Syntax highlighting is done by pluggable highlighters:
main
- the base highlighter, and the only one active by default.brackets
- matches brackets and parenthesis.pattern
- matches user-defined patterns.cursor
- matches the cursor position.root
- highlights the whole command line if the current user is root.line
- applied to the whole command line.By default, all command lines are highlighted. However, it is possible to
prevent command lines longer than a fixed number of characters from being
highlighted by setting the variable ${ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_MAXLENGTH}
to the maximum
length (in characters) of command lines to be highlighter. This is useful when
editing very long comand lines (for example, with the fned
utility
function). Example:
ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_MAXLENGTH=512
To activate an highlighter, add it to the ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_HIGHLIGHTERS
array in
~/.zshrc
, for example:
ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_HIGHLIGHTERS=(main brackets pattern cursor)
By default, $ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_HIGHLIGHTERS
is unset and only the main
highlighter is active.
Highlighters look up styles from the ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES
associative array.
Navigate into the individual highlighters' documentation to
see what styles (keys) each highlighter defines; the syntax for values is the
same as the syntax of "types of highlighting" of the zsh builtin
$zle_highlight
array, which is documented in the zshzle(1)
manual
page.
Some highlighters support additional configuration parameters; see each highlighter's documentation for details and examples.
To create your own acme
highlighter:
Create your script at
highlighters/acme/acme-highlighter.zsh
.
Implement the _zsh_highlight_highlighter_acme_predicate
function.
This function must return 0 when the highlighter needs to be called and
non-zero otherwise, for example:
_zsh_highlight_highlighter_acme_predicate() {
# Call this highlighter in SVN working copies
[[ -d .svn ]]
}
Implement the _zsh_highlight_highlighter_acme_paint
function.
This function does the actual syntax highlighting, by calling
_zsh_highlight_add_highlight
with the start and end of the region to
be highlighted and the ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES
key to use. Define the default
style for that key in the highlighter script outside of any function with
: ${ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES[key]:=value}
, being sure to prefix
the key with your highlighter name and a colon. For example:
: ${ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES[acme:aurora]:=fg=green}
_zsh_highlight_highlighter_acme_paint() {
# Colorize the whole buffer with the 'aurora' style
_zsh_highlight_add_highlight 0 $#BUFFER acme:aurora
}
If you need to test which options the user has set, test zsyh_user_options
with a sensible default if the option is not present in supported zsh
versions. For example:
[[ ${zsyh_user_options[ignoreclosebraces]:-off} == on ]]
The option name must be all lowercase with no underscores and not an alias.
Name your own functions and global variables _zsh_highlight_acme_*
.
In zsh-syntax-highlighting 0.4.0 and earlier, the entrypoints
_zsh_highlight_highlighter_acme_predicate
and
_zsh_highlight_highlighter_acme_paint
were named
_zsh_highlight_acme_highlighter_predicate
and
_zsh_highlight_highlighter_acme_paint
respectively.
These names are still supported for backwards compatibility; however, support for them will be removed in a future major or minor release (v0.x.0 or v1.0.0).
Activate your highlighter in ~/.zshrc
:
ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_HIGHLIGHTERS+=(acme)