From Hugo 0.28, the default syntax hightlighter in Hugo is [Chroma](https://github.com/alecthomas/chroma); it is built in Go and is really, really fast -- and for the most important parts compatible with Pygments.
If you want to continue to use Pygments (see below), set `pygmentsUseClassic=true` in your site config.
The example below shows a simple code snippet from the Hugo source highlighted with the `highlight` shortcode. Note that the gohugo.io site is generated with `pygmentsUseClasses=true` (see [Generate Syntax Highlighter CSS](#generate-syntax-highlighter-css)).
To make the transition from Pygments to Chroma seamless, they share a common set of configuration options:
pygmentsOptions
: A comma separated list of options. See below for a full list.
pygmentsCodefences
: Set to true to enable syntax highlighting in code fences with a language tag in markdown (see below for an example).
pygmentsStyle
: The style of code highlighting. See https://help.farbox.com/pygments.html for a gallery. Note that this option is not relevant when `pygmentsUseClasses` is set.
pygmentsUseClasses
: Set to `true` to use CSS classes to format your highlighted code. See [Generate Syntax Highlighter CSS](#generate-syntax-highlighter-css).
pygmentsCodefencesGuessSyntax
: Set to `true` to try to do syntax highlighting on code fenced blocks in markdown without a language tag.
pygmentsUseClassic
: Set to true to use Pygments instead of the much faster Chroma.
### Options
`pygmentsOptions` can be set either in site config or overridden per code block in the Highlight shortcode or template func.
noclasses
: Use inline style.
linenos
: For Chroma, any value in this setting will print line numbers. Pygments has some more fine grained control.
linenostart
: Start the line numbers from this value (default is 1).
hl_lines
: Highlight a space separated list of line numbers. For Chroma, you can provide a list of ranges, i.e. "3-8 10-20".
The full set of supported options for Pygments is: `encoding`, `outencoding`, `nowrap`, `full`, `title`, `style`, `noclasses`, `classprefix`, `cssclass`, `cssstyles`, `prestyles`, `linenos`, `hl_lines`, `linenostart`, `linenostep`, `linenospecial`, `nobackground`, `lineseparator`, `lineanchors`, `linespans`, `anchorlinenos`, `startinline`. See the [Pygments HTML Formatter Documentation](http://pygments.org/docs/formatters/#HtmlFormatter) for details.
hugo gen chromastyles --style=monokai > syntax.css
```
Run `hugo gen chromastyles -h` for more options. See https://help.farbox.com/pygments.html for a gallery of available styles.
## Highlight Shortcode
Highlighting is carried out via the [built-in shortcode](/content-management/shortcodes/) `highlight`. `highlight` takes exactly one required parameter for the programming language to be highlighted and requires a closing shortcode. Note that `highlight` is *not* used for client-side javascript highlighting.
It is also possible to add syntax highlighting with GitHub flavored code fences. To enable this, set the `pygmentsCodeFences` to `true` in Hugo's [configuration file](/getting-started/configuration/);
````
```html
<sectionid="main">
<div>
<h1id="title">{{ .Title }}</h1>
{{ range .Data.Pages }}
{{ .Render "summary"}}
{{ end }}
</div>
</section>
```
````
## Highlight with Pygments Classic
If you for some reason don't want to use the built-in Chroma highlighter, you can set `pygmentsUseClassic=true` in your config and add Pygments to your path.
{{% note "Disclaimers on Pygments" %}}
* Pygments is relatively slow and _causes a performance hit when building your site_, but Hugo has been designed to cache the results to disk.
* The caching can be turned off by setting the `--ignoreCache` flag to `true`.
* The languages available for highlighting depend on your Pygments installation.
{{% /note %}}
If you have never worked with Pygments before, here is a brief primer:
+ Install Python from [python.org](https://www.python.org/downloads/). Version 2.7.x is already sufficient.
+ Run `pip install Pygments` in order to install Pygments. Once installed, Pygments gives you a command `pygmentize`. Make sure it sits in your PATH; otherwise, Hugo will not be able to find and use it.
On Debian and Ubuntu systems, you may also install Pygments by running `sudo apt-get install python3-pygments`.