hugo/docs/content/extras/highlighting.md
Anthony Fok 5505ac0d72 doc: Strip trailing whitespace; other revisions
Make some random and non-comprehensive changes to the
template functions documentation to make them more
consistent.
2015-08-04 12:00:08 -06:00

180 lines
7.5 KiB
Markdown
Raw Blame History

This file contains ambiguous Unicode characters

This file contains Unicode characters that might be confused with other characters. If you think that this is intentional, you can safely ignore this warning. Use the Escape button to reveal them.

---
aliases:
- /extras/highlight/
date: 2013-07-01
menu:
main:
parent: extras
next: /extras/toc
prev: /extras/datadrivencontent
title: Syntax Highlighting
weight: 90
toc: true
---
Hugo provides the ability for you to highlight source code in _two different ways_ — either pre-processed server side from your content, or to defer the processing to the client side, using a JavaScript library.
**The advantage of server side** is that it doesnt depend on a JavaScript library and consequently works very well when read from an RSS feed.
**The advantage of client side** is that it doesnt cost anything when building your site and some of the highlighting scripts available cover more languages than Pygments does.
## Server-side
For the pre-processed approach, highlighting is performed by an external Python-based program called [Pygments](http://pygments.org/) and is triggered via an embedded Hugo shortcode (see example below). If Pygments is absent from the path, it will silently simply pass the content along unhighlighted.
### Pygments
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 cannot find it.
On Debian and Ubuntu systems, you may also install Pygments by running `sudo apt-get install python3-pygments`.
Hugo gives you two options that you can set with the variable `pygmentsuseclasses` (default `false`) in `config.toml` (or `config.yaml`).
1. Color-codes for highlighting keywords are directly inserted if `pygmentsuseclasses = false` (default). See in the example below. The color-codes depend on your choice of the `pygmentsstyle` (default `"monokai"`). You can explore the different color styles on [pygments.org](http://pygments.org/) after inserting some example code.
2. If you choose `pygmentsuseclasses = true`, Hugo includes class names in your code instead of color-codes. For class-names to be meaningful, you need to include a `.css`-file in your website representing your color-scheme. You can either generate this `.css`-files according to this [description](http://pygments.org/docs/cmdline/) or download the standard ones from the [GitHub pygments-css repository](https://github.com/richleland/pygments-css).
### Usage
Highlighting is carried out via the in-built shortcode `highlight`. `highlight` takes exactly one required parameter of language, and requires a closing shortcode. Note that `highlight` is _not_ used for client-side javascript highlighting.
### Example
```
{{</* highlight html */>}}
<section id="main">
<div>
<h1 id="title">{{ .Title }}</h1>
{{ range .Data.Pages }}
{{ .Render "summary"}}
{{ end }}
</div>
</section>
{{</* /highlight */>}}
```
### Example Output
```
<span style="color: #f92672">&lt;section</span> <span style="color: #a6e22e">id=</span><span style="color: #e6db74">&quot;main&quot;</span><span style="color: #f92672">&gt;</span>
<span style="color: #f92672">&lt;div&gt;</span>
<span style="color: #f92672">&lt;h1</span> <span style="color: #a6e22e">id=</span><span style="color: #e6db74">&quot;title&quot;</span><span style="color: #f92672">&gt;</span>{{ .Title }}<span style="color: #f92672">&lt;/h1&gt;</span>
{{ range .Data.Pages }}
{{ .Render &quot;summary&quot;}}
{{ end }}
<span style="color: #f92672">&lt;/div&gt;</span>
<span style="color: #f92672">&lt;/section&gt;</span>
```
### Options
Options to control highlighting can be added as a quoted, comma separated key-value list as the second argument in the shortcode. The example below will highlight as language `go` with inline line numbers, with line number 2 and 3 highlighted.
```
{{</* highlight go "linenos=inline,hl_lines=2 3" */>}}
var a string
var b string
var c string
var d string
{{</* / highlight */>}}
```
Supported keywords: `style`, `encoding`, `noclasses`, `hl_lines`, `linenos`. Note that `style` and `noclasses` will override the similar setting in the global config.
The keywords are the same you would using with Pygments from the command line, see the [Pygments doc](http://pygments.org/docs/) for more info.
### Disclaimers
* Pygments is relatively slow and _causes a performance hit when building your site_, but Hugo has been designed to cache the results to disk.
* Languages available depends on your Pygments installation.
## Client-side
Alternatively, code highlighting can be done in client-side JavaScript.
Client-side syntax highlighting is very simple to add. You'll need to pick
a library and a corresponding theme. Some popular libraries are:
- [Highlight.js]
- [Prism]
- [Rainbow]
- [Syntax Highlighter]
- [Google Prettify]
### Highlight.js example
This example uses the popular [Highlight.js] library, hosted by [Yandex], a popular Russian search engine.
In your `./layouts/partials/` (or `./layouts/chrome/`) folder, depending on your specific theme, there will be a snippet that will be included in every generated HTML page, such as `header.html` or `header.includes.html`. Simply add the css and js to initialize [Highlight.js]:
~~~
<link rel="stylesheet" href="https://yandex.st/highlightjs/8.0/styles/default.min.css">
<script src="https://yandex.st/highlightjs/8.0/highlight.min.js"></script>
<script>hljs.initHighlightingOnLoad();</script>
~~~
### Prism example
Prism is another popular highlighter library, used on some major sites. Similar to Highlight.js, you simply load `prism.css` in your `<head>` via whatever Hugo partial template is creating that part of your pages, like so:
```html
...
<link href="/css/prism.css" rel="stylesheet" />
...
```
... and add `prism.js` near the bottom of your `<body>` tag, again in whatever Hugo partial template is appropriate for your site or theme.
```html
...
<script src="/js/prism.js"></script>
...
</body>
```
In this example, the local paths indicate that your own copy of these files are being added to the site, typically under `./static/`.
### Using Client-side highlighting
To use client-side highlighting, most of these javascript libraries expect your code to be wrapped in semantically correct `<code>` tags, with the language expressed in a class attribute on the `<code>` tag, such as `class="language-abc"`, where the `abc` is the code the highlighter script uses to represent that language.
The script would be looking for classes like `language-go`, `language-html`, or `language-css`. If you look at the page's source, it would be marked up like so:
~~~html
<pre>
<code class="language-css">
body {
font-family: "Noto Sans", sans-serif;
}
</code>
</pre>
~~~
The markup in your content pages (e.g. `my-css-tutorial.md`) needs to look like the following, with the name of the language to be highlighted entered directly after the first "fence", in a fenced code block:
<pre><code class="language-css">&#126;&#126;&#126;css
body {
font-family: "Noto Sans", sans-serif;
}
&#126;&#126;&#126;</code></pre>
When passed through the highlighter script, it would yield something like this output when viewed on your rendered page:
~~~css
body {
font-family: "Noto Sans", sans-serif;
}
~~~
Please see individual libraries' documentation for how to implement each of the JavaScript-based libraries.
[Prism]: http://prismjs.com
[Highlight.js]: http://highlightjs.org/
[Rainbow]: http://craig.is/making/rainbows
[Syntax Highlighter]: http://alexgorbatchev.com/SyntaxHighlighter/
[Google Prettify]: https://code.google.com/p/google-code-prettify/
[Yandex]: http://yandex.ru/