CodeHilite¶
Summary¶
The CodeHilite extension adds code/syntax highlighting to standard Python-Markdown code blocks using Pygments.
This extension is included in the standard Markdown library.
Setup¶
Step 1: Download and Install Pygments¶
You will also need to download and install the Pygments package on your
PYTHONPATH
. The CodeHilite extension will produce HTML output without
Pygments, but it won’t highlight anything (same behavior as setting
use_pygments
to False
).
Step 2: Add CSS Classes¶
You will need to define the appropriate CSS classes with appropriate rules. The CSS rules either need to be defined in or linked from the header of your HTML templates. Pygments can generate CSS rules for you. Just run the following command from the command line:
pygmentize -S default -f html -a .codehilite > styles.css
If you are using a different css_class
(default: .codehilite
), then
set the value of the -a
option to that class name. The CSS rules will be
written to the styles.css
file which you can copy to your site and link from
your HTML templates.
If you would like to use a different theme, swap out default
for the desired
theme. For a list of themes installed on your system (additional themes can be
installed via Pygments plugins), run the following command:
pygmentize -L style
See Pygments’ excellent documentation for more details. If no language is defined, Pygments will attempt to guess the language. When that fails, the code block will not be highlighted.
See Also
GitHub user richeland has provided a number of different CSS style
sheets which work with Pygments along with a preview of each theme.
The css_class
used is the same as the default value for that option
(.codehilite
). However, the Python-Markdown project makes no guarantee that
richeland’s CSS styles will work with the version of Pygments you are using.
To ensure complete compatibility, you should generate the CSS rules from
your own installation of Pygments.
Syntax¶
The CodeHilite extension follows the same syntax as regular Markdown code blocks, with one exception. The highlighter needs to know what language to use for the code block. There are three ways to tell the highlighter what language the code block contains and each one has a different result.
Note
The format of the language identifier only effects the display of line numbers
if linenums
is set to None
(the default). If set to True
or False
(see Usage below) the format of the identifier has no effect on the
display of line numbers – it only serves as a means to define the language
of the code block.
Shebang (with path)¶
If the first line of the code block contains a shebang, the language is derived from that and line numbers are used.
#!/usr/bin/python # Code goes here ...
Will result in:
1 2 | #!/usr/bin/python # Code goes here ... |
Shebang (no path)¶
If the first line contains a shebang, but the shebang line does not contain a
path (a single /
or even a space), then that line is removed from the code
block before processing. Line numbers are used.
#!python # Code goes here ...
Will result in:
1 | # Code goes here ...
|
Colons¶
If the first line begins with three or more colons, the text following the colons identifies the language. The first line is removed from the code block before processing and line numbers are not used.
:::python # Code goes here ...
Will result in:
# Code goes here ...
Certain lines can be selected for emphasis with the colon syntax. When using Pygments’ default CSS styles, emphasized lines have a yellow background. This is useful to direct the reader’s attention to specific lines.
:::python hl_lines="1 3" # This line is emphasized # This line isn't # This line is emphasized
Will result in:
# This line is emphasized # This line isn't # This line is emphasized
Note
hl_lines
is named for Pygments’ option meaning “highlighted lines”.
When No Language is Defined¶
CodeHilite is completely backwards compatible so that if a code block is
encountered that does not define a language, the block is simply wrapped in
<pre>
tags and output.
# Code goes here ...
Will result in:
# Code goes here ...
Lets see the source for that:
<div class="codehilite"><pre><code># Code goes here ... </code></pre></div>
Note
When no language is defined, the Pygments highlighting engine will try to guess
the language (unless guess_lang
is set to False
). Upon failure, the same
behavior will happen as described above.
Usage¶
See Extensions for general extension usage. Use codehilite
as the
name of the extension.
See the Library Reference for information about configuring extensions.
The following options are provided to configure the output:
-
linenums
: Use line numbers. Possible values areTrue
for yes,False
for no andNone
for auto. Defaults toNone
.Using
True
will force every code block to have line numbers, even when using colons (:::
) for language identification.Using
False
will turn off all line numbers, even when using shebangs (#!
) for language identification. -
guess_lang
: Automatic language detection. Defaults toTrue
.Using
False
will prevent Pygments from guessing the language, and thus highlighting blocks only when you explicitly set the language. -
css_class
: Set CSS class name for the wrapper<div>
tag. Defaults tocodehilite
. -
pygments_style
: Pygments HTML Formatter Style (ColorScheme
). Defaults todefault
.Note
This is useful only when
noclasses
is set toTrue
, otherwise the CSS styles must be provided by the end user. -
noclasses
: Use inline styles instead of CSS classes. Defaults toFalse
. -
use_pygments
: Defaults toTrue
. Set toFalse
to disable the use of Pygments. If a language is defined for a code block, it will be assigned to the<code>
tag as a class in the manner suggested by the HTML5 spec (alternate output will not be entertained) and might be used by a JavaScript library in the browser to highlight the code block.