntax highlighting library with support for over one hundred languages. It derives its tokenizers from XML syntax definitions used by KDE's KSyntaxHighlighting framework, so any syntax supported by that framework can be added. An optional command-line program is provided. Skylighting is intended to be the successor to highlighting-kate. This package provides generated syntax modules based on the KDE XML definitions provided by the skylighting-core
package. As a result this package is licensed under the GPL.
skylighting
A Haskell syntax highlighting library with tokenizers derived from KDE XML syntax highlighting descriptions.
A command-line highlighter program, skylighting
, is also provided.
This project is divided up into five packages:
skylighting-core
: this provides KDE XML parsing, data types, and a tokenizer. This includes the core functionality of the skylighting project licensed under the BSD3 license, along with the KDE XML files, some of which are licensed under the LGPL or GPL. This package does not provide any built-in parsers corresponding to the XML descriptions, however. For that, useskylighting
.skylighting-format-ansi
: this provides formatters for rendering skylighting tokens as colored ANSI text.skylighting-format-blaze-html
: this provides formatters for rendering skylighting tokens as HTML, using theblaze-html
library.skylighting-format-context
: this provides formatters for rendering skylighting tokens as ConTeXt.skylighting-format-latex
: this provides formatters for rendering skylighting tokens as LaTeX.skylighting
: this exposes theskylighting-core
API and ANSI, HTML, ConTeXt, and LaTeX formatters, and also provides bundled Haskell parser modules derived from the XML descriptions in thecore
package. This package is entirely licensed under the GPL.
Motivation
This library is the successor to highlighting-kate, which had some problems that were difficult to resolve given its architecture.
In highlighting-kate, the XML syntax descriptions were converted into individual parsec parsers, which were then compiled. This made it difficult to handle IncludeRules properly without circular imports. There was also no way to load a syntax description dynamically.
Skylighting, by contrast, parses the XML syntax descriptions into Haskell data structures, which are then interpreted by a "tokenize" function. IncludeRules can now be handled properly, and users can add new syntax descriptions dynamically. It is also now possible to convert .theme
files directly into styles.
Skylighting is also faster than highlighting-kate, by a factor of 3 in some cases.
Installing
To install the latest release from Hackage, do
stack install skylighting
or
cabal install skylighting
If you want the command-line tool, set the executable
flag using --flag "skylighting:executable"
in stack or -fexecutable
in cabal.
The release tarball for the skylighting
package includes generated files not present in this repository. Building from this repository is a two-step process. In the first step we build the skylighting-core
package, which provides a program, skylighting-extract
, which reads XML syntax highlighting definitions from the xml
directory and writes Haskell source files. In the second we actually build the skylighting
package.
Using cabal:
# First, build skylighting-extract
cabal build -fexecutable skylighting-core
# This will print the path of the built executable.
# Replace $EXE with this path in the following steps
# Now, generate the syntax files
cd ../skylighting
$EXE ../skylighting-core/xml
cabal install -fexecutable
Using stack:
stack build --flag skylighting-core:executable skylighting-core
cd skylighting
stack exec skylighting-extract -- ../skylighting-core/xml
cd ..
stack install --flag skylighting:executable
Command-line tool
A command-line executable, skylighting
, is installed if the executable
cabal flag is set in building.
For help, skylighting --help
.
Adding new syntaxes
To compile with additional syntaxes, simply add the syntax definition (XML) file to the xml
directory of the skylighting-core
package and repeat the bootstrap build described above.
Note that both the library and the executable can dynamically load syntax definitions, so you may not need to compile them in. If you prefer this approach, you can use the skylighting-core
package directly which provides the XML files without the generated code produced by the bootstrap process described above.
If the syntax definition you are adding is not already in the KDE repository, please submit it upstream so it can be included there. You can do that here, providing the file (or changes) and a test: https://invent.kde.org/frameworks/syntax-highlighting/-/merge_requests. Here is a sample merge request: https://invent.kde.org/frameworks/syntax-highlighting/-/merge_requests/20/diffs. If creating a proper merge request is too much work, at least submit an issue to https://invent.kde.org/frameworks/syntax-highlighting/-/issues alerting the KDE developers of the availability of a new or changed syntax definition; they can then decide whether to integrate it.
We normally pull changes in syntax definitions from upstream before each release.
License
The skylighting
package is licensed under the GPL because some of the XML syntax descriptions from which its tokenizers are generated are GPL-licensed. However, the skylighting-core
package, which provides the core types and functions of this project is licensed under the BSD3 license and bundles the GPL-licensed XML files separately.
The KDE project now recommends that new syntax highlighting files be MIT licensed.
References
Kate syntax highlighting documentation: https://docs.kde.org/stable5/en/kate/katepart/highlight.html
Kate highlighting definitions: KDE repository.