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| | ;;; font-lock.el --- Electric font lock mode -*- lexical-binding:t -*-
;; Copyright (C) 1992-2023 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
;; Author: Jamie Zawinski
;; Richard Stallman
;; Stefan Monnier
;; Maintainer: emacs-devel@gnu.org
;; Keywords: languages, faces
;; Package: emacs
;; This file is part of GNU Emacs.
;; GNU Emacs is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify
;; it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
;; the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
;; (at your option) any later version.
;; GNU Emacs is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
;; but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
;; MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
;; GNU General Public License for more details.
;; You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
;; along with GNU Emacs. If not, see <https://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
;;; Commentary:
;; Font Lock mode is a minor mode that causes your comments to be displayed in
;; one face, strings in another, reserved words in another, and so on.
;;
;; Comments will be displayed in `font-lock-comment-face'.
;; Strings will be displayed in `font-lock-string-face'.
;; Regexps are used to display selected patterns in other faces.
;;
;; To make the text you type be fontified, use M-x font-lock-mode RET.
;; When this minor mode is on, the faces of the current line are updated with
;; every insertion or deletion.
;;
;; To turn Font Lock mode on automatically, add this to your init file:
;;
;; (add-hook 'emacs-lisp-mode-hook #'turn-on-font-lock)
;;
;; Or if you want to turn Font Lock mode on in many modes:
;;
;; (global-font-lock-mode t)
;;
;; Fontification for a particular mode may be available in a number of levels
;; of decoration. The higher the level, the more decoration, but the more time
;; it takes to fontify. See the variable `font-lock-maximum-decoration'.
;; Support modes for Font Lock mode can be used to speed up Font Lock
;; mode. See `font-lock-support-mode'.
\f
;;;; How Font Lock mode fontifies:
;; When Font Lock mode is turned on in a buffer, it (a) fontifies the entire
;; buffer and (b) installs one of its fontification functions on one of the
;; hook variables that are run by Emacs after every buffer change (i.e., an
;; insertion or deletion). Fontification means the replacement of `face' text
;; properties in a given region; Emacs displays text with these `face' text
;; properties appropriately.
;;
;; Fontification normally involves syntactic (i.e., strings and comments) and
;; regexp (i.e., keywords and everything else) passes. There are actually
;; three passes; (a) the syntactic keyword pass, (b) the syntactic pass and (c)
;; the keyword pass. Confused?
;;
;; The syntactic keyword pass places `syntax-table' text properties in the
;; buffer according to the variable `font-lock-syntactic-keywords'. It is
;; necessary because Emacs's syntax table is not powerful enough to describe all
;; the different syntactic constructs required by the sort of people who decide
;; that a single quote can be syntactic or not depending on the time of day.
;; (What sort of person could decide to overload the meaning of a quote?)
;; Obviously the syntactic keyword pass must occur before the syntactic pass.
;;
;; The syntactic pass places `face' text properties in the buffer according to
;; syntactic context, i.e., according to the buffer's syntax table and buffer
;; text's `syntax-table' text properties. It involves using a syntax parsing
;; function to determine the context of different parts of a region of text. A
;; syntax parsing function is necessary because generally strings and/or
;; comments can span lines, and so the context of a given region is not
;; necessarily apparent from the content of that region. Because the keyword
;; pass only works within a given region, it is not generally appropriate for
;; syntactic fontification. This is the first fontification pass that makes
;; changes visible to the user; it fontifies strings and comments.
;;
;; The keyword pass places `face' text properties in the buffer according to
;; the variable `font-lock-keywords'. It involves searching for given regexps
;; (or calling given search functions) within the given region. This is the
;; second fontification pass that makes changes visible to the user; it
;; fontifies language reserved words, etc.
;;
;; Oh, and the answer is, "Yes, obviously just about everything should be done
;; in a single syntactic pass, but the only syntactic parser available
;; understands only strings and comments." Perhaps one day someone will write
;; some syntactic parsers for common languages and a son-of-font-lock.el could
;; use them rather then relying so heavily on the keyword (regexp) pass.
;;;; How Font Lock mode supports modes or is supported by modes:
;; Modes that support Font Lock mode do so by defining one or more variables
;; whose values specify the fontification. Font Lock mode knows of these
;; variable names from the buffer local variable `font-lock-defaults'.
;; (Font Lock mode is set up via (a) where a mode's patterns are
;; distributed with the mode's package library, and (b) where a mode's
;; patterns are distributed with font-lock.el itself. An example of (a)
;; is Pascal mode, an example of (b) is Lisp mode. Normally, the mechanism is
;; (a); (b) is used where it is not clear which package library should contain
;; the pattern definitions.) Font Lock mode chooses which variable to use for
;; fontification based on `font-lock-maximum-decoration'.
;;
;; Font Lock mode fontification behavior can be modified in a number of ways.
;; See the below comments and the comments distributed throughout this file.
;;;; Constructing patterns:
;; See the documentation for the variable `font-lock-keywords'.
;;
;; Efficient regexps for use as MATCHERs for `font-lock-keywords' and
;; `font-lock-syntactic-keywords' can be generated via the function
;; `regexp-opt'.
;;;; Adding patterns for modes that already support Font Lock:
;; Though Font Lock highlighting patterns already exist for many modes, it's
;; likely there's something that you want fontified that currently isn't, even
;; at the maximum fontification level. You can add highlighting patterns via
;; `font-lock-add-keywords'. For example, say in some C
;; header file you #define the token `and' to expand to `&&', etc., to make
;; your C code almost readable. In your ~/.emacs there could be:
;;
;; (font-lock-add-keywords 'c-mode '("\\<\\(and\\|or\\|not\\)\\>"))
;;
;; Some modes provide specific ways to modify patterns based on the values of
;; other variables. For example, additional C types can be specified via the
;; variable `c-font-lock-extra-types'.
;;;; Adding patterns for modes that do not support Font Lock:
;; Not all modes support Font Lock mode. If you (as a user of the mode) add
;; patterns for a new mode, you must define in your ~/.emacs a variable or
;; variables that specify regexp fontification. Then, you should indicate to
;; Font Lock mode, via the mode hook setting `font-lock-defaults', exactly what
;; support is required. For example, say Foo mode should have the following
;; regexps fontified case-sensitively, and comments and strings should not be
;; fontified automagically. In your ~/.emacs there could be:
;;
;; (defvar foo-font-lock-keywords
;; '(("\\<\\(one\\|two\\|three\\)\\>" . 'font-lock-keyword-face)
;; ("\\<\\(four\\|five\\|six\\)\\>" . 'font-lock-type-face))
;; "Default expressions to highlight in Foo mode.")
;;
;; (add-hook 'foo-mode-hook
;; (lambda ()
;; (setq-local font-lock-defaults
;; '(foo-font-lock-keywords t))))
;;;; Adding Font Lock support for modes:
;; Of course, it would be better that the mode already supports Font Lock mode.
;; The package author would do something similar to above. The mode must
;; define at the top-level a variable or variables that specify regexp
;; fontification. Then, the mode command should indicate to Font Lock mode,
;; via `font-lock-defaults', exactly what support is required. For example,
;; say Bar mode should have the following regexps fontified case-insensitively,
;; and comments and strings should be fontified automagically. In bar.el there
;; could be:
;;
;; (defvar bar-font-lock-keywords
;; '(("\\<\\(uno\\|due\\|tre\\)\\>" . 'font-lock-keyword-face)
;; ("\\<\\(quattro\\|cinque\\|sei\\)\\>" . 'font-lock-type-face))
;; "Default expressions to highlight in Bar mode.")
;;
;; and within `bar-mode' there could be:
;;
;; (setq-local font-lock-defaults
;; '(bar-font-lock-keywords nil t))
\f
;; What is fontification for? You might say, "It's to make my code look nice."
;; I think it should be for adding information in the form of cues. These cues
;; should provide you with enough information to both (a) distinguish between
;; different items, and (b) identify the item meanings, without having to read
;; the items and think about it. Therefore, fontification allows you to think
;; less about, say, the structure of code, and more about, say, why the code
;; doesn't work. Or maybe it allows you to think less and drift off to sleep.
;;
;; So, here are my opinions/advice/guidelines:
;;
;; - Highlight conceptual objects, such as function and variable names, and
;; different objects types differently, i.e., (a) and (b) above, highlight
;; function names differently to variable names.
;; - Keep the faces distinct from each other as far as possible.
;; i.e., (a) above.
;; - Use the same face for the same conceptual object, across all modes.
;; i.e., (b) above, all modes that have items that can be thought of as, say,
;; keywords, should be highlighted with the same face, etc.
;; - Make the face attributes fit the concept as far as possible.
;; i.e., function names might be a bold color such as blue, comments might
;; be a bright color such as red, character strings might be brown, because,
;; err, strings are brown (that was not the reason, please believe me).
;; - Don't use a non-nil OVERRIDE unless you have a good reason.
;; Only use OVERRIDE for special things that are easy to define, such as the
;; way `...' quotes are treated in strings and comments in Emacs Lisp mode.
;; Don't use it to, say, highlight keywords in commented out code or strings.
;; - Err, that's it.
\f
;;; Code:
(require 'syntax)
(eval-when-compile (require 'cl-lib))
(eval-when-compile (require 'subr-x))
;; Define core `font-lock' group.
(defgroup font-lock '((jit-lock custom-group))
"Font Lock mode text highlighting package."
:link '(custom-manual :tag "Emacs Manual" "(emacs)Font Lock")
:link '(custom-manual :tag "Elisp Manual" "(elisp)Font Lock Mode")
:group 'faces)
(defgroup font-lock-faces nil
"Faces for highlighting text."
:prefix "font-lock-"
:group 'font-lock)
(defgroup font-lock-extra-types nil
"Extra mode-specific type names for highlighting declarations."
:group 'font-lock)
\f
;; User variables.
(defcustom font-lock-maximum-decoration t
"Maximum decoration level for fontification.
If nil, use the default decoration (typically the minimum available).
If t, use the maximum decoration available.
If a number, use that level of decoration (or if not available the maximum).
The higher the number, the more decoration is done.
If a list, each element should be a cons pair of the form (MAJOR-MODE . LEVEL),
where MAJOR-MODE is a symbol or t (meaning the default). For example:
((c-mode . t) (c++-mode . 2) (t . 1))
means use the maximum decoration available for buffers in C mode, level 2
decoration for buffers in C++ mode, and level 1 decoration otherwise."
:type '(choice (const :tag "default" nil)
(const :tag "maximum" t)
(integer :tag "level" 1)
(repeat :menu-tag "mode specific" :tag "mode specific"
:value ((t . t))
(cons :tag "Instance"
(radio :tag "Mode"
(const :tag "all" t)
(symbol :tag "name"))
(radio :tag "Decoration"
(const :tag "default" nil)
(const :tag "maximum" t)
(integer :tag "level" 1)))))
:group 'font-lock)
(defcustom font-lock-ignore nil
"Rules to selectively disable fontifications due to `font-lock-keywords'.
If non-nil, the value should be a list of condition sets of the form
(SYMBOL CONDITION ...)
where:
- SYMBOL is a symbol, usually a major or minor mode. The subsequent
CONDITIONs apply if SYMBOL is bound as variable and its value is non-nil.
If SYMBOL is a symbol of a mode, that means the buffer has that mode
enabled (for major modes, it means the buffer's major mode is derived
from SYMBOL's mode).
- Each CONDITION can be one of the following:
- A symbol, typically a face. It matches any element of
`font-lock-keywords' that references the symbol. The symbol is
interpreted as a glob pattern; in particular, `*' matches
everything, `?' matches any single character, and `[abcd]'
matches one character from the set.
- A string. It matches any element of `font-lock-keywords' whose
MATCHER is a regexp that matches the string. This can be used to
disable fontification of a particular programming keyword.
- A form (pred FUNCTION). It matches an element of `font-lock-keywords'
if FUNCTION, when called with the element as the argument, returns
non-nil.
- A form (not CONDITION). It matches if CONDITION doesn't.
- A form (and CONDITION ...). It matches if all the provided
CONDITIONs match.
- A form (or CONDITION ...). It matches if at least one of the
provided CONDITIONs matches.
- A form (except CONDITIONs ...). This can be used only at top level
or inside an `or' clause. It undoes the effect of previous
matching CONDITIONs on the same level.
In each buffer, fontifications due to the elements of `font-lock-keywords'
that match at least one applicable CONDITION are disabled."
:type '(alist :key-type symbol :value-type sexp)
:group 'font-lock
:version "29.1")
(defcustom font-lock-verbose nil
"If non-nil, means show status messages for buffer fontification.
If a number, only buffers greater than this size have fontification messages."
:type '(choice (const :tag "never" nil)
(other :tag "always" t)
(integer :tag "size"))
:group 'font-lock
:version "24.1")
\f
;; Originally these variable values were face names such as `bold' etc.
;; Now we create our own faces, but we keep these variables for compatibility
;; and they give users another mechanism for changing face appearance.
;; We now allow a FACENAME in `font-lock-keywords' to be any expression that
;; returns a face. So the easiest thing is to continue using these variables,
;; rather than sometimes evalling FACENAME and sometimes not. sm.
;; Note that in new code, in the vast majority of cases there is no
;; need to create variables that specify face names. Simply using
;; faces directly is enough. Font-lock is not a template to be
;; followed in this area.
(defvar font-lock-comment-face 'font-lock-comment-face
"Face name to use for comments.")
(defvar font-lock-comment-delimiter-face 'font-lock-comment-delimiter-face
"Face name to use for comment delimiters.")
(defvar font-lock-string-face 'font-lock-string-face
"Face name to use for strings.")
(defvar font-lock-doc-face 'font-lock-doc-face
"Face name to use for documentation.")
(defvar font-lock-doc-markup-face 'font-lock-doc-markup-face
"Face name to use for documentation mark-up.")
(defvar font-lock-keyword-face 'font-lock-keyword-face
"Face name to use for keywords.")
(defvar font-lock-builtin-face 'font-lock-builtin-face
"Face name to use for builtins.")
(defvar font-lock-function-name-face 'font-lock-function-name-face
"Face name to use for function names.")
(defvar font-lock-variable-name-face 'font-lock-variable-name-face
"Face name to use for variable names.")
(defvar font-lock-type-face 'font-lock-type-face
"Face name to use for type and class names.")
(defvar font-lock-constant-face 'font-lock-constant-face
"Face name to use for constant and label names.")
(defvar font-lock-warning-face 'font-lock-warning-face
"Face name to use for things that should stand out.")
(defvar font-lock-negation-char-face 'font-lock-negation-char-face
"Face name to use for easy to overlook negation.
This can be an \"!\" or the \"n\" in \"ifndef\".")
(defvar font-lock-preprocessor-face 'font-lock-preprocessor-face
"Face name to use for preprocessor directives.")
;; Fontification variables:
(defvar font-lock-keywords nil
"A list of keywords and corresponding font-lock highlighting rules.
There are two kinds of values: user-level, and compiled.
A user-level keywords list is what a major mode or the user would
set up. Normally the list would come from `font-lock-defaults'.
through selection of a fontification level and evaluation of any
contained expressions. You can also alter it by calling
`font-lock-add-keywords' or `font-lock-remove-keywords' with MODE = nil.
Each element in a user-level keywords list should have one of these forms:
MATCHER
(MATCHER . SUBEXP)
(MATCHER . FACENAME)
(MATCHER . HIGHLIGHT)
(MATCHER HIGHLIGHT ...)
(eval . FORM)
where MATCHER can be either the regexp to search for, or the
function name to call to make the search (called with one
argument, the limit of the search; it should return non-nil, move
point, and set `match-data' appropriately if it succeeds; like
`re-search-forward' would). MATCHER regexps can be generated via
the function `regexp-opt'.
FORM is an expression, whose value should be a keyword element
of one of the above forms, evaluated when the keyword is (first)
used in a buffer. This feature can be used to provide a keyword
that can only be generated when Font Lock mode is actually turned on.
HIGHLIGHT should be either MATCH-HIGHLIGHT or MATCH-ANCHORED.
For highlighting single items, for example each instance of the
word \"foo\", typically only MATCH-HIGHLIGHT is required.
However, if an item or (typically) items are to be highlighted
following the instance of another item (the anchor), for example
each instance of the word \"bar\" following the word \"anchor\"
then MATCH-ANCHORED may be required.
MATCH-HIGHLIGHT should be of the form:
(SUBEXP FACENAME [OVERRIDE [LAXMATCH]])
SUBEXP is the number of the subexpression of MATCHER to be
highlighted.
FACENAME is an expression whose value is the face to use.
Instead of a face, FACENAME can evaluate to a property list of
the form (face FACE PROP1 VAL1 PROP2 VAL2 ...) in which case all
the listed text-properties will be set rather than just FACE. In
such a case, you will most likely want to put those properties in
`font-lock-extra-managed-props' or to override
`font-lock-unfontify-region-function'.
OVERRIDE and LAXMATCH are flags. If OVERRIDE is t, existing
fontification can be overwritten. If `keep', only parts not
already fontified are highlighted. If `prepend' or `append',
existing fontification is merged with the new, in which the new
or existing fontification, respectively, takes precedence. If
LAXMATCH is non-nil, that means don't signal an error if there is
no match for SUBEXP in MATCHER.
For example, an element of the form highlights (if not already
highlighted):
\"\\\\\\=<foo\\\\\\=>\"
Discrete occurrences of \"foo\" in the value of the variable
`font-lock-keyword-face'.
(\"fu\\\\(bar\\\\)\" . 1)
Substring \"bar\" within all occurrences of \"fubar\" in the
value of `font-lock-keyword-face'.
(\"fubar\" . fubar-face)
Occurrences of \"fubar\" in the value of `fubar-face'.
(\"foo\\\\|bar\" 0 foo-bar-face t)
Occurrences of either \"foo\" or \"bar\" in the value of
`foo-bar-face', even if already highlighted.
(fubar-match 1 fubar-face)
The first subexpression within all occurrences of whatever the
function `fubar-match' finds and matches in the value of
`fubar-face'.
MATCH-ANCHORED should be of the form:
(MATCHER PRE-MATCH-FORM POST-MATCH-FORM MATCH-HIGHLIGHT ...)
where MATCHER is a regexp to search for or the function name to
call to make the search, as for MATCH-HIGHLIGHT above, but with
one exception; see below. PRE-MATCH-FORM and POST-MATCH-FORM are
evaluated before the first, and after the last, instance
MATCH-ANCHORED's MATCHER is used. Therefore they can be used to
initialize before, and cleanup after, MATCHER is used.
Typically, PRE-MATCH-FORM is used to move to some position
relative to the original MATCHER, before starting with
MATCH-ANCHORED's MATCHER. POST-MATCH-FORM might be used to move
back, before resuming with MATCH-ANCHORED's parent's MATCHER.
For example, an element of the form highlights (if not already
highlighted):
(\"\\\\\\=<anchor\\\\\\=>\" (0 anchor-face)
(\"\\\\\\=<item\\\\\\=>\" nil nil (0 item-face)))
Discrete occurrences of \"anchor\" in the value of
`anchor-face', and subsequent discrete occurrences of
\"item\" (on the same line) in the value of `item-face'.
(Here PRE-MATCH-FORM and POST-MATCH-FORM are nil. Therefore
\"item\" is initially searched for starting from the end of the
match of \"anchor\", and searching for subsequent instances of
\"anchor\" resumes from where searching for \"item\" concluded.)
The above-mentioned exception is as follows. The limit of the
MATCHER search defaults to the end of the line after
PRE-MATCH-FORM is evaluated. However, if PRE-MATCH-FORM returns
a position greater than the position after PRE-MATCH-FORM is
evaluated, that position is used as the limit of the search. It
is generally a bad idea to return a position greater than the end
of the line, i.e., cause the MATCHER search to span lines.
These regular expressions can match text which spans lines,
although it is better to avoid it if possible since updating them
while editing text is slower, and it is not guaranteed to be
always correct.
This variable is set by major modes via the variable
`font-lock-defaults'. Be careful when composing regexps for this
list; a poorly written pattern can dramatically slow things down!
A compiled keywords list starts with t. It is produced
internally by `font-lock-compile-keywords' from a user-level
keywords list. Its second element is the user-level keywords
list that was compiled. The remaining elements have the same
form as user-level keywords, but normally their values have been
optimized.")
(defvar font-lock-keywords-alist nil
"Alist of additional `font-lock-keywords' elements for major modes.
Each element has the form (MODE KEYWORDS . HOW).
Function `font-lock-set-defaults' adds the elements in the list KEYWORDS to
`font-lock-keywords' when Font Lock is turned on in major mode MODE.
If HOW is nil, KEYWORDS are added at the beginning of
`font-lock-keywords'. If it is `set', they are used to replace the
value of `font-lock-keywords'. If HOW is any other non-nil value,
they are added at the end.
This is normally set via `font-lock-add-keywords' and
`font-lock-remove-keywords'.")
(put 'font-lock-keywords-alist 'risky-local-variable t)
(defvar font-lock-removed-keywords-alist nil
"Alist of `font-lock-keywords' elements to be removed for major modes.
Each element has the form (MODE . KEYWORDS). Function `font-lock-set-defaults'
removes the elements in the list KEYWORDS from `font-lock-keywords'
when Font Lock is turned on in major mode MODE.
This is normally set via `font-lock-add-keywords' and
`font-lock-remove-keywords'.")
(defvar font-lock-keywords-only nil
"Non-nil means Font Lock should not fontify comments or strings.
This is normally set via `font-lock-defaults'.")
(defvar-local font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search nil
"Non-nil means the patterns in `font-lock-keywords' are case-insensitive.
This is set via the function `font-lock-set-defaults', based on
the CASE-FOLD argument of `font-lock-defaults'.")
(defvar-local font-lock-syntactically-fontified 0
"Point up to which `font-lock-syntactic-keywords' has been applied.
If nil, this is ignored, in which case the syntactic fontification may
sometimes be slightly incorrect.")
(defvar font-lock-syntactic-face-function
(lambda (state)
(if (nth 3 state) font-lock-string-face font-lock-comment-face))
"Function to determine which face to use when fontifying syntactically.
The function is called with a single parameter (the state as returned by
`parse-partial-sexp' at the beginning of the region to highlight) and
should return a face. This is normally set via `font-lock-defaults'.")
(defvar font-lock-syntactic-keywords nil
"A list of the syntactic keywords to put syntax properties on.
The value can be the list itself, or the name of a function or variable
whose value is the list.
See `font-lock-keywords' for a description of the form of this list;
only the differences are stated here. MATCH-HIGHLIGHT should be of the form:
(SUBEXP SYNTAX OVERRIDE LAXMATCH)
where SYNTAX can be a string (as taken by `modify-syntax-entry'), a syntax
table, a cons cell (as returned by `string-to-syntax') or an expression whose
value is such a form. OVERRIDE cannot be `prepend' or `append'.
Here are two examples of elements of `font-lock-syntactic-keywords'
and what they do:
(\"\\\\$\\\\(#\\\\)\" 1 \".\")
gives a hash character punctuation syntax (\".\") when following a
dollar-sign character. Hash characters in other contexts will still
follow whatever the syntax table says about the hash character.
(\"\\\\(\\='\\\\).\\\\(\\='\\\\)\"
(1 \"\\\"\")
(2 \"\\\"\"))
gives a pair of apostrophes, which surround a single character, a
SYNTAX of \"\\\"\" (meaning string quote syntax). Apostrophes in other
contexts will not be affected.
This is normally set via `font-lock-defaults'.")
(make-obsolete-variable 'font-lock-syntactic-keywords
'syntax-propertize-function "24.1")
(defvar font-lock-syntax-table nil
"Non-nil means use this syntax table for fontifying.
If this is nil, the major mode's syntax table is used.
This is normally set via `font-lock-defaults'.")
(defvar-local font-lock--syntax-table-affects-ppss nil)
(defvar font-lock-mark-block-function nil
"Non-nil means use this function to mark a block of text.
When called with no args it should leave point at the beginning of any
enclosing textual block and mark at the end.
This is normally set via `font-lock-defaults'.")
(defvar font-lock-fontify-buffer-function #'font-lock-default-fontify-buffer
"Function to use for fontifying the buffer.
This is normally set via `font-lock-defaults'.")
(defvar font-lock-unfontify-buffer-function #'font-lock-default-unfontify-buffer
"Function to use for unfontifying the buffer.
This is used when turning off Font Lock mode.
This is normally set via `font-lock-defaults'.")
(defvar font-lock-fontify-region-function #'font-lock-default-fontify-region
"Function to use for fontifying a region.
It should take two args, the beginning and end of the region, and an optional
third arg VERBOSE. If VERBOSE is non-nil, the function should print status
messages. This is normally set via `font-lock-defaults'.
If it fontifies a larger region, it should ideally return a list of the form
\(jit-lock-bounds BEG . END) indicating the bounds of the region actually
fontified.")
(defvar font-lock-fontify-syntactically-function
#'font-lock-default-fontify-syntactically
"Function to use for syntactically fontifying a region.
It should take two args, the beginning and end of the region, and
an optional third arg VERBOSE. If VERBOSE is non-nil, the
function should print status messages.")
(defvar font-lock-unfontify-region-function #'font-lock-default-unfontify-region
"Function to use for unfontifying a region.
It should take two args, the beginning and end of the region.
This is normally set via `font-lock-defaults'.")
(defvar font-lock-inhibit-thing-lock nil)
(make-obsolete-variable 'font-lock-inhibit-thing-lock "it does nothing." "25.1")
(defvar-local font-lock-multiline nil
"Whether font-lock should cater to multiline keywords.
If nil, don't try to handle multiline patterns.
If t, always handle multiline patterns.
If `undecided', don't try to handle multiline patterns until you see one.
Major/minor modes can set this variable if they know which option applies.")
(defvar-local font-lock-fontified nil) ; Whether we have fontified the buffer.
\f
;; Font Lock mode.
(defvar-local font-lock-set-defaults nil) ; Whether we have set up defaults.
(defun font-lock-specified-p (mode)
"Return non-nil if the current buffer is ready for fontification.
The MODE argument, if non-nil, means Font Lock mode is about to
be enabled."
(or font-lock-defaults
(and (boundp 'font-lock-keywords)
font-lock-keywords)
(and mode
font-lock-set-defaults
font-lock-major-mode
(not (eq font-lock-major-mode major-mode)))))
(defun font-lock-initial-fontify ()
;; The first fontification after turning the mode on. This must
;; only be called after the mode hooks have been run.
(when (and font-lock-mode
(font-lock-specified-p t)
(not font-lock-fontified))
(with-no-warnings (font-lock-fontify-buffer))))
(defun font-lock-mode-internal (arg)
;; Turn on Font Lock mode.
(when arg
(add-hook 'after-change-functions #'font-lock-after-change-function t t)
(font-lock-set-defaults)
(font-lock-turn-on-thing-lock))
;; Turn off Font Lock mode.
(unless font-lock-mode
(remove-hook 'after-change-functions #'font-lock-after-change-function t)
(font-lock-unfontify-buffer)
(font-lock-turn-off-thing-lock)))
(defun font-lock-add-keywords (mode keywords &optional how)
"Add highlighting KEYWORDS for MODE.
MODE should be a symbol, the major mode command name, such as `c-mode'
or nil. If nil, highlighting keywords are added for the current buffer.
KEYWORDS should be a list; see the variable `font-lock-keywords'.
By default they are added at the beginning of the current highlighting list.
If optional argument HOW is `set', they are used to replace the current
highlighting list. If HOW is any other non-nil value, they are added at the
end of the current highlighting list.
For example:
(font-lock-add-keywords \\='c-mode
\\='((\"\\\\\\=<\\\\(FIXME\\\\):\" 1 \\='font-lock-warning-face prepend)
(\"\\\\\\=<\\\\(and\\\\|or\\\\|not\\\\)\\\\\\=>\" . \\='font-lock-keyword-face)))
adds two fontification patterns for C mode, to fontify `FIXME:' words, even in
comments, and to fontify `and', `or' and `not' words as keywords.
The above procedure will only add the keywords for C mode, not
for modes derived from C mode. To add them for derived modes too,
pass nil for MODE and add the call to `c-mode-hook'.
For example:
(add-hook \\='c-mode-hook
(lambda ()
(font-lock-add-keywords nil
\\='((\"\\\\\\=<\\\\(FIXME\\\\):\" 1 \\='font-lock-warning-face prepend)
(\"\\\\\\=<\\\\(and\\\\|or\\\\|not\\\\)\\\\\\=>\" .
\\='font-lock-keyword-face)))))
The above procedure may fail to add keywords to derived modes if
some involved major mode does not follow the standard conventions.
File a bug report if this happens, so the major mode can be corrected.
Note that some modes have specialized support for additional patterns, e.g.,
see the variables `c-font-lock-extra-types', `c++-font-lock-extra-types',
`objc-font-lock-extra-types' and `java-font-lock-extra-types'."
(cond (mode
;; If MODE is non-nil, add the KEYWORDS and HOW spec to
;; `font-lock-keywords-alist' so `font-lock-set-defaults' uses them.
(let ((spec (cons keywords how)) cell)
(if (setq cell (assq mode font-lock-keywords-alist))
(if (eq how 'set)
(setcdr cell (list spec))
(setcdr cell (append (cdr cell) (list spec))))
(push (list mode spec) font-lock-keywords-alist)))
;; Make sure that `font-lock-removed-keywords-alist' does not
;; contain the new keywords.
(font-lock-update-removed-keyword-alist mode keywords how))
(t
(when (and font-lock-mode
(not (or font-lock-keywords font-lock-defaults)))
;; The major mode has not set any keywords, so when we enabled
;; font-lock-mode it only enabled the font-core.el part, not the
;; font-lock-mode-internal. Try again.
(font-lock-mode -1)
(setq-local font-lock-defaults '(nil t))
(font-lock-mode 1))
;; Otherwise set or add the keywords now.
;; This is a no-op if it has been done already in this buffer
;; for the correct major mode.
(font-lock-set-defaults)
(let ((was-compiled (eq (car font-lock-keywords) t)))
;; Bring back the user-level (uncompiled) keywords.
(if was-compiled
(setq font-lock-keywords (cadr font-lock-keywords)))
;; Now modify or replace them.
(if (eq how 'set)
(setq font-lock-keywords keywords)
(font-lock-remove-keywords nil keywords) ;to avoid duplicates
(let ((old (if (eq (car-safe font-lock-keywords) t)
(cdr font-lock-keywords)
font-lock-keywords)))
(setq font-lock-keywords (if how
(append old keywords)
(append keywords old)))))
;; If the keywords were compiled before, compile them again.
(if was-compiled
(setq font-lock-keywords
(font-lock-compile-keywords font-lock-keywords)))))))
(defun font-lock-update-removed-keyword-alist (mode keywords how)
"Update `font-lock-removed-keywords-alist' when adding new KEYWORDS to MODE."
;; When font-lock is enabled first all keywords in the list
;; `font-lock-keywords-alist' are added, then all keywords in the
;; list `font-lock-removed-keywords-alist' are removed. If a
;; keyword was once added, removed, and then added again it must be
;; removed from the removed-keywords list. Otherwise the second add
;; will not take effect.
(let ((cell (assq mode font-lock-removed-keywords-alist)))
(if cell
(if (eq how 'set)
;; A new set of keywords is defined. Forget all about
;; our old keywords that should be removed.
(setq font-lock-removed-keywords-alist
(delq cell font-lock-removed-keywords-alist))
;; Delete all previously removed keywords.
(dolist (kword keywords)
(setcdr cell (delete kword (cdr cell))))
;; Delete the mode cell if empty.
(if (null (cdr cell))
(setq font-lock-removed-keywords-alist
(delq cell font-lock-removed-keywords-alist)))))))
;; Written by Anders Lindgren
;;
;; Case study:
;; (I) The keywords are removed from a major mode.
;; In this case the keyword could be local (i.e. added earlier by
;; `font-lock-add-keywords'), global, or both.
;;
;; (a) In the local case we remove the keywords from the variable
;; `font-lock-keywords-alist'.
;;
;; (b) The actual global keywords are not known at this time.
;; All keywords are added to `font-lock-removed-keywords-alist',
;; when font-lock is enabled those keywords are removed.
;;
;; Note that added keywords are taken out of the list of removed
;; keywords. This ensure correct operation when the same keyword
;; is added and removed several times.
;;
;; (II) The keywords are removed from the current buffer.
(defun font-lock-remove-keywords (mode keywords)
"Remove highlighting KEYWORDS for MODE.
MODE should be a symbol, the major mode command name, such as
`c-mode' or nil. If nil, highlighting keywords are removed for
the current buffer.
For a description of KEYWORDS, see `font-lock-add-keywords'.
To make the removal apply to modes derived from MODE as well,
pass nil for MODE and add the call to MODE-hook. This may fail
for some derived modes if some involved major mode does not
follow the standard conventions. File a bug report if this
happens, so the major mode can be corrected."
(cond (mode
;; Remove one keyword at the time.
(dolist (keyword keywords)
(let ((top-cell (assq mode font-lock-keywords-alist)))
;; If MODE is non-nil, remove the KEYWORD from
;; `font-lock-keywords-alist'.
(when top-cell
(dolist (keyword-list-how-pair (cdr top-cell))
;; `keyword-list-how-pair' is a cons with a list of
;; keywords in the car top-cell and the original how
;; argument in the cdr top-cell.
(setcar keyword-list-how-pair
(delete keyword (car keyword-list-how-pair))))
;; Remove keyword list/how pair when the keyword list
;; is empty and how doesn't specify `set'. (If it
;; should be deleted then previously deleted keywords
;; would appear again.)
(let ((cell top-cell))
(while (cdr cell)
(if (and (null (car (car (cdr cell))))
(not (eq (cdr (car (cdr cell))) 'set)))
(setcdr cell (cdr (cdr cell)))
(setq cell (cdr cell)))))
;; Final cleanup, remove major mode cell if last keyword
;; was deleted.
(if (null (cdr top-cell))
(setq font-lock-keywords-alist
(delq top-cell font-lock-keywords-alist))))
;; Remember the keyword in case it is not local.
(let ((cell (assq mode font-lock-removed-keywords-alist)))
(if cell
(unless (member keyword (cdr cell))
(nconc cell (list keyword)))
(push (cons mode (list keyword))
font-lock-removed-keywords-alist))))))
(t
;; Otherwise remove it immediately.
(font-lock-set-defaults)
(let ((was-compiled (eq (car font-lock-keywords) t)))
;; Bring back the user-level (uncompiled) keywords.
(if was-compiled
(setq font-lock-keywords (cadr font-lock-keywords)))
;; Edit them.
(setq font-lock-keywords (copy-sequence font-lock-keywords))
(dolist (keyword keywords)
(setq font-lock-keywords
(delete keyword font-lock-keywords)))
;; If the keywords were compiled before, compile them again.
(if was-compiled
(setq font-lock-keywords
(font-lock-compile-keywords font-lock-keywords)))))))
\f
;;; Font Lock Support mode.
(defvar font-lock-support-mode #'jit-lock-mode
"Support mode for Font Lock mode.
If nil, means support for Font Lock mode is never performed.
This can be useful for debugging.
The value of this variable is used when Font Lock mode is turned on.")
(defvar jit-lock-mode)
(defun font-lock-turn-on-thing-lock ()
(pcase (font-lock-value-in-major-mode font-lock-support-mode)
('jit-lock-mode
;; Prepare for jit-lock
(remove-hook 'after-change-functions
#'font-lock-after-change-function t)
(setq-local font-lock-flush-function #'jit-lock-refontify)
(setq-local font-lock-ensure-function #'jit-lock-fontify-now)
;; Prevent font-lock-fontify-buffer from fontifying eagerly the whole
;; buffer. This is important for things like CWarn mode which
;; adds/removes a few keywords and does a refontify (which takes ages on
;; large files).
(setq-local font-lock-fontify-buffer-function #'jit-lock-refontify)
;; Don't fontify eagerly (and don't abort if the buffer is large).
(setq-local font-lock-fontified t)
;; Use jit-lock.
(jit-lock-register #'font-lock-fontify-region
(not font-lock-keywords-only))
;; Tell jit-lock how we extend the region to refontify.
(add-hook 'jit-lock-after-change-extend-region-functions
#'font-lock-extend-jit-lock-region-after-change
nil t))))
(defun font-lock-turn-off-thing-lock ()
(cond ((bound-and-true-p jit-lock-mode)
(jit-lock-unregister 'font-lock-fontify-region)
;; Reset local vars to the non-jit-lock case.
(kill-local-variable 'font-lock-fontify-buffer-function))))
\f
;;; Fontification functions.
;; Rather than the function, e.g., `font-lock-fontify-region' containing the
;; code to fontify a region, the function runs the function whose name is the
;; value of the variable, e.g., `font-lock-fontify-region-function'. Normally,
;; the value of this variable is, e.g., `font-lock-default-fontify-region'
;; which does contain the code to fontify a region. However, the value of the
;; variable could be anything and thus, e.g., `font-lock-fontify-region' could
;; do anything. The indirection of the fontification functions gives major
;; modes the capability of modifying the way font-lock.el fontifies. Major
;; modes can modify the values of, e.g., `font-lock-fontify-region-function',
;; via the variable `font-lock-defaults'.
;;
;; For example, Rmail mode sets the variable `font-lock-defaults' so that
;; font-lock.el uses its own function for buffer fontification. This function
;; makes fontification be on a message-by-message basis and so visiting an
;; RMAIL file is much faster. A clever implementation of the function might
;; fontify the headers differently from the message body. (It should, and
;; correspondingly for Mail mode, but I can't be bothered to do the work. Can
;; you?) This hints at a more interesting use...
;;
;; Languages that contain text normally contained in different major modes
;; could define their own fontification functions that treat text differently
;; depending on its context. For example, Perl mode could arrange that here
;; docs are fontified differently from Perl code. Or Yacc mode could fontify
;; rules one way and C code another. Neat!
;;
;; A further reason to use the fontification indirection feature is when the
;; default syntactic fontification, or the default fontification in general,
;; is not flexible enough for a particular major mode. For example, perhaps
;; comments are just too hairy for `font-lock-default-fontify-syntactically' to
;; cope with. You need to write your own version of that function, e.g.,
;; `hairy-fontify-syntactically-region', and make your own version of
;; `hairy-fontify-region' call that function before calling
;; `font-lock-fontify-keywords-region' for the normal regexp fontification
;; pass. And Hairy mode would set `font-lock-defaults' so that font-lock.el
;; would call your region fontification function instead of its own. For
;; example, TeX modes could fontify {\foo ...} and \bar{...} etc. multi-line
;; directives correctly and cleanly. (It is the same problem as fontifying
;; multi-line strings and comments; regexps are not appropriate for the job.)
;; (This comment is written before `font-lock-default-fontify-syntactically'
;; can be replaced. Now you can obviously replace
;; `font-lock-default-fontify-syntactically' with a custom function.)
(defvar-local font-lock-extend-after-change-region-function nil
"A function that determines the region to refontify after a change.
This variable is either nil, or is a function that determines the
region to refontify after a change.
It is usually set by the major mode via `font-lock-defaults'.
Font-lock calls this function after each buffer change.
The function is given three parameters, the standard BEG, END, and OLD-LEN
from `after-change-functions'. It should return either a cons of the beginning
and end buffer positions \(in that order) of the region to refontify, or nil
\(which directs the caller to fontify a default region).
This function should preserve the match data.
The region it returns may start or end in the middle of a line.")
(defun font-lock-fontify-buffer (&optional interactively)
"Fontify the current buffer the way the function `font-lock-mode' would."
(declare
;; When called from Lisp, this function is a big mess. The caller usually
;; expects one of the following behaviors:
;; - refresh the highlighting (because the font-lock-keywords have been
;; changed).
;; - apply font-lock highlighting even if font-lock-mode is not enabled.
;; - reset the highlighting rules because font-lock-defaults
;; has been changed (and then rehighlight everything).
;; Of course, this function doesn't do all of the above in all situations
;; (e.g. depending on whether jit-lock is in use) and it can't guess what
;; the caller wants.
(interactive-only "use `font-lock-ensure' or `font-lock-flush' instead."))
(interactive "p")
(font-lock-set-defaults)
(let ((font-lock-verbose (or font-lock-verbose interactively)))
(funcall font-lock-fontify-buffer-function)))
(defun font-lock-unfontify-buffer ()
(funcall font-lock-unfontify-buffer-function))
(defun font-lock-fontify-region (beg end &optional loudly)
"Fontify the text between BEG and END.
If LOUDLY is non-nil, print status messages while fontifying.
This works by calling `font-lock-fontify-region-function'."
(font-lock-set-defaults)
(save-restriction
(unless font-lock-dont-widen (widen))
(funcall font-lock-fontify-region-function beg end loudly)))
(defun font-lock-unfontify-region (beg end)
"Unfontify the text between BEG and END.
This works by calling `font-lock-unfontify-region-function'."
(with-silent-modifications
(funcall font-lock-unfontify-region-function beg end)))
(defvar font-lock-flush-function #'font-lock-after-change-function
"Function to use to mark a region for refontification.
Called with two arguments BEG and END.")
(defun font-lock-flush (&optional beg end)
"Declare the region BEG...END's fontification as out-of-date.
If the region is not specified, it defaults to the entire
accessible portion of the current buffer."
(and font-lock-mode
font-lock-fontified
(funcall font-lock-flush-function
(or beg (point-min)) (or end (point-max)))))
(defvar font-lock-ensure-function
(lambda (beg end)
(unless font-lock-fontified
(save-excursion
(font-lock-fontify-region beg end))))
"Function to make sure a region has been fontified.
Called with two arguments BEG and END.")
(defun font-lock-debug-fontify ()
"Reinitialize the font-lock machinery and (re-)fontify the buffer.
This functions is a convenience functions when developing font
locking for a mode, and is not meant to be called from Lisp functions."
(declare (interactive-only t))
(interactive)
;; Make font-lock recalculate all the mode-specific data.
(setq font-lock-major-mode nil)
;; Make the syntax machinery discard all information.
(syntax-ppss-flush-cache -1)
(font-lock-set-defaults)
(save-excursion
(font-lock-fontify-region (point-min) (point-max))))
(defun font-lock-ensure (&optional beg end)
"Make sure the region BEG...END has been fontified.
If the region is not specified, it defaults to the entire accessible
portion of the buffer."
(when (font-lock-specified-p t)
(font-lock-set-defaults)
(funcall font-lock-ensure-function
(or beg (point-min)) (or end (point-max)))))
(defun font-lock-update (&optional arg)
"Update the syntax highlighting in this buffer.
Refontify the accessible portion of this buffer, or enable Font Lock mode
in this buffer if it is currently disabled. With prefix ARG, toggle Font
Lock mode."
(interactive "P")
(save-excursion
(if (and (not arg) font-lock-mode)
(font-lock-fontify-region (point-min) (point-max))
(font-lock-unfontify-region (point-min) (point-max))
(font-lock-mode 'toggle))))
(defun font-lock-default-fontify-buffer ()
"Fontify the whole buffer using `font-lock-fontify-region-function'."
(let ((verbose (if (numberp font-lock-verbose)
(> (buffer-size) font-lock-verbose)
font-lock-verbose)))
(with-temp-message
(when verbose
(format "Fontifying %s..." (buffer-name)))
;; Make sure we fontify etc. in the whole buffer.
(save-restriction
(unless font-lock-dont-widen (widen))
(condition-case nil
(save-excursion
(save-match-data
(font-lock-fontify-region (point-min) (point-max) verbose)
(setq font-lock-fontified t)))
;; We don't restore the old fontification, so it's best to unfontify.
(quit (font-lock-unfontify-buffer)))))))
(defun font-lock-default-unfontify-buffer ()
"Unfontify the whole buffer using `font-lock-unfontify-region-function'."
;; Make sure we unfontify etc. in the whole buffer.
(save-restriction
(widen)
(font-lock-unfontify-region (point-min) (point-max))
(setq font-lock-fontified nil)))
(defvar font-lock-dont-widen nil
"If non-nil, font-lock will work on the non-widened buffer.
Useful for things like RMAIL and Info where the whole buffer is not
a very meaningful entity to highlight.")
(defvar font-lock-beg) (defvar font-lock-end)
(defvar-local font-lock-extend-region-functions
'(font-lock-extend-region-wholelines
;; This use of font-lock-multiline property is unreliable but is just
;; a handy heuristic: in case you don't have a function that does
;; /identification/ of multiline elements, you may still occasionally
;; discover them by accident (or you may /identify/ them but not in all
;; cases), in which case the font-lock-multiline property can help make
;; sure you will properly *re*identify them during refontification.
font-lock-extend-region-multiline)
"Special hook run just before proceeding to fontify a region.
This is used to allow major modes to help font-lock find safe buffer positions
as beginning and end of the fontified region. Its most common use is to solve
the problem of /identification/ of multiline elements by providing a function
that tries to find such elements and move the boundaries such that they do
not fall in the middle of one.
Each function is called with no argument; it is expected to adjust the
dynamically bound variables `font-lock-beg' and `font-lock-end'; and return
non-nil if it did make such an adjustment.
These functions are run in turn repeatedly until they all return nil.
Put first the functions more likely to cause a change and cheaper to compute.")
;; Mark it as a special hook which doesn't use any global setting
;; (i.e. doesn't obey the element t in the buffer-local value).
(defun font-lock-extend-region-multiline ()
"Move fontification boundaries away from any `font-lock-multiline' property."
(let ((changed nil))
(when (and (> font-lock-beg (point-min))
(get-text-property (1- font-lock-beg) 'font-lock-multiline))
(setq changed t)
(setq font-lock-beg (or (previous-single-property-change
font-lock-beg 'font-lock-multiline)
(point-min))))
;; If `font-lock-multiline' starts at `font-lock-end', do not
;; extend the region.
(let ((before-end (max (point-min) (1- font-lock-end)))
(new-end nil))
(when (get-text-property before-end 'font-lock-multiline)
(setq new-end (or (text-property-any before-end (point-max)
'font-lock-multiline nil)
(point-max)))
(when (/= new-end font-lock-end)
(setq changed t)
(setq font-lock-end new-end))))
changed))
(defun font-lock-extend-region-wholelines ()
"Move fontification boundaries to beginning of lines."
(let ((new (syntax-propertize-wholelines font-lock-beg font-lock-end)))
(when new
(setq font-lock-beg (car new))
(setq font-lock-end (cdr new))
t)))
(defun font-lock-default-fontify-region (beg end loudly)
"Fontify the text between BEG and END.
If LOUDLY is non-nil, print status messages while fontifying.
This function is the default `font-lock-fontify-region-function'."
(or (<= end (point-max))
(setq end (point-max)))
(with-silent-modifications
;; Use the fontification syntax table, if any.
(with-syntax-table (or font-lock-syntax-table (syntax-table))
;; Extend the region to fontify so that it starts and ends at
;; safe places.
(let ((funs font-lock-extend-region-functions)
(font-lock-beg beg)
(font-lock-end end))
(while funs
(setq funs (if (or (not (funcall (car funs)))
(eq funs font-lock-extend-region-functions))
(cdr funs)
;; If there's been a change, we should go through
;; the list again since this new position may
;; warrant a different answer from one of the fun
;; we've already seen.
font-lock-extend-region-functions)))
(setq beg font-lock-beg end font-lock-end))
;; Now do the fontification.
(font-lock-unfontify-region beg end)
(when (and font-lock-syntactic-keywords
(null syntax-propertize-function))
;; Ensure the beginning of the file is properly syntactic-fontified.
(let ((start beg))
(when (< font-lock-syntactically-fontified start)
(setq start (max font-lock-syntactically-fontified (point-min)))
(setq font-lock-syntactically-fontified end))
(font-lock-fontify-syntactic-keywords-region start end)))
(unless font-lock-keywords-only
(font-lock-fontify-syntactically-region beg end loudly))
(font-lock-fontify-keywords-region beg end loudly)
`(jit-lock-bounds ,beg . ,end))))
;; The following must be rethought, since keywords can override fontification.
;; ;; Now scan for keywords, but not if we are inside a comment now.
;; (or (and (not font-lock-keywords-only)
;; (let ((state (parse-partial-sexp beg end nil nil
;; font-lock-cache-state)))
;; (or (nth 4 state) (nth 7 state))))
;; (font-lock-fontify-keywords-region beg end))
(defvar font-lock-extra-managed-props nil
"Additional text properties managed by font-lock.
This is used by `font-lock-default-unfontify-region' to decide
what properties to clear before refontifying a region.")
(defun font-lock-default-unfontify-region (beg end)
"Unfontify the text between BEG and END.
This function is the default `font-lock-unfontify-region-function'."
(remove-list-of-text-properties
beg end (append
font-lock-extra-managed-props
(if font-lock-syntactic-keywords
'(syntax-table face font-lock-multiline)
'(face font-lock-multiline)))))
;; Called when any modification is made to buffer text.
(defun font-lock-after-change-function (beg end &optional old-len)
(save-excursion
(let ((inhibit-quit t)
(region (if font-lock-extend-after-change-region-function
(funcall font-lock-extend-after-change-region-function
beg end old-len))))
(save-match-data
(if region
;; Fontify the region the major mode has specified.
(setq beg (car region) end (cdr region))
;; Fontify the whole lines which enclose the region.
;; Actually, this is not needed because
;; font-lock-default-fontify-region already rounds up to a whole
;; number of lines.
;; (setq beg (progn (goto-char beg) (line-beginning-position))
;; end (progn (goto-char end) (line-beginning-position 2)))
(unless (eq end (point-max))
;; Rounding up to a whole number of lines should include the
;; line right after `end'. Typical case: the first char of
;; the line was deleted. Or a \n was inserted in the middle
;; of a line.
(setq end (1+ end))))
(font-lock-fontify-region beg end)))))
(defvar jit-lock-start) (defvar jit-lock-end)
(defun font-lock-extend-jit-lock-region-after-change (beg end old-len)
"Function meant for `jit-lock-after-change-extend-region-functions'.
This function does 2 things:
- extend the region so that it not only includes the part that was modified
but also the surrounding text whose highlighting may change as a consequence.
- anticipate (part of) the region extension that will happen later in
`font-lock-default-fontify-region', in order to avoid the need for
double-redisplay in `jit-lock-fontify-now'."
(save-excursion
;; First extend the region as font-lock-after-change-function would.
(let ((region (if font-lock-extend-after-change-region-function
(funcall font-lock-extend-after-change-region-function
beg end old-len))))
(if region
(setq beg (min jit-lock-start (car region))
end (max jit-lock-end (cdr region))))
;; Then extend the region obeying font-lock-multiline properties,
;; indicating which part of the buffer needs to be refontified.
;; !!! This is the *main* user of font-lock-multiline property !!!
;; font-lock-after-change-function could/should also do that, but it
;; doesn't need to because font-lock-default-fontify-region does
;; it anyway. Here OTOH we have no guarantee that
;; font-lock-default-fontify-region will be executed on this region
;; any time soon.
;; Note: contrary to font-lock-default-fontify-region, we do not do
;; any loop here because we are not looking for a safe spot: we just
;; mark the text whose appearance may need to change as a result of
;; the buffer modification.
(when (and (> beg (point-min))
(get-text-property (1- beg) 'font-lock-multiline))
(setq beg (or (previous-single-property-change
beg 'font-lock-multiline)
(point-min))))
(when (< end (point-max))
(setq end
(cond
((get-text-property end 'font-lock-multiline)
(or (text-property-any end (point-max)
'font-lock-multiline nil)
(point-max)))
;; If `end' has been set by the function above, don't corrupt it.
(font-lock-extend-after-change-region-function end)
;; Rounding up to a whole number of lines should include the
;; line right after `end'. Typical case: the first char of
;; the line was deleted. Or a \n was inserted in the middle
;; of a line.
(t (1+ end)))))
;; Finally, pre-enlarge the region to a whole number of lines, to try
;; and anticipate what font-lock-default-fontify-region will do, so as to
;; avoid double-redisplay.
;; We could just run `font-lock-extend-region-functions', but since
;; the only purpose is to avoid the double-redisplay, we prefer to
;; do here only the part that is cheap and most likely to be useful.
(when (memq 'font-lock-extend-region-wholelines
font-lock-extend-region-functions)
(goto-char beg)
(setq beg (min jit-lock-start (line-beginning-position)))
(goto-char end)
(setq end
(max jit-lock-end
(if (bolp) (point) (line-beginning-position 2)))))
(setq jit-lock-start beg
jit-lock-end end))))
(defun font-lock-fontify-block (&optional arg)
"Fontify some lines the way `font-lock-fontify-buffer' would.
The lines could be a function or paragraph, or a specified number of lines.
If ARG is given, fontify that many lines before and after point, or 16 lines if
no ARG is given and `font-lock-mark-block-function' is nil.
If `font-lock-mark-block-function' non-nil and no ARG is given, it is used to
delimit the region to fontify."
(interactive "P")
(let (deactivate-mark)
;; Make sure we have the right `font-lock-keywords' etc.
(if (not font-lock-mode) (font-lock-set-defaults))
(save-mark-and-excursion
(save-match-data
(condition-case error-data
(if (or arg (not font-lock-mark-block-function))
(let ((lines (if arg (prefix-numeric-value arg) 16)))
(font-lock-fontify-region
(save-excursion (forward-line (- lines)) (point))
(save-excursion (forward-line lines) (point))))
(funcall font-lock-mark-block-function)
(font-lock-fontify-region (point) (mark)))
((error quit) (message "Fontifying block...%s" error-data)))))))
;; End of Fontification functions.
\f
;;; Additional text property functions.
;; The following text property functions should be builtins. This means they
;; should be written in C and put with all the other text property functions.
;; In the meantime, those that are used by font-lock.el are defined in Lisp
;; below and given a `font-lock-' prefix. Those that are not used are defined
;; in Lisp below and commented out. sm.
(defun font-lock--add-text-property (start end prop value object append)
"Add an element to a property of the text from START to END.
Arguments PROP and VALUE specify the property and value to add to
the value already in place. The resulting property values are
always lists. Argument OBJECT is the string or buffer containing
the text. If argument APPEND is non-nil, VALUE will be appended,
otherwise it will be prepended."
(let ((val (if (and (listp value) (not (keywordp (car value))))
;; Already a list of faces.
value
;; A single face (e.g. a plist of face properties).
(list value)))
next prev)
(while (/= start end)
(setq next (next-single-property-change start prop object end)
prev (get-text-property start prop object))
;; Canonicalize old forms of face property.
(and (memq prop '(face font-lock-face))
(listp prev)
(or (keywordp (car prev))
(memq (car prev) '(foreground-color background-color)))
(setq prev (list prev)))
(let* ((list-prev (if (listp prev) prev (list prev)))
(new-value (if append
(append list-prev val)
(append val list-prev))))
(put-text-property start next prop new-value object))
(setq start next))))
(defun font-lock-prepend-text-property (start end prop value &optional object)
"Prepend to one property of the text from START to END.
Arguments PROP and VALUE specify the property and value to prepend to the value
already in place. The resulting property values are always lists.
Optional argument OBJECT is the string or buffer containing the text."
(font-lock--add-text-property start end prop value object nil))
(defun font-lock-append-text-property (start end prop value &optional object)
"Append to one property of the text from START to END.
Arguments PROP and VALUE specify the property and value to append to the value
already in place. The resulting property values are always lists.
Optional argument OBJECT is the string or buffer containing the text."
(font-lock--add-text-property start end prop value object t))
(defun font-lock-fillin-text-property (start end prop value &optional object)
"Fill in one property of the text from START to END.
Arguments PROP and VALUE specify the property and value to put where none are
already in place. Therefore existing property values are not overwritten.
Optional argument OBJECT is the string or buffer containing the text."
(let ((start (text-property-any start end prop nil object)) next)
(while start
(setq next (next-single-property-change start prop object end))
(put-text-property start next prop value object)
(setq start (text-property-any next end prop nil object)))))
(defun font-lock--remove-face-from-text-property (start
end
prop value &optional object)
"Remove a specific property value from text from START to END.
Arguments PROP and VALUE specify the property and value to remove. The
resulting property values are not `eq' to VALUE nor lists containing VALUE.
Optional argument OBJECT is the string or buffer containing the text."
(let ((start (text-property-not-all start end prop nil object)) next prev)
(while start
(setq next (next-single-property-change start prop object end)
prev (get-text-property start prop object))
(cond ((or (atom prev)
(keywordp (car prev))
(eq (car prev) 'foreground-color)
(eq (car prev) 'background-color))
(when (eq value prev)
(remove-list-of-text-properties start next (list prop) object)))
((memq value prev) ;Assume prev is not dotted.
(let ((new (remq value prev)))
(cond ((null new)
(remove-list-of-text-properties start next (list prop)
object))
((= (length new) 1)
(put-text-property start next prop (car new) object))
(t
(put-text-property start next prop new object))))))
(setq start (text-property-not-all next end prop nil object)))))
;; End of Additional text property functions.
\f
;;; Syntactic regexp fontification functions.
;; These syntactic keyword pass functions are identical to those keyword pass
;; functions below, with the following exceptions; (a) they operate on
;; `font-lock-syntactic-keywords' of course, (b) they are all `defun' as speed
;; is less of an issue, (c) eval of property value does not occur JIT as speed
;; is less of an issue, (d) OVERRIDE cannot be `prepend' or `append' as it
;; makes no sense for `syntax-table' property values, (e) they do not do it
;; LOUDLY as it is not likely to be intensive.
(defun font-lock-apply-syntactic-highlight (highlight)
"Apply HIGHLIGHT following a match.
HIGHLIGHT should be of the form MATCH-HIGHLIGHT,
see `font-lock-syntactic-keywords'."
(let* ((match (nth 0 highlight))
(start (match-beginning match)) (end (match-end match))
(value (nth 1 highlight))
(override (nth 2 highlight)))
(if (not start)
;; No match but we might not signal an error.
(or (nth 3 highlight)
(error "No match %d in highlight %S" match highlight))
(when (and (consp value) (not (numberp (car value))))
(setq value (eval value t)))
(when (stringp value) (setq value (string-to-syntax value)))
;; Flush the syntax-cache. I believe this is not necessary for
;; font-lock's use of syntax-ppss, but I'm not 100% sure and it can
;; still be necessary for other users of syntax-ppss anyway.
(syntax-ppss-flush-cache start)
(cond
((not override)
;; Cannot override existing fontification.
(or (text-property-not-all start end 'syntax-table nil)
(put-text-property start end 'syntax-table value)))
((eq override t)
;; Override existing fontification.
(put-text-property start end 'syntax-table value))
((eq override 'keep)
;; Keep existing fontification.
(font-lock-fillin-text-property start end 'syntax-table value))))))
(defun font-lock-fontify-syntactic-anchored-keywords (keywords limit)
"Fontify according to KEYWORDS until LIMIT.
KEYWORDS should be of the form MATCH-ANCHORED, see `font-lock-keywords',
LIMIT can be modified by the value of its PRE-MATCH-FORM."
(let ((matcher (nth 0 keywords)) (lowdarks (nthcdr 3 keywords)) highlights
;; Evaluate PRE-MATCH-FORM.
(pre-match-value (eval (nth 1 keywords) t)))
;; Set LIMIT to value of PRE-MATCH-FORM or the end of line.
(if (and (numberp pre-match-value) (> pre-match-value (point)))
(setq limit pre-match-value)
(setq limit (line-end-position)))
(save-match-data
;; Find an occurrence of `matcher' before `limit'.
(while (if (stringp matcher)
(re-search-forward matcher limit t)
(funcall matcher limit))
;; Apply each highlight to this instance of `matcher'.
(setq highlights lowdarks)
(while highlights
(font-lock-apply-syntactic-highlight (car highlights))
(setq highlights (cdr highlights)))))
;; Evaluate POST-MATCH-FORM.
(eval (nth 2 keywords) t)))
(defun font-lock-fontify-syntactic-keywords-region (start end)
"Fontify according to `font-lock-syntactic-keywords' between START and END.
START should be at the beginning of a line."
(unless parse-sexp-lookup-properties
;; We wouldn't go through so much trouble if we didn't intend to use those
;; properties, would we?
(setq-local parse-sexp-lookup-properties t))
;; If `font-lock-syntactic-keywords' is a symbol, get the real keywords.
(when (symbolp font-lock-syntactic-keywords)
(setq font-lock-syntactic-keywords (font-lock-eval-keywords
font-lock-syntactic-keywords)))
;; If `font-lock-syntactic-keywords' is not compiled, compile it.
(unless (eq (car font-lock-syntactic-keywords) t)
(setq font-lock-syntactic-keywords (font-lock-compile-keywords
font-lock-syntactic-keywords
t)))
;; Get down to business.
(let ((case-fold-search font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search)
(keywords (cddr font-lock-syntactic-keywords))
keyword matcher highlights)
(while keywords
;; Find an occurrence of `matcher' from `start' to `end'.
(setq keyword (car keywords) matcher (car keyword))
(goto-char start)
(while (and (< (point) end)
(if (stringp matcher)
(re-search-forward matcher end t)
(funcall matcher end)))
;; Apply each highlight to this instance of `matcher', which may be
;; specific highlights or more keywords anchored to `matcher'.
(setq highlights (cdr keyword))
(while highlights
(if (numberp (car (car highlights)))
(font-lock-apply-syntactic-highlight (car highlights))
(font-lock-fontify-syntactic-anchored-keywords (car highlights)
end))
(setq highlights (cdr highlights))))
(setq keywords (cdr keywords)))))
;; End of Syntactic regexp fontification functions.
\f
;;; Syntactic fontification functions.
(defvar font-lock-comment-start-skip nil
"If non-nil, Font Lock mode uses this instead of `comment-start-skip'.")
(defvar font-lock-comment-end-skip nil
"If non-nil, Font Lock mode uses this instead of `comment-end-skip'.")
(defun font-lock-fontify-syntactically-region (beg end &optional loudly)
"Syntactically fontify the text between BEG and END.
If LOUDLY is non-nil, print status messages while fontifying.
This works by calling `font-lock-fontify-syntactically-function'."
(funcall font-lock-fontify-syntactically-function beg end loudly))
(defun font-lock-default-fontify-syntactically (start end &optional loudly)
"Put proper face on each string and comment between START and END.
START should be at the beginning of a line."
(syntax-propertize end) ; Apply any needed syntax-table properties.
(with-syntax-table (or syntax-ppss-table (syntax-table))
(when (and comment-start (not comment-end-skip)) (comment-normalize-vars))
(let (;; Find the `start' state.
(state (if (or syntax-ppss-table
(not font-lock--syntax-table-affects-ppss))
(syntax-ppss start)
;; If `syntax-ppss' doesn't have its own syntax-table and
;; we have installed our own syntax-table which
;; differs from the standard one in ways which affects PPSS,
;; then we can't use `syntax-ppss' since that would pollute
;; and be polluted by its cache.
(parse-partial-sexp (point-min) start)))
face beg)
(if loudly (message "Fontifying %s... (syntactically...)" (buffer-name)))
;;
;; Find each interesting place between here and `end'.
(while
(progn
(when (or (nth 3 state) (nth 4 state))
(setq face (funcall font-lock-syntactic-face-function state))
(setq beg (max (nth 8 state) start))
(setq state (parse-partial-sexp (point) end nil nil state
'syntax-table))
(when face (put-text-property beg (point) 'face face))
(when (and (eq face 'font-lock-comment-face)
(or font-lock-comment-start-skip
comment-start-skip))
;; Find the comment delimiters
;; and use font-lock-comment-delimiter-face for them.
(save-excursion
(goto-char beg)
(if (looking-at (or font-lock-comment-start-skip
comment-start-skip))
(put-text-property beg (match-end 0) 'face
font-lock-comment-delimiter-face)))
(if (looking-back (or font-lock-comment-end-skip
comment-end-skip)
(line-beginning-position) t)
(put-text-property (match-beginning 0) (point) 'face
font-lock-comment-delimiter-face))))
(< (point) end))
(setq state (parse-partial-sexp (point) end nil nil state
'syntax-table))))))
;; End of Syntactic fontification functions.
\f
;;; Keyword regexp fontification functions.
(defsubst font-lock-apply-highlight (highlight)
"Apply HIGHLIGHT following a match.
HIGHLIGHT should be of the form MATCH-HIGHLIGHT, see `font-lock-keywords'."
(let* ((match (nth 0 highlight))
(start (match-beginning match)) (end (match-end match))
(override (nth 2 highlight)))
(if (not start)
;; No match but we might not signal an error.
(or (nth 3 highlight)
(error "No match %d in highlight %S" match highlight))
(let ((val (eval (nth 1 highlight) t)))
(when (eq (car-safe val) 'face)
(add-text-properties start end (cddr val))
(setq val (cadr val)))
(cond
((not (or val (eq override t)))
;; If `val' is nil, don't do anything. It is important to do it
;; explicitly, because when adding nil via things like
;; font-lock-append-text-property, the property is actually
;; changed from <face> to (<face>) which is undesirable. --Stef
nil)
((not override)
;; Cannot override existing fontification.
(or (text-property-not-all start end 'face nil)
(put-text-property start end 'face val)))
((eq override t)
;; Override existing fontification.
(put-text-property start end 'face val))
((eq override 'prepend)
;; Prepend to existing fontification.
(font-lock-prepend-text-property start end 'face val))
((eq override 'append)
;; Append to existing fontification.
(font-lock-append-text-property start end 'face val))
((eq override 'keep)
;; Keep existing fontification.
(font-lock-fillin-text-property start end 'face val)))))))
(defsubst font-lock-fontify-anchored-keywords (keywords limit)
"Fontify according to KEYWORDS until LIMIT.
KEYWORDS should be of the form MATCH-ANCHORED, see `font-lock-keywords',
LIMIT can be modified by the value of its PRE-MATCH-FORM."
(let ((matcher (nth 0 keywords)) (lowdarks (nthcdr 3 keywords)) highlights
(lead-start (match-beginning 0))
;; Evaluate PRE-MATCH-FORM.
(pre-match-value (eval (nth 1 keywords) t)))
;; Set LIMIT to value of PRE-MATCH-FORM or the end of line.
(if (not (and (numberp pre-match-value) (> pre-match-value (point))))
(setq limit (line-end-position))
(setq limit pre-match-value)
(when (and font-lock-multiline (>= limit (line-beginning-position 2)))
;; this is a multiline anchored match
;; (setq font-lock-multiline t)
(put-text-property (if (= limit (line-beginning-position 2))
(1- limit)
(min lead-start (point)))
limit
'font-lock-multiline t)))
(save-match-data
;; Find an occurrence of `matcher' before `limit'.
(while (and (< (point) limit)
(if (stringp matcher)
(re-search-forward matcher limit t)
(funcall matcher limit)))
;; Apply each highlight to this instance of `matcher'.
(setq highlights lowdarks)
(while highlights
(font-lock-apply-highlight (car highlights))
(setq highlights (cdr highlights)))))
;; Evaluate POST-MATCH-FORM.
(eval (nth 2 keywords) t)))
(defun font-lock-fontify-keywords-region (start end &optional loudly)
"Fontify according to `font-lock-keywords' between START and END.
START should be at the beginning of a line.
LOUDLY, if non-nil, allows progress-meter bar."
(unless (eq (car font-lock-keywords) t)
(setq font-lock-keywords
(font-lock-compile-keywords font-lock-keywords)))
(let ((case-fold-search font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search)
(keywords (cddr font-lock-keywords))
(bufname (buffer-name)) (count 0)
(pos (make-marker))
keyword matcher highlights)
;;
;; Fontify each item in `font-lock-keywords' from `start' to `end'.
(while keywords
(if loudly (message "Fontifying %s... (regexps..%s)" bufname
(make-string (cl-incf count) ?.)))
;;
;; Find an occurrence of `matcher' from `start' to `end'.
(setq keyword (car keywords) matcher (car keyword))
(goto-char start)
(while (and (< (point) end)
(if (stringp matcher)
(re-search-forward matcher end t)
(funcall matcher end))
;; Beware empty string matches since they will
;; loop indefinitely.
(or (> (point) (match-beginning 0))
(progn (forward-char 1) t)))
(when (and font-lock-multiline
(>= (point)
(save-excursion (goto-char (match-beginning 0))
(forward-line 1) (point))))
;; this is a multiline regexp match
;; (setq font-lock-multiline t)
(put-text-property (if (= (point)
(save-excursion
(goto-char (match-beginning 0))
(forward-line 1) (point)))
(1- (point))
(match-beginning 0))
(point)
'font-lock-multiline t))
;; Apply each highlight to this instance of `matcher', which may be
;; specific highlights or more keywords anchored to `matcher'.
(setq highlights (cdr keyword))
(while highlights
(if (numberp (car (car highlights)))
(font-lock-apply-highlight (car highlights))
(set-marker pos (point))
(font-lock-fontify-anchored-keywords (car highlights) end)
;; Ensure forward progress. `pos' is a marker because anchored
;; keyword may add/delete text (this happens e.g. in grep.el).
(if (< (point) pos) (goto-char pos)))
(setq highlights (cdr highlights))))
(setq keywords (cdr keywords)))
(set-marker pos nil)))
;; End of Keyword regexp fontification functions.
\f
;;; Various functions.
(defun font-lock-compile-keywords (keywords &optional syntactic-keywords)
"Compile KEYWORDS into the form (t KEYWORDS COMPILED...)
Here each COMPILED is of the form (MATCHER HIGHLIGHT ...) as shown in the
`font-lock-keywords' doc string.
If SYNTACTIC-KEYWORDS is non-nil, it means these keywords are used for
`font-lock-syntactic-keywords' rather than for `font-lock-keywords'."
(if (not font-lock-set-defaults)
;; This should never happen. But some external packages sometimes
;; call font-lock in unexpected and incorrect ways. It's important to
;; stop processing at this point, otherwise we may end up changing the
;; global value of font-lock-keywords and break highlighting in many
;; other buffers.
(error "Font-lock trying to use keywords before setting them up"))
(if (eq (car-safe keywords) t)
keywords
(let ((compiled (mapcar #'font-lock-compile-keyword keywords)))
(setq keywords `(t ,keywords ,@(font-lock--filter-keywords compiled))))
(if (and (not syntactic-keywords)
(let ((beg-function (with-no-warnings syntax-begin-function)))
(or (eq beg-function #'beginning-of-defun)
(if (symbolp beg-function)
(get beg-function 'font-lock-syntax-paren-check))))
(not beginning-of-defun-function))
;; Try to detect when a string or comment contains something that
;; looks like a defun and would thus confuse font-lock.
(nconc keywords
`((,(if defun-prompt-regexp
(concat "^\\(?:" defun-prompt-regexp "\\)?\\s(")
"^\\s(")
(0
(if (memq (get-text-property (match-beginning 0) 'face)
'(font-lock-string-face font-lock-doc-face
font-lock-comment-face))
(list 'face font-lock-warning-face
'help-echo "Looks like a toplevel defun: escape the parenthesis"))
prepend)))))
keywords))
(defun font-lock-compile-keyword (keyword)
(cond ((or (functionp keyword) (nlistp keyword)) ; MATCHER
(list keyword '(0 font-lock-keyword-face)))
((eq (car keyword) 'eval) ; (eval . FORM)
(font-lock-compile-keyword (eval (cdr keyword) t)))
((eq (car-safe (cdr keyword)) 'quote) ; (MATCHER . 'FORM)
;; If FORM is a FACENAME then quote it. Otherwise ignore the quote.
(if (symbolp (nth 2 keyword))
(list (car keyword) (list 0 (cdr keyword)))
(font-lock-compile-keyword (cons (car keyword) (nth 2 keyword)))))
((numberp (cdr keyword)) ; (MATCHER . MATCH)
(list (car keyword) (list (cdr keyword) 'font-lock-keyword-face)))
((symbolp (cdr keyword)) ; (MATCHER . FACENAME)
(list (car keyword) (list 0 (cdr keyword))))
((nlistp (nth 1 keyword)) ; (MATCHER . HIGHLIGHT)
(list (car keyword) (cdr keyword)))
(t ; (MATCHER HIGHLIGHT ...)
keyword)))
(defun font-lock-eval-keywords (keywords)
"Evaluate KEYWORDS if a function (funcall) or variable (eval) name."
(if (listp keywords)
keywords
(font-lock-eval-keywords (if (fboundp keywords)
(funcall keywords)
(eval keywords t)))))
(defun font-lock-value-in-major-mode (values)
"If VALUES is a list, use `major-mode' as a key and return the `assq' value.
VALUES should then be an alist on the form ((MAJOR-MODE . VALUE) ...) where
MAJOR-MODE may be t.
If VALUES isn't a list, return VALUES."
(if (consp values)
(cdr (or (assq major-mode values) (assq t values)))
values))
(defun font-lock-choose-keywords (keywords level)
"Return LEVELth element of KEYWORDS.
A LEVEL of nil is equal to a LEVEL of 0, a LEVEL of t is equal to
\(1- (length KEYWORDS))."
(cond ((not (and (listp keywords) (symbolp (car keywords))))
keywords)
((numberp level)
(or (nth level keywords) (car (last keywords))))
((eq level t)
(car (last keywords)))
(t
(car keywords))))
(defun font-lock--match-keyword (rule keyword)
"Return non-nil if font-lock KEYWORD matches RULE.
See `font-lock-ignore' for the possible rules."
(pcase-exhaustive rule
('* t)
((pred symbolp)
(let ((regexp (when (string-match-p "[*?]" (symbol-name rule))
(wildcard-to-regexp (symbol-name rule)))))
(named-let search ((obj keyword))
(cond
((consp obj) (or (search (car obj)) (search (cdr obj))))
((not regexp) (eq rule obj))
((symbolp obj) (string-match-p regexp (symbol-name obj)))))))
((pred stringp) (when (stringp (car keyword))
(string-match-p (concat "\\`\\(?:" (car keyword) "\\)")
rule)))
(`(or . ,rules) (let ((match nil))
(while rules
(pcase-exhaustive (pop rules)
(`(except ,rule)
(when match
(setq match (not (font-lock--match-keyword rule keyword)))))
(rule
(unless match
(setq match (font-lock--match-keyword rule keyword))))))
match))
(`(not ,rule) (not (font-lock--match-keyword rule keyword)))
(`(and . ,rules) (seq-every-p (lambda (rule)
(font-lock--match-keyword rule keyword))
rules))
(`(pred ,fun) (funcall fun keyword))))
(defun font-lock--filter-keywords (keywords)
"Filter a list of KEYWORDS using `font-lock-ignore'."
(if-let ((rules (mapcan (pcase-lambda (`(,mode . ,rules))
(when (or (and (boundp mode) mode)
(derived-mode-p mode))
(copy-sequence rules)))
font-lock-ignore)))
(seq-filter (lambda (keyword) (not (font-lock--match-keyword
`(or ,@rules) keyword)))
keywords)
keywords))
(defun font-lock-refresh-defaults ()
"Restart fontification in current buffer after recomputing from defaults.
Recompute fontification variables using `font-lock-defaults' and
`font-lock-maximum-decoration'. Then restart fontification.
Use this function when you have changed any of the above
variables directly.
Note: This function will erase modifications done by
`font-lock-add-keywords' or `font-lock-remove-keywords', but will
preserve `hi-lock-mode' highlighting patterns."
(font-lock-mode -1)
(kill-local-variable 'font-lock-set-defaults)
(font-lock-mode 1))
(defvar-local font-lock-major-mode nil
"Major mode for which the font-lock settings have been setup.")
(defun font-lock-set-defaults ()
"Set fontification defaults appropriately for this mode.
Sets various variables using `font-lock-defaults' and
`font-lock-maximum-decoration'."
;; Set fontification defaults if not previously set for correct major mode.
(when (or (not font-lock-set-defaults)
(not font-lock-major-mode)
(not (derived-mode-p font-lock-major-mode)))
(setq font-lock-major-mode major-mode)
(setq font-lock-set-defaults t)
(let* ((defaults font-lock-defaults)
(keywords
(font-lock-choose-keywords (nth 0 defaults)
(font-lock-value-in-major-mode font-lock-maximum-decoration)))
(local (cdr (assq major-mode font-lock-keywords-alist)))
(removed-keywords
(cdr-safe (assq major-mode font-lock-removed-keywords-alist))))
;; Syntactic fontification?
(setq-local font-lock-keywords-only (nth 1 defaults))
;; Case fold during regexp fontification?
(setq-local font-lock-keywords-case-fold-search (nth 2 defaults))
;; Syntax table for regexp and syntactic fontification?
(kill-local-variable 'font-lock--syntax-table-affects-ppss)
(if (null (nth 3 defaults))
(setq-local font-lock-syntax-table nil)
(setq-local font-lock-syntax-table (copy-syntax-table (syntax-table)))
(dolist (selem (nth 3 defaults))
;; The character to modify may be a single CHAR or a STRING.
(let ((syntax (cdr selem)))
(dolist (char (if (numberp (car selem))
(list (car selem))
(mapcar #'identity (car selem))))
(unless (memq (car (aref font-lock-syntax-table char))
'(1 2 3)) ;"." "w" "_"
(setq font-lock--syntax-table-affects-ppss t))
(modify-syntax-entry char syntax font-lock-syntax-table)
(unless (memq (car (aref font-lock-syntax-table char))
'(1 2 3)) ;"." "w" "_"
(setq font-lock--syntax-table-affects-ppss t))
))))
;; (nth 4 defaults) used to hold `font-lock-beginning-of-syntax-function',
;; but that was removed in 25.1, so if it's a cons cell, we assume that
;; it's part of the variable alist.
;; Variable alist?
(dolist (x (nthcdr (if (consp (nth 4 defaults)) 4 5) defaults))
(set (make-local-variable (car x)) (cdr x)))
;; Set up `font-lock-keywords' last because its value might depend
;; on other settings.
(setq-local font-lock-keywords
(font-lock-eval-keywords keywords))
;; Local fontification?
(while local
(font-lock-add-keywords nil (car (car local)) (cdr (car local)))
(setq local (cdr local)))
(when removed-keywords
(font-lock-remove-keywords nil removed-keywords))
;; Now compile the keywords.
(unless (eq (car font-lock-keywords) t)
(setq font-lock-keywords
(font-lock-compile-keywords font-lock-keywords))))
(font-lock-flush)))
\f
;;; Color etc. support.
;; Note that `defface' will not overwrite any faces declared above via
;; `custom-declare-face'.
(defface font-lock-comment-face
'((((class grayscale) (background light))
:foreground "DimGray" :weight bold :slant italic)
(((class grayscale) (background dark))
:foreground "LightGray" :weight bold :slant italic)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light))
:foreground "Firebrick")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark))
:foreground "chocolate1")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background light))
:foreground "red")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background dark))
:foreground "red1")
(((class color) (min-colors 8) (background light))
:foreground "red")
(((class color) (min-colors 8) (background dark))
:foreground "yellow")
(t :weight bold :slant italic))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight comments."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-comment-delimiter-face
'((default :inherit font-lock-comment-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight comment delimiters."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-string-face
'((((class grayscale) (background light)) :foreground "DimGray" :slant italic)
(((class grayscale) (background dark)) :foreground "LightGray" :slant italic)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light)) :foreground "VioletRed4")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark)) :foreground "LightSalmon")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background light)) :foreground "RosyBrown")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background dark)) :foreground "LightSalmon")
(((class color) (min-colors 8)) :foreground "green")
(t :slant italic))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight strings."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-doc-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-string-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight documentation embedded in program code.
It is typically used for special documentation comments or strings."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-doc-markup-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-constant-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight embedded documentation mark-up.
It is meant for mark-up elements in text that uses `font-lock-doc-face', such
as the constructs of Haddock, Javadoc and similar systems."
:version "28.1"
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-keyword-face
'((((class grayscale) (background light)) :foreground "LightGray" :weight bold)
(((class grayscale) (background dark)) :foreground "DimGray" :weight bold)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light)) :foreground "Purple")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark)) :foreground "Cyan1")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background light)) :foreground "Purple")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background dark)) :foreground "Cyan")
(((class color) (min-colors 8)) :foreground "cyan" :weight bold)
(t :weight bold))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight keywords."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-builtin-face
'((((class grayscale) (background light)) :foreground "LightGray" :weight bold)
(((class grayscale) (background dark)) :foreground "DimGray" :weight bold)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light)) :foreground "dark slate blue")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark)) :foreground "LightSteelBlue")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background light)) :foreground "Orchid")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background dark)) :foreground "LightSteelBlue")
(((class color) (min-colors 8)) :foreground "blue" :weight bold)
(t :weight bold))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight builtins."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-function-name-face
'((((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light)) :foreground "Blue1")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark)) :foreground "LightSkyBlue")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background light)) :foreground "Blue")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background dark)) :foreground "LightSkyBlue")
(((class color) (min-colors 8)) :foreground "blue" :weight bold)
(t :inverse-video t :weight bold))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight function names."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-function-call-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-function-name-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight function calls."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-variable-name-face
'((((class grayscale) (background light))
:foreground "Gray90" :weight bold :slant italic)
(((class grayscale) (background dark))
:foreground "DimGray" :weight bold :slant italic)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light)) :foreground "sienna")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark)) :foreground "LightGoldenrod")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background light)) :foreground "DarkGoldenrod")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background dark)) :foreground "LightGoldenrod")
(((class color) (min-colors 8)) :foreground "yellow" :weight light)
(t :weight bold :slant italic))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight variable names."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-variable-ref-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-variable-name-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight variable references."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-type-face
'((((class grayscale) (background light)) :foreground "Gray90" :weight bold)
(((class grayscale) (background dark)) :foreground "DimGray" :weight bold)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light)) :foreground "ForestGreen")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark)) :foreground "PaleGreen")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background light)) :foreground "ForestGreen")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background dark)) :foreground "PaleGreen")
(((class color) (min-colors 8)) :foreground "green")
(t :weight bold :underline t))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight type and class names."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-constant-face
'((((class grayscale) (background light))
:foreground "LightGray" :weight bold :underline t)
(((class grayscale) (background dark))
:foreground "Gray50" :weight bold :underline t)
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background light)) :foreground "dark cyan")
(((class color) (min-colors 88) (background dark)) :foreground "Aquamarine")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background light)) :foreground "CadetBlue")
(((class color) (min-colors 16) (background dark)) :foreground "Aquamarine")
(((class color) (min-colors 8)) :foreground "magenta")
(t :weight bold :underline t))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight constants and labels."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-warning-face
'((t :inherit error))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight warnings."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-negation-char-face
'((t nil))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight easy to overlook negation."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-preprocessor-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-builtin-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight preprocessor directives."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-regexp-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-string-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight regexp literals."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-regexp-grouping-backslash
'((t :inherit bold))
"Font Lock mode face for backslashes in Lisp regexp grouping constructs."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-regexp-grouping-construct
'((t :inherit bold))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight grouping constructs in Lisp regexps."
:group 'font-lock-faces)
(defface font-lock-escape-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-regexp-grouping-backslash))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight escape sequences in strings."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-number-face
'((t nil))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight numbers."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-operator-face
'((t nil))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight operators."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-property-name-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-variable-name-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight properties of an object.
For example, the declaration of fields in a struct."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-property-ref-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-property-name-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight property references.
For example, property lookup of fields in a struct."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-punctuation-face
'((t nil))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight punctuation characters."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-bracket-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-punctuation-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight brackets, braces, and parens."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-delimiter-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-punctuation-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight delimiters.
What exactly is a delimiter depends on the major mode, but usually
these are characters like comma, colon, and semi-colon."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
(defface font-lock-misc-punctuation-face
'((t :inherit font-lock-punctuation-face))
"Font Lock mode face used to highlight miscellaneous punctuation."
:group 'font-lock-faces
:version "29.1")
;; End of Color etc. support.
\f
;;; Menu support.
;; This section of code is commented out because Emacs does not have real menu
;; buttons. (We can mimic them by putting "( ) " or "(X) " at the beginning of
;; the menu entry text, but with Xt it looks both ugly and embarrassingly
;; amateur.) If/When Emacs gets real menus buttons, put in menu-bar.el after
;; the entry for "Text Properties" something like:
;;
;; (define-key menu-bar-edit-menu [font-lock]
;; (cons "Syntax Highlighting" font-lock-menu))
;;
;; and remove a single ";" from the beginning of each line in the rest of this
;; section. Probably the mechanism for telling the menu code what are menu
;; buttons and when they are on or off needs tweaking. I have assumed that the
;; mechanism is via `menu-toggle' and `menu-selected' symbol properties. sm.
;;;;;###autoload
;;(progn
;; ;; Make the Font Lock menu.
;; (defvar-keymap font-lock-menu :name "Syntax Highlighting")
;; ;; Add the menu items in reverse order.
;; (define-key font-lock-menu [fontify-less]
;; '("Less In Current Buffer" . font-lock-fontify-less))
;; (define-key font-lock-menu [fontify-more]
;; '("More In Current Buffer" . font-lock-fontify-more))
;; (define-key font-lock-menu [font-lock-sep]
;; '("--"))
;; (define-key font-lock-menu [font-lock-mode]
;; '("In Current Buffer" . font-lock-mode))
;; (define-key font-lock-menu [global-font-lock-mode]
;; '("In All Buffers" . global-font-lock-mode)))
;;
;;;;;###autoload
;;(progn
;; ;; We put the appropriate `menu-enable' etc. symbol property values on when
;; ;; font-lock.el is loaded, so we don't need to autoload the three variables.
;; (put 'global-font-lock-mode 'menu-toggle t)
;; (put 'font-lock-mode 'menu-toggle t)
;; (put 'font-lock-fontify-more 'menu-enable '(identity))
;; (put 'font-lock-fontify-less 'menu-enable '(identity)))
;;
;; ;; Put the appropriate symbol property values on now. See above.
;;(put 'global-font-lock-mode 'menu-selected 'global-font-lock-mode)
;;(put 'font-lock-mode 'menu-selected 'font-lock-mode)
;;(put 'font-lock-fontify-more 'menu-enable '(nth 2 font-lock-fontify-level))
;;(put 'font-lock-fontify-less 'menu-enable '(nth 1 font-lock-fontify-level))
;;
;;(defvar font-lock-fontify-level nil) ; For less/more fontification.
;;
;;(defun font-lock-fontify-level (level)
;; (let ((font-lock-maximum-decoration level))
;; (when font-lock-mode
;; (font-lock-mode))
;; (font-lock-mode)
;; (when font-lock-verbose
;; (message "Fontifying %s... level %d" (buffer-name) level))))
;;
;;(defun font-lock-fontify-less ()
;; "Fontify the current buffer with less decoration.
;;See `font-lock-maximum-decoration'."
;; (interactive)
;; ;; Check in case we get called interactively.
;; (if (nth 1 font-lock-fontify-level)
;; (font-lock-fontify-level (1- (car font-lock-fontify-level)))
;; (error "No less decoration")))
;;
;;(defun font-lock-fontify-more ()
;; "Fontify the current buffer with more decoration.
;;See `font-lock-maximum-decoration'."
;; (interactive)
;; ;; Check in case we get called interactively.
;; (if (nth 2 font-lock-fontify-level)
;; (font-lock-fontify-level (1+ (car font-lock-fontify-level)))
;; (error "No more decoration")))
;;
;; ;; This should be called by `font-lock-set-defaults'.
;;(defun font-lock-set-menu ()
;; ;; Activate less/more fontification entries if there are multiple levels for
;; ;; the current buffer. Sets `font-lock-fontify-level' to be of the form
;; ;; (CURRENT-LEVEL IS-LOWER-LEVEL-P IS-HIGHER-LEVEL-P) for menu activation.
;; (let ((keywords (nth 0 font-lock-defaults))
;; (level (font-lock-value-in-major-mode font-lock-maximum-decoration)))
;; (make-local-variable 'font-lock-fontify-level)
;; (if (or (symbolp keywords) (= (length keywords) 1))
;; (font-lock-unset-menu)
;; (cond ((eq level t)
;; (setq level (1- (length keywords))))
;; ((or (null level) (zerop level))
;; ;; The default level is usually, but not necessarily, level 1.
;; (setq level (- (length keywords)
;; (length (member (eval (car keywords))
;; (mapcar #'eval (cdr keywords))))))))
;; (setq font-lock-fontify-level (list level (> level 1)
;; (< level (1- (length keywords))))))))
;;
;; ;; This should be called by `font-lock-unset-defaults'.
;;(defun font-lock-unset-menu ()
;; ;; Deactivate less/more fontification entries.
;; (setq font-lock-fontify-level nil))
;; End of Menu support.
\f
;;; Various regexp information shared by several modes.
;; ;; Information specific to a single mode should go in its load library.
;; Font Lock support for C, C++, Objective-C and Java modes is now in
;; cc-fonts.el (and required by cc-mode.el). However, the below function
;; should stay in font-lock.el, since it is used by other libraries. sm.
(defun font-lock-match-c-style-declaration-item-and-skip-to-next (limit)
"Match, and move over, any declaration/definition item after point.
Matches after point, but ignores leading whitespace and `*' characters.
Does not move further than LIMIT.
The expected syntax of a declaration/definition item is `word' (preceded by
optional whitespace and `*' characters and proceeded by optional whitespace)
optionally followed by a `('. Everything following the item (but belonging to
it) is expected to be skip-able by `scan-sexps', and items are expected to be
separated with a `,' and to be terminated with a `;'.
Thus the regexp matches after point: word (
^^^^ ^
Where the match subexpressions are: 1 2
The item is delimited by (match-beginning 1) and (match-end 1).
If (match-beginning 2) is non-nil, the item is followed by a `('.
This function could be MATCHER in a MATCH-ANCHORED `font-lock-keywords' item."
(when (looking-at "[ \n\t*]*\\(\\sw+\\)[ \t\n]*\\(((?\\)?")
(when (and (match-end 2) (> (- (match-end 2) (match-beginning 2)) 1))
;; If `word' is followed by a double open-paren, it's probably
;; a macro used for "int myfun P_ ((int arg1))". Let's go back one
;; word to try and match `myfun' rather than `P_'.
(let ((pos (point)))
(skip-chars-backward " \t\n")
(skip-syntax-backward "w")
(unless (looking-at "\\(\\sw+\\)[ \t\n]*\\sw+[ \t\n]*\\(((?\\)?")
;; Looks like it was something else, so go back to where we
;; were and reset the match data by rematching.
(goto-char pos)
(looking-at "[ \n\t*]*\\(\\sw+\\)[ \t\n]*\\(((?\\)?"))))
(save-match-data
(condition-case nil
(save-restriction
;; Restrict to the LIMIT.
(narrow-to-region (point-min) limit)
(goto-char (match-end 1))
;; Move over any item value, etc., to the next item.
(while (not (looking-at "[ \t\n]*\\(\\(,\\)\\|;\\|\\'\\)"))
(goto-char (or (scan-sexps (point) 1) (point-max))))
(if (match-end 2)
(goto-char (match-end 2))))
(error t)))))
;; C preprocessor(cpp) is used outside of C, C++ and Objective-C source file.
;; e.g. assembler code and GNU linker script in Linux kernel.
;; `cpp-font-lock-keywords' is handy for modes for the files.
;;
;; Here we cannot use `regexp-opt' because regex-opt is not preloaded
;; while font-lock.el is preloaded to emacs. So values pre-calculated with
;; regexp-opt are used here.
;; `cpp-font-lock-keywords-source-directives' is calculated from:
;;
;; (regexp-opt
;; '("define" "elif" "else" "endif" "error" "file" "if" "ifdef"
;; "ifndef" "import" "include" "line" "pragma" "undef" "warning"))
;;
(defconst cpp-font-lock-keywords-source-directives
"define\\|e\\(?:l\\(?:if\\|se\\)\\|ndif\\|rror\\)\\|file\\|i\\(?:f\\(?:n?def\\)?\\|mport\\|nclude\\)\\|line\\|pragma\\|undef\\|warning"
"Regular expression used in `cpp-font-lock-keywords'.")
;; `cpp-font-lock-keywords-source-depth' is calculated from:
;;
;; (regexp-opt-depth (regexp-opt
;; '("define" "elif" "else" "endif" "error" "file" "if" "ifdef"
;; "ifndef" "import" "include" "line" "pragma" "undef" "warning")))
;;
(defconst cpp-font-lock-keywords-source-depth 0
"Regular expression depth of `cpp-font-lock-keywords-source-directives'.
This should be an integer. Used in `cpp-font-lock-keywords'.")
(defconst cpp-font-lock-keywords
(let* ((directives cpp-font-lock-keywords-source-directives)
(directives-depth cpp-font-lock-keywords-source-depth))
(list
;;
;; Fontify error directives.
'("^#[ \t]*\\(?:error\\|warning\\)[ \t]+\\(.+\\)" 1 font-lock-warning-face prepend)
;;
;; Fontify filenames in #include <...> preprocessor directives as strings.
'("^#[ \t]*\\(?:import\\|include\\)[ \t]*\\(<[^>\"\n]*>?\\)"
1 font-lock-string-face prepend)
;;
;; Fontify function macro names.
'("^#[ \t]*define[ \t]+\\([[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]_$]*\\)("
(1 font-lock-function-name-face prepend)
;;
;; Macro arguments.
((lambda (limit)
(re-search-forward
"\\(?:\\([[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]_]*\\)[,]?\\)"
(or (save-excursion (re-search-forward ")" limit t))
limit)
t))
nil nil (1 font-lock-variable-name-face prepend)))
;;
;; Fontify symbol names in #elif or #if ... defined preprocessor directives.
'("^#[ \t]*\\(?:elif\\|if\\)\\>"
("\\<\\(defined\\)\\>[ \t]*(?\\([[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]_]*\\)?" nil nil
(1 font-lock-builtin-face prepend) (2 font-lock-variable-name-face prepend t)))
;;
;; Fontify otherwise as symbol names, and the preprocessor directive names.
(list
(concat "^\\(#[ \t]*\\(?:" directives
"\\)\\)\\>[ \t!]*\\([[:alpha:]_][[:alnum:]_]*\\)?")
'(1 font-lock-preprocessor-face prepend)
(list (+ 2 directives-depth)
'font-lock-variable-name-face nil t))))
"Font lock keywords for C preprocessor directives.
`c-mode', `c++-mode' and `objc-mode' have their own font lock keywords
for C preprocessor directives. This definition is for the other modes
in which C preprocessor directives are used, e.g. `asm-mode' and
`ld-script-mode'.")
(define-obsolete-function-alias 'font-lock-after-fontify-buffer #'ignore "29.1")
(define-obsolete-function-alias 'font-lock-after-unfontify-buffer #'ignore "29.1")
\f
(provide 'font-lock)
;;; font-lock.el ends here
|