syntax.txt For Vim version 7.4. Last change: 2014 Nov 19LINK

VIM REFERENCE MANUAL by Bram Moolenaar

Syntax highlighting syntax syntax-highlighting coloringLINK

Syntax highlighting enables Vim to show parts of the text in another font or

color. Those parts can be specific keywords or text matching a pattern. Vim

doesn't parse the whole file (to keep it fast), so the highlighting has its

limitations. Lexical highlighting might be a better name, but since everybody

calls it syntax highlighting we'll stick with that.

Vim supports syntax highlighting on all terminals. But since most ordinary

terminals have very limited highlighting possibilities, it works best in the

GUI version, gvim.

In the User Manual:

usr_06.txt introduces syntax highlighting.

usr_44.txt introduces writing a syntax file.

1. Quick start :syn-qstart

2. Syntax files :syn-files

3. Syntax loading procedure syntax-loading

4. Syntax file remarks :syn-file-remarks

5. Defining a syntax :syn-define

6. :syntax arguments :syn-arguments

7. Syntax patterns :syn-pattern

8. Syntax clusters :syn-cluster

9. Including syntax files :syn-include

10. Synchronizing :syn-sync

11. Listing syntax items :syntax

12. Highlight command :highlight

13. Linking groups :highlight-link

14. Cleaning up :syn-clear

15. Highlighting tags tag-highlight

16. Window-local syntax :ownsyntax

17. Color xterms xterm-color

18. When syntax is slow :syntime

{Vi does not have any of these commands}

Syntax highlighting is not available when the +syntax feature has been

disabled at compile time.

==============================================================================

1. Quick start :syn-qstartLINK

:syn-enable :syntax-enableLINK

This command switches on syntax highlighting:

:syntax enable

What this command actually does is to execute the command

:source $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/syntax.vim

If the VIM environment variable is not set, Vim will try to find

the path in another way (see $VIMRUNTIME). Usually this works just

fine. If it doesn't, try setting the VIM environment variable to the

directory where the Vim stuff is located. For example, if your syntax files

are in the "/usr/vim/vim50/syntax" directory, set $VIMRUNTIME to

"/usr/vim/vim50". You must do this in the shell, before starting Vim.

:syn-on :syntax-onLINK

The ":syntax enable" command will keep your current color settings. This

allows using ":highlight" commands to set your preferred colors before or

after using this command. If you want Vim to overrule your settings with the

defaults, use:

:syntax on

:hi-normal :highlight-normalLINK

If you are running in the GUI, you can get white text on a black background

with:

:highlight Normal guibg=Black guifg=White

For a color terminal see :hi-normal-cterm.

For setting up your own colors syntax highlighting see syncolor.

NOTE: The syntax files on MS-DOS and Windows have lines that end in <CR><NL>.

The files for Unix end in <NL>. This means you should use the right type of

file for your system. Although on MS-DOS and Windows the right format is

automatically selected if the 'fileformats' option is not empty.

NOTE: When using reverse video ("gvim -fg white -bg black"), the default value

of 'background' will not be set until the GUI window is opened, which is after

reading the gvimrc. This will cause the wrong default highlighting to be

used. To set the default value of 'background' before switching on

highlighting, include the ":gui" command in the gvimrc:

:gui " open window and set default for 'background'

:syntax on " start highlighting, use 'background' to set colors

NOTE: Using ":gui" in the gvimrc means that "gvim -f" won't start in the

foreground! Use ":gui -f" then.

g:syntax_onLINK

You can toggle the syntax on/off with this command:

:if exists("g:syntax_on") | syntax off | else | syntax enable | endif

To put this into a mapping, you can use:

:map <F7> :if exists("g:syntax_on") <Bar>

\ syntax off <Bar>

\ else <Bar>

\ syntax enable <Bar>

\ endif <CR>

[using the <> notation, type this literally]

Details:

The ":syntax" commands are implemented by sourcing a file. To see exactly how

this works, look in the file:

command file

:syntax enable $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/syntax.vim

:syntax on $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/syntax.vim

:syntax manual $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/manual.vim

:syntax off $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/nosyntax.vim

Also see syntax-loading.

NOTE: If displaying long lines is slow and switching off syntax highlighting

makes it fast, consider setting the 'synmaxcol' option to a lower value.

==============================================================================

2. Syntax files :syn-filesLINK

The syntax and highlighting commands for one language are normally stored in

a syntax file. The name convention is: "{name}.vim". Where {name} is the

name of the language, or an abbreviation (to fit the name in 8.3 characters,

a requirement in case the file is used on a DOS filesystem).

Examples:

c.vim perl.vim java.vim html.vim

cpp.vim sh.vim csh.vim

The syntax file can contain any Ex commands, just like a vimrc file. But

the idea is that only commands for a specific language are included. When a

language is a superset of another language, it may include the other one,

for example, the cpp.vim file could include the c.vim file:

:so $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/c.vim

The .vim files are normally loaded with an autocommand. For example:

:au Syntax c runtime! syntax/c.vim

:au Syntax cpp runtime! syntax/cpp.vim

These commands are normally in the file $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/synload.vim.

MAKING YOUR OWN SYNTAX FILES mysyntaxfileLINK

When you create your own syntax files, and you want to have Vim use these

automatically with ":syntax enable", do this:

1. Create your user runtime directory. You would normally use the first item

of the 'runtimepath' option. Example for Unix:

mkdir ~/.vim

2. Create a directory in there called "syntax". For Unix:

mkdir ~/.vim/syntax

3. Write the Vim syntax file. Or download one from the internet. Then write

it in your syntax directory. For example, for the "mine" syntax:

:w ~/.vim/syntax/mine.vim

Now you can start using your syntax file manually:

:set syntax=mine

You don't have to exit Vim to use this.

If you also want Vim to detect the type of file, see new-filetype.

If you are setting up a system with many users and you don't want each user

to add the same syntax file, you can use another directory from 'runtimepath'.

ADDING TO AN EXISTING SYNTAX FILE mysyntaxfile-addLINK

If you are mostly satisfied with an existing syntax file, but would like to

add a few items or change the highlighting, follow these steps:

1. Create your user directory from 'runtimepath', see above.

2. Create a directory in there called "after/syntax". For Unix:

mkdir ~/.vim/after

mkdir ~/.vim/after/syntax

3. Write a Vim script that contains the commands you want to use. For

example, to change the colors for the C syntax:

highlight cComment ctermfg=Green guifg=Green

4. Write that file in the "after/syntax" directory. Use the name of the

syntax, with ".vim" added. For our C syntax:

:w ~/.vim/after/syntax/c.vim

That's it. The next time you edit a C file the Comment color will be

different. You don't even have to restart Vim.

If you have multiple files, you can use the filetype as the directory name.

All the "*.vim" files in this directory will be used, for example:

~/.vim/after/syntax/c/one.vim

~/.vim/after/syntax/c/two.vim

REPLACING AN EXISTING SYNTAX FILE mysyntaxfile-replaceLINK

If you don't like a distributed syntax file, or you have downloaded a new

version, follow the same steps as for mysyntaxfile above. Just make sure

that you write the syntax file in a directory that is early in 'runtimepath'.

Vim will only load the first syntax file found, assuming that it sets

b:current_syntax.

NAMING CONVENTIONS group-name {group-name} E669 W18LINK

A syntax group name is to be used for syntax items that match the same kind of

thing. These are then linked to a highlight group that specifies the color.

A syntax group name doesn't specify any color or attributes itself.

The name for a highlight or syntax group must consist of ASCII letters, digits

and the underscore. As a regexp: "[a-zA-Z0-9_]*"

To be able to allow each user to pick his favorite set of colors, there must

be preferred names for highlight groups that are common for many languages.

These are the suggested group names (if syntax highlighting works properly

you can see the actual color, except for "Ignore"):

*Comment any comment

*Constant any constant

String a string constant: "this is a string"

Character a character constant: 'c', '\n'

Number a number constant: 234, 0xff

Boolean a boolean constant: TRUE, false

Float a floating point constant: 2.3e10

*Identifier any variable name

Function function name (also: methods for classes)

*Statement any statement

Conditional if, then, else, endif, switch, etc.

Repeat for, do, while, etc.

Label case, default, etc.

Operator "sizeof", "+", "*", etc.

Keyword any other keyword

Exception try, catch, throw

*PreProc generic Preprocessor

Include preprocessor #include

Define preprocessor #define

Macro same as Define

PreCondit preprocessor #if, #else, #endif, etc.

*Type int, long, char, etc.

StorageClass static, register, volatile, etc.

Structure struct, union, enum, etc.

Typedef A typedef

*Special any special symbol

SpecialChar special character in a constant

Tag you can use CTRL-] on this

Delimiter character that needs attention

SpecialComment special things inside a comment

Debug debugging statements

*Underlined text that stands out, HTML links

*Ignore left blank, hidden hl-Ignore

*Error any erroneous construct

*Todo anything that needs extra attention; mostly the

keywords TODO FIXME and XXX

The names marked with * are the preferred groups; the others are minor groups.

For the preferred groups, the "syntax.vim" file contains default highlighting.

The minor groups are linked to the preferred groups, so they get the same

highlighting. You can override these defaults by using ":highlight" commands

after sourcing the "syntax.vim" file.

Note that highlight group names are not case sensitive. "String" and "string"

can be used for the same group.

The following names are reserved and cannot be used as a group name:

NONE ALL ALLBUT contains contained

hl-IgnoreLINK

When using the Ignore group, you may also consider using the conceal

mechanism. See conceal.

==============================================================================

3. Syntax loading procedure syntax-loadingLINK

This explains the details that happen when the command ":syntax enable" is

issued. When Vim initializes itself, it finds out where the runtime files are

located. This is used here as the variable $VIMRUNTIME.

":syntax enable" and ":syntax on" do the following:

Source $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/syntax.vim

|

+- Clear out any old syntax by sourcing $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/nosyntax.vim

|

+- Source first syntax/synload.vim in 'runtimepath'

| |

| +- Setup the colors for syntax highlighting. If a color scheme is

| | defined it is loaded again with ":colors {name}". Otherwise

| | ":runtime! syntax/syncolor.vim" is used. ":syntax on" overrules

| | existing colors, ":syntax enable" only sets groups that weren't

| | set yet.

| |

| +- Set up syntax autocmds to load the appropriate syntax file when

| | the 'syntax' option is set. synload-1LINK

| |

| +- Source the user's optional file, from the mysyntaxfile variable.

| This is for backwards compatibility with Vim 5.x only. synload-2LINK

|

+- Do ":filetype on", which does ":runtime! filetype.vim". It loads any

| filetype.vim files found. It should always Source

| $VIMRUNTIME/filetype.vim, which does the following.

| |

| +- Install autocmds based on suffix to set the 'filetype' option

| | This is where the connection between file name and file type is

| | made for known file types. synload-3LINK

| |

| +- Source the user's optional file, from the myfiletypefileLINK

| | variable. This is for backwards compatibility with Vim 5.x only.

| | synload-4LINK

| |

| +- Install one autocommand which sources scripts.vim when no file

| | type was detected yet. synload-5LINK

| |

| +- Source $VIMRUNTIME/menu.vim, to setup the Syntax menu. menu.vim

|

+- Install a FileType autocommand to set the 'syntax' option when a file

| type has been detected. synload-6LINK

|

+- Execute syntax autocommands to start syntax highlighting for each

already loaded buffer.

Upon loading a file, Vim finds the relevant syntax file as follows:

Loading the file triggers the BufReadPost autocommands.

|

+- If there is a match with one of the autocommands from synload-3

| (known file types) or synload-4 (user's file types), the 'filetype'

| option is set to the file type.

|

+- The autocommand at synload-5 is triggered. If the file type was not

| found yet, then scripts.vim is searched for in 'runtimepath'. This

| should always load $VIMRUNTIME/scripts.vim, which does the following.

| |

| +- Source the user's optional file, from the myscriptsfileLINK

| | variable. This is for backwards compatibility with Vim 5.x only.

| |

| +- If the file type is still unknown, check the contents of the file,

| again with checks like "getline(1) =~ pattern" as to whether the

| file type can be recognized, and set 'filetype'.

|

+- When the file type was determined and 'filetype' was set, this

| triggers the FileType autocommand synload-6 above. It sets

| 'syntax' to the determined file type.

|

+- When the 'syntax' option was set above, this triggers an autocommand

| from synload-1 (and synload-2). This find the main syntax file in

| 'runtimepath', with this command:

| runtime! syntax/<name>.vim

|

+- Any other user installed FileType or Syntax autocommands are

triggered. This can be used to change the highlighting for a specific

syntax.

==============================================================================

4. Syntax file remarks :syn-file-remarksLINK

b:current_syntax-variableLINK

Vim stores the name of the syntax that has been loaded in the

"b:current_syntax" variable. You can use this if you want to load other

settings, depending on which syntax is active. Example:

:au BufReadPost * if b:current_syntax == "csh"

:au BufReadPost * do-some-things

:au BufReadPost * endif

2HTML 2html.vim convert-to-HTMLLINK

This is not a syntax file itself, but a script that converts the current

window into HTML. Vim opens a new window in which it builds the HTML file.

After you save the resulting file, you can view it with any browser. The

colors should be exactly the same as you see them in Vim. With

g:html_line_ids you can jump to specific lines by adding (for example) #L123

or #123 to the end of the URL in your browser's address bar. And with

g:html_dynamic_folds enabled, you can show or hide the text that is folded

in Vim.

You are not supposed to set the 'filetype' or 'syntax' option to "2html"!

Source the script to convert the current file:

:runtime! syntax/2html.vim

Many variables affect the output of 2html.vim; see below. Any of the on/off

options listed below can be enabled or disabled by setting them explicitly to

the desired value, or restored to their default by removing the variable using

:unlet.

Remarks:

- Some truly ancient browsers may not show the background colors.

- From most browsers you can also print the file (in color)!

- The latest TOhtml may actually work with older versions of Vim, but some

features such as conceal support will not function, and the colors may be

incorrect for an old Vim without GUI support compiled in.

Here is an example how to run the script over all .c and .h files from a

Unix shell:

for f in *.[ch]; do gvim -f +"syn on" +"run! syntax/2html.vim" +"wq" +"q" $f; done

g:html_start_line g:html_end_lineLINK

To restrict the conversion to a range of lines, use a range with the :TOhtml

command below, or set "g:html_start_line" and "g:html_end_line" to the first

and last line to be converted. Example, using the last set Visual area:

:let g:html_start_line = line("'<")

:let g:html_end_line = line("'>")

:runtime! syntax/2html.vim

:TOhtmlLINK

:[range]TOhtml The ":TOhtml" command is defined in a standard plugin.

This command will source 2html.vim for you. When a

range is given, set g:html_start_line and

g:html_end_line to the start and end of the range,

respectively. Default range is the entire buffer.

If the current window is part of a diff, unless

g:html_diff_one_file is set, :TOhtml will convert

all windows which are part of the diff in the current

tab and place them side-by-side in a <table> element

in the generated HTML. With g:html_line_ids you can

jump to lines in specific windows with (for example)

#W1L42 for line 42 in the first diffed window, or

#W3L87 for line 87 in the third.

Examples:

:10,40TOhtml " convert lines 10-40 to html

:'<,'>TOhtml " convert current/last visual selection

:TOhtml " convert entire buffer

g:html_diff_one_fileLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, and using :TOhtml all windows involved in a diff in the current tab

page are converted to HTML and placed side-by-side in a <table> element. When

1, only the current buffer is converted.

Example:

let g:html_diff_one_file = 1

g:html_whole_fillerLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, if g:html_diff_one_file is 1, a sequence of more than 3 filler lines

is displayed as three lines with the middle line mentioning the total number

of inserted lines.

When 1, always display all inserted lines as if g:html_diff_one_file were

not set.

:let g:html_whole_filler = 1

TOhtml-performance g:html_no_progressLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, display a progress bar in the statusline for each major step in the

2html.vim conversion process.

When 1, do not display the progress bar. This offers a minor speed improvement

but you won't have any idea how much longer the conversion might take; for big

files it can take a long time!

Example:

let g:html_no_progress = 1

You can obtain better performance improvements by also instructing Vim to not

run interactively, so that too much time is not taken to redraw as the script

moves through the buffer, switches windows, and the like:

vim -E -s -c "let g:html_no_progress=1" -c "syntax on" -c "set ft=c" -c "runtime syntax/2html.vim" -cwqa myfile.c

Note that the -s flag prevents loading your .vimrc and any plugins, so you

need to explicitly source/enable anything that will affect the HTML

conversion. See -E and -s-ex for details. It is probably best to create a

script to replace all the -c commands and use it with the -u flag instead of

specifying each command separately.

g:html_number_linesLINK

Default: current 'number' setting.

When 0, buffer text is displayed in the generated HTML without line numbering.

When 1, a column of line numbers is added to the generated HTML with the same

highlighting as the line number column in Vim (hl-LineNr).

Force line numbers even if 'number' is not set:

:let g:html_number_lines = 1

Force to omit the line numbers:

:let g:html_number_lines = 0

Go back to the default to use 'number' by deleting the variable:

:unlet g:html_number_lines

g:html_line_idsLINK

Default: 1 if g:html_number_lines is set, 0 otherwise.

When 1, adds an HTML id attribute to each line number, or to an empty <span>

inserted for that purpose if no line numbers are shown. This ID attribute

takes the form of L123 for single-buffer HTML pages, or W2L123 for diff-view

pages, and is used to jump to a specific line (in a specific window of a diff

view). Javascript is inserted to open any closed dynamic folds

(g:html_dynamic_folds) containing the specified line before jumping. The

javascript also allows omitting the window ID in the url, and the leading L.

For example:

page.html#L123 jumps to line 123 in a single-buffer file

page.html#123 does the same

diff.html#W1L42 jumps to line 42 in the first window in a diff

diff.html#42 does the same

g:html_use_cssLINK

Default: 1.

When 1, generate valid HTML 4.01 markup with CSS1 styling, supported in all

modern browsers and most old browsers.

When 0, generate <font> tags and similar outdated markup. This is not

recommended but it may work better in really old browsers, email clients,

forum posts, and similar situations where basic CSS support is unavailable.

Example:

:let g:html_use_css = 0

g:html_ignore_concealLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, concealed text is removed from the HTML and replaced with a character

from :syn-cchar or 'listchars' as appropriate, depending on the current

value of 'conceallevel'.

When 1, include all text from the buffer in the generated HTML, even if it is

concealed.

Either of the following commands will ensure that all text in the buffer is

included in the generated HTML (unless it is folded):

:let g:html_ignore_conceal = 1

:setl conceallevel=0

g:html_ignore_foldingLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, text in a closed fold is replaced by the text shown for the fold in

Vim (fold-foldtext). See g:html_dynamic_folds if you also want to allow

the user to expand the fold as in Vim to see the text inside.

When 1, include all text from the buffer in the generated HTML; whether the

text is in a fold has no impact at all. g:html_dynamic_folds has no effect.

Either of these commands will ensure that all text in the buffer is included

in the generated HTML (unless it is concealed):

zR

:let g:html_ignore_folding = 1

g:html_dynamic_foldsLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, text in a closed fold is not included at all in the generated HTML.

When 1, generate javascript to open a fold and show the text within, just like

in Vim.

Setting this variable to 1 causes 2html.vim to always use CSS for styling,

regardless of what g:html_use_css is set to.

This variable is ignored when g:html_ignore_folding is set.

:let g:html_dynamic_folds = 1

g:html_no_foldcolumnLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, if g:html_dynamic_folds is 1, generate a column of text similar to

Vim's foldcolumn (fold-foldcolumn) the user can click on to toggle folds

open or closed. The minimum width of the generated text column is the current

'foldcolumn' setting.

When 1, do not generate this column; instead, hovering the mouse cursor over

folded text will open the fold as if g:html_hover_unfold were set.

:let g:html_no_foldcolumn = 1

TOhtml-uncopyable-text g:html_prevent_copyLINK

Default: empty string.

This option prevents certain regions of the generated HTML from being copied,

when you select all text in document rendered in a browser and copy it. Useful

for allowing users to copy-paste only the source text even if a fold column or

line numbers are shown in the generated content. Specify regions to be

affected in this way as follows:

f: fold column

n: line numbers (also within fold text)

t: fold text

d: diff filler

Example, to make the fold column and line numbers uncopyable:

:let g:html_prevent_copy = "fn"

This feature is currently implemented by inserting read-only <input> elements

into the markup to contain the uncopyable areas. This does not work well in

all cases. When pasting to some applications which understand HTML, the

<input> elements also get pasted. But plain-text paste destinations should

always work.

g:html_no_invalidLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, if g:html_prevent_copy is non-empty, an invalid attribute is

intentionally inserted into the <input> element for the uncopyable areas. This

increases the number of applications you can paste to without also pasting the

<input> elements. Specifically, Microsoft Word will not paste the <input>

elements if they contain this invalid attribute.

When 1, no invalid markup is ever intentionally inserted, and the generated

page should validate. However, be careful pasting into Microsoft Word when

g:html_prevent_copy is non-empty; it can be hard to get rid of the <input>

elements which get pasted.

g:html_hover_unfoldLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, the only way to open a fold generated by 2html.vim with

g:html_dynamic_folds set, is to click on the generated fold column.

When 1, use CSS 2.0 to allow the user to open a fold by moving the mouse

cursor over the displayed fold text. This is useful to allow users with

disabled javascript to view the folded text.

Note that old browsers (notably Internet Explorer 6) will not support this

feature. Browser-specific markup for IE6 is included to fall back to the

normal CSS1 styling so that the folds show up correctly for this browser, but

they will not be openable without a foldcolumn.

:let g:html_hover_unfold = 1

g:html_id_exprLINK

Default: ""

Dynamic folding and jumping to line IDs rely on unique IDs within the document

to work. If generated HTML is copied into a larger document, these IDs are no

longer guaranteed to be unique. Set g:html_id_expr to an expression Vim can

evaluate to get a unique string to append to each ID used in a given document,

so that the full IDs will be unique even when combined with other content in a

larger HTML document. Example, to append _ and the buffer number to each ID:

:let g:html_id_expr = '"_".bufnr("%")'

To append a string "_mystring" to the end of each ID:

:let g:html_id_expr = '"_mystring"'

Note, when converting a diff view to HTML, the expression will only be

evaluated for the first window in the diff, and the result used for all the

windows.

TOhtml-wrap-text g:html_pre_wrapLINK

Default: current 'wrap' setting.

When 0, if g:html_no_pre is 0 or unset, the text in the generated HTML does

not wrap at the edge of the browser window.

When 1, if g:html_use_css is 1, the CSS 2.0 "white-space:pre-wrap" value is

used, causing the text to wrap at whitespace at the edge of the browser

window.

Explicitly enable text wrapping:

:let g:html_pre_wrap = 1

Explicitly disable wrapping:

:let g:html_pre_wrap = 0

Go back to default, determine wrapping from 'wrap' setting:

:unlet g:html_pre_wrap

g:html_no_preLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, buffer text in the generated HTML is surrounded by <pre>...</pre>

tags. Series of whitespace is shown as in Vim without special markup, and tab

characters can be included literally (see g:html_expand_tabs).

When 1 (not recommended), the <pre> tags are omitted, and a plain <div> is

used instead. Whitespace is replaced by a series of &nbsp; character

references, and <br> is used to end each line. This is another way to allow

text in the generated HTML is wrap (see g:html_pre_wrap) which also works in

old browsers, but may cause noticeable differences between Vim's display and

the rendered page generated by 2html.vim.

:let g:html_no_pre = 1

g:html_expand_tabsLINK

Default: 1 if 'tabstop' is 8, 'expandtab' is 0, and no fold column or line

numbers occur in the generated HTML;

0 otherwise.

When 0, <Tab> characters in the buffer text are replaced with an appropriate

number of space characters, or &nbsp; references if g:html_no_pre is 1.

When 1, if g:html_no_pre is 0 or unset, <Tab> characters in the buffer text

are included as-is in the generated HTML. This is useful for when you want to

allow copy and paste from a browser without losing the actual whitespace in

the source document. Note that this can easily break text alignment and

indentation in the HTML, unless set by default.

Force 2html.vim to keep <Tab> characters:

:let g:html_expand_tabs = 0

Force tabs to be expanded:

:let g:html_expand_tabs = 1

TOhtml-encoding-detect TOhtml-encodingLINK

It is highly recommended to set your desired encoding with

g:html_use_encoding for any content which will be placed on a web server.

If you do not specify an encoding, 2html.vim uses the preferred IANA name

for the current value of 'fileencoding' if set, or 'encoding' if not.

'encoding' is always used for certain 'buftype' values. 'fileencoding' will be

set to match the chosen document encoding.

Automatic detection works for the encodings mentioned specifically by name in

encoding-names, but TOhtml will only automatically use those encodings with

wide browser support. However, you can override this to support specific

encodings that may not be automatically detected by default (see options

below). See http://www.iana.org/assignments/character-sets for the IANA names.

Note, by default all Unicode encodings are converted to UTF-8 with no BOM in

the generated HTML, as recommended by W3C:

http://www.w3.org/International/questions/qa-choosing-encodings

http://www.w3.org/International/questions/qa-byte-order-mark

g:html_use_encodingLINK

Default: none, uses IANA name for current 'fileencoding' as above.

To overrule all automatic charset detection, set g:html_use_encoding to the

name of the charset to be used. It is recommended to set this variable to

something widely supported, like UTF-8, for anything you will be hosting on a

webserver:

:let g:html_use_encoding = "UTF-8"

You can also use this option to omit the line that specifies the charset

entirely, by setting g:html_use_encoding to an empty string (NOT recommended):

:let g:html_use_encoding = ""

To go back to the automatic mechanism, delete the g:html_use_encoding

variable:

:unlet g:html_use_encoding

g:html_encoding_overrideLINK

Default: none, autoload/tohtml.vim contains default conversions for encodings

mentioned by name at encoding-names.

This option allows 2html.vim to detect the correct 'fileencoding' when you

specify an encoding with g:html_use_encoding which is not in the default

list of conversions.

This is a dictionary of charset-encoding pairs that will replace existing

pairs automatically detected by TOhtml, or supplement with new pairs.

Detect the HTML charset "windows-1252" as the encoding "8bit-cp1252":

:let g:html_encoding_override = {'windows-1252': '8bit-cp1252'}

g:html_charset_overrideLINK

Default: none, autoload/tohtml.vim contains default conversions for encodings

mentioned by name at encoding-names and which have wide

browser support.

This option allows 2html.vim to detect the HTML charset for any

'fileencoding' or 'encoding' which is not detected automatically. You can also

use it to override specific existing encoding-charset pairs. For example,

TOhtml will by default use UTF-8 for all Unicode/UCS encodings. To use UTF-16

and UTF-32 instead, use:

:let g:html_charset_override = {'ucs-4': 'UTF-32', 'utf-16': 'UTF-16'}

Note that documents encoded in either UTF-32 or UTF-16 have known

compatibility problems with some major browsers.

convert-to-XML convert-to-XHTML g:html_use_xhtmlLINK

Default: 0.

When 0, generate standard HTML 4.01 (strict when possible).

When 1, generate XHTML 1.0 instead (XML compliant HTML).

:let g:html_use_xhtml = 1

ABEL abel.vim ft-abel-syntaxLINK

ABEL highlighting provides some user-defined options. To enable them, assign

any value to the respective variable. Example:

:let abel_obsolete_ok=1

To disable them use ":unlet". Example:

:unlet abel_obsolete_ok

Variable Highlight

abel_obsolete_ok obsolete keywords are statements, not errors

abel_cpp_comments_illegal do not interpret '//' as inline comment leader

ADA

See ft-ada-syntax

ANT ant.vim ft-ant-syntaxLINK

The ant syntax file provides syntax highlighting for javascript and python

by default. Syntax highlighting for other script languages can be installed

by the function AntSyntaxScript(), which takes the tag name as first argument

and the script syntax file name as second argument. Example:

:call AntSyntaxScript('perl', 'perl.vim')

will install syntax perl highlighting for the following ant code

<script language = 'perl'><![CDATA[

# everything inside is highlighted as perl

]]></script>

See mysyntaxfile-add for installing script languages permanently.

APACHE apache.vim ft-apache-syntaxLINK

The apache syntax file provides syntax highlighting depending on Apache HTTP

server version, by default for 1.3.x. Set "apache_version" to Apache version

(as a string) to get highlighting for another version. Example:

:let apache_version = "2.0"

asm.vim asmh8300.vim nasm.vim masm.vim asm68kLINK

ASSEMBLY ft-asm-syntax ft-asmh8300-syntax ft-nasm-syntaxLINK

ft-masm-syntax ft-asm68k-syntax fasm.vimLINK

Files matching "*.i" could be Progress or Assembly. If the automatic detection

doesn't work for you, or you don't edit Progress at all, use this in your

startup vimrc:

:let filetype_i = "asm"

Replace "asm" with the type of assembly you use.

There are many types of assembly languages that all use the same file name

extensions. Therefore you will have to select the type yourself, or add a

line in the assembly file that Vim will recognize. Currently these syntax

files are included:

asm GNU assembly (the default)

asm68k Motorola 680x0 assembly

asmh8300 Hitachi H-8300 version of GNU assembly

ia64 Intel Itanium 64

fasm Flat assembly (http://flatassembler.net)

masm Microsoft assembly (probably works for any 80x86)

nasm Netwide assembly

tasm Turbo Assembly (with opcodes 80x86 up to Pentium, and

MMX)

pic PIC assembly (currently for PIC16F84)

The most flexible is to add a line in your assembly file containing:

asmsyntax=nasm

Replace "nasm" with the name of the real assembly syntax. This line must be

one of the first five lines in the file. No non-white text must be

immediately before or after this text. Note that specifying asmsyntax=foo is

equivalent to setting ft=foo in a modeline, and that in case of a conflict

between the two settings the one from the modeline will take precedence (in

particular, if you have ft=asm in the modeline, you will get the GNU syntax

highlighting regardless of what is specified as asmsyntax).

The syntax type can always be overruled for a specific buffer by setting the

b:asmsyntax variable:

:let b:asmsyntax = "nasm"

If b:asmsyntax is not set, either automatically or by hand, then the value of

the global variable asmsyntax is used. This can be seen as a default assembly

language:

:let asmsyntax = "nasm"

As a last resort, if nothing is defined, the "asm" syntax is used.

Netwide assembler (nasm.vim) optional highlighting

To enable a feature:

:let {variable}=1|set syntax=nasm

To disable a feature:

:unlet {variable} |set syntax=nasm

Variable Highlight

nasm_loose_syntax unofficial parser allowed syntax not as Error

(parser dependent; not recommended)

nasm_ctx_outside_macro contexts outside macro not as Error

nasm_no_warn potentially risky syntax not as ToDo

ASPPERL and ASPVBS ft-aspperl-syntax ft-aspvbs-syntaxLINK

*.asp and *.asa files could be either Perl or Visual Basic script. Since it's

hard to detect this you can set two global variables to tell Vim what you are

using. For Perl script use:

:let g:filetype_asa = "aspperl"

:let g:filetype_asp = "aspperl"

For Visual Basic use:

:let g:filetype_asa = "aspvbs"

:let g:filetype_asp = "aspvbs"

BAAN baan.vim baan-syntaxLINK

The baan.vim gives syntax support for BaanC of release BaanIV upto SSA ERP LN

for both 3 GL and 4 GL programming. Large number of standard defines/constants

are supported.

Some special violation of coding standards will be signalled when one specify

in ones .vimrc:

let baan_code_stds=1

baan-foldingLINK

Syntax folding can be enabled at various levels through the variables

mentioned below (Set those in your .vimrc). The more complex folding on

source blocks and SQL can be CPU intensive.

To allow any folding and enable folding at function level use:

let baan_fold=1

Folding can be enabled at source block level as if, while, for ,... The

indentation preceding the begin/end keywords has to match (spaces are not

considered equal to a tab).

let baan_fold_block=1

Folding can be enabled for embedded SQL blocks as SELECT, SELECTDO,

SELECTEMPTY, ... The indentation preceding the begin/end keywords has to

match (spaces are not considered equal to a tab).

let baan_fold_sql=1

Note: Block folding can result in many small folds. It is suggested to :set

the options 'foldminlines' and 'foldnestmax' in .vimrc or use :setlocal in

.../after/syntax/baan.vim (see after-directory). Eg:

set foldminlines=5

set foldnestmax=6

BASIC basic.vim vb.vim ft-basic-syntax ft-vb-syntaxLINK

Both Visual Basic and "normal" basic use the extension ".bas". To detect

which one should be used, Vim checks for the string "VB_Name" in the first

five lines of the file. If it is not found, filetype will be "basic",

otherwise "vb". Files with the ".frm" extension will always be seen as Visual

Basic.

C c.vim ft-c-syntaxLINK

A few things in C highlighting are optional. To enable them assign any value

to the respective variable. Example:

:let c_comment_strings = 1

To disable them use ":unlet". Example:

:unlet c_comment_strings

Variable Highlight

c_gnu GNU gcc specific items

c_comment_strings strings and numbers inside a comment

c_space_errors trailing white space and spaces before a <Tab>

c_no_trail_space_error ... but no trailing spaces

c_no_tab_space_error ... but no spaces before a <Tab>

c_no_bracket_error don't highlight {}; inside [] as errors

c_no_curly_error don't highlight {}; inside [] and () as errors;

except { and } in first column

c_curly_error highlight a missing }; this forces syncing from the

start of the file, can be slow

c_no_ansi don't do standard ANSI types and constants

c_ansi_typedefs ... but do standard ANSI types

c_ansi_constants ... but do standard ANSI constants

c_no_utf don't highlight \u and \U in strings

c_syntax_for_h for *.h files use C syntax instead of C++ and use objc

syntax instead of objcpp

c_no_if0 don't highlight "#if 0" blocks as comments

c_no_cformat don't highlight %-formats in strings

c_no_c99 don't highlight C99 standard items

c_no_c11 don't highlight C11 standard items

When 'foldmethod' is set to "syntax" then /* */ comments and { } blocks will

become a fold. If you don't want comments to become a fold use:

:let c_no_comment_fold = 1

"#if 0" blocks are also folded, unless:

:let c_no_if0_fold = 1

If you notice highlighting errors while scrolling backwards, which are fixed

when redrawing with CTRL-L, try setting the "c_minlines" internal variable

to a larger number:

:let c_minlines = 100

This will make the syntax synchronization start 100 lines before the first

displayed line. The default value is 50 (15 when c_no_if0 is set). The

disadvantage of using a larger number is that redrawing can become slow.

When using the "#if 0" / "#endif" comment highlighting, notice that this only

works when the "#if 0" is within "c_minlines" from the top of the window. If

you have a long "#if 0" construct it will not be highlighted correctly.

To match extra items in comments, use the cCommentGroup cluster.

Example:

:au Syntax c call MyCadd()

:function MyCadd()

: syn keyword cMyItem contained Ni

: syn cluster cCommentGroup add=cMyItem

: hi link cMyItem Title

:endfun

ANSI constants will be highlighted with the "cConstant" group. This includes

"NULL", "SIG_IGN" and others. But not "TRUE", for example, because this is

not in the ANSI standard. If you find this confusing, remove the cConstant

highlighting:

:hi link cConstant NONE

If you see '{' and '}' highlighted as an error where they are OK, reset the

highlighting for cErrInParen and cErrInBracket.

If you want to use folding in your C files, you can add these lines in a file

in the "after" directory in 'runtimepath'. For Unix this would be

~/.vim/after/syntax/c.vim.

syn sync fromstart

set foldmethod=syntax

CH ch.vim ft-ch-syntaxLINK

C/C++ interpreter. Ch has similar syntax highlighting to C and builds upon

the C syntax file. See c.vim for all the settings that are available for C.

By setting a variable you can tell Vim to use Ch syntax for *.h files, instead

of C or C++:

:let ch_syntax_for_h = 1

CHILL chill.vim ft-chill-syntaxLINK

Chill syntax highlighting is similar to C. See c.vim for all the settings

that are available. Additionally there is:

chill_space_errors like c_space_errors

chill_comment_string like c_comment_strings

chill_minlines like c_minlines

CHANGELOG changelog.vim ft-changelog-syntaxLINK

ChangeLog supports highlighting spaces at the start of a line.

If you do not like this, add following line to your .vimrc:

let g:changelog_spacing_errors = 0

This works the next time you edit a changelog file. You can also use

"b:changelog_spacing_errors" to set this per buffer (before loading the syntax

file).

You can change the highlighting used, e.g., to flag the spaces as an error:

:hi link ChangelogError Error

Or to avoid the highlighting:

:hi link ChangelogError NONE

This works immediately.

CLOJURE ft-clojure-syntaxLINK

Setting g:clojure_fold enables folding Clojure code via the syntax engine.LINK

Any list, vector, or map that extends over more than one line can be folded

using the standard Vim fold-commands.

Please note that this option does not work with scripts that redefine the

bracket syntax regions, such as rainbow-parentheses plugins.

This option is off by default.

" Default

let g:clojure_fold = 0

COBOL cobol.vim ft-cobol-syntaxLINK

COBOL highlighting has different needs for legacy code than it does for fresh

development. This is due to differences in what is being done (maintenance

versus development) and other factors. To enable legacy code highlighting,

add this line to your .vimrc:

:let cobol_legacy_code = 1

To disable it again, use this:

:unlet cobol_legacy_code

COLD FUSION coldfusion.vim ft-coldfusion-syntaxLINK

The ColdFusion has its own version of HTML comments. To turn on ColdFusion

comment highlighting, add the following line to your startup file:

:let html_wrong_comments = 1

The ColdFusion syntax file is based on the HTML syntax file.

CPP cpp.vim ft-cpp-syntaxLINK

Most of things are same as ft-c-syntax.

Variable Highlight

cpp_no_c11 don't highlight C++11 standard items

CSH csh.vim ft-csh-syntaxLINK

This covers the shell named "csh". Note that on some systems tcsh is actually

used.

Detecting whether a file is csh or tcsh is notoriously hard. Some systems

symlink /bin/csh to /bin/tcsh, making it almost impossible to distinguish

between csh and tcsh. In case VIM guesses wrong you can set the

"filetype_csh" variable. For using csh: g:filetype_cshLINK

:let g:filetype_csh = "csh"

For using tcsh:

:let g:filetype_csh = "tcsh"

Any script with a tcsh extension or a standard tcsh filename (.tcshrc,

tcsh.tcshrc, tcsh.login) will have filetype tcsh. All other tcsh/csh scripts

will be classified as tcsh, UNLESS the "filetype_csh" variable exists. If the

"filetype_csh" variable exists, the filetype will be set to the value of the

variable.

CYNLIB cynlib.vim ft-cynlib-syntaxLINK

Cynlib files are C++ files that use the Cynlib class library to enable

hardware modelling and simulation using C++. Typically Cynlib files have a .cc

or a .cpp extension, which makes it very difficult to distinguish them from a

normal C++ file. Thus, to enable Cynlib highlighting for .cc files, add this

line to your .vimrc file:

:let cynlib_cyntax_for_cc=1

Similarly for cpp files (this extension is only usually used in Windows)

:let cynlib_cyntax_for_cpp=1

To disable these again, use this:

:unlet cynlib_cyntax_for_cc

:unlet cynlib_cyntax_for_cpp

CWEB cweb.vim ft-cweb-syntaxLINK

Files matching "*.w" could be Progress or cweb. If the automatic detection

doesn't work for you, or you don't edit Progress at all, use this in your

startup vimrc:

:let filetype_w = "cweb"

DESKTOP desktop.vim ft-desktop-syntaxLINK

Primary goal of this syntax file is to highlight .desktop and .directory files

according to freedesktop.org standard:

http://standards.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/latest/

But actually almost none implements this standard fully. Thus it will

highlight all Unix ini files. But you can force strict highlighting according

to standard by placing this in your vimrc file:

:let enforce_freedesktop_standard = 1

DIRCOLORS dircolors.vim ft-dircolors-syntaxLINK

The dircolors utility highlighting definition has one option. It exists to

provide compatibility with the Slackware GNU/Linux distributions version of

the command. It adds a few keywords that are generally ignored by most

versions. On Slackware systems, however, the utility accepts the keywords and

uses them for processing. To enable the Slackware keywords add the following

line to your startup file:

let dircolors_is_slackware = 1

DOCBOOK docbk.vim ft-docbk-syntax docbookLINK

DOCBOOK XML docbkxml.vim ft-docbkxml-syntaxLINK

DOCBOOK SGML docbksgml.vim ft-docbksgml-syntaxLINK

There are two types of DocBook files: SGML and XML. To specify what type you

are using the "b:docbk_type" variable should be set. Vim does this for you

automatically if it can recognize the type. When Vim can't guess it the type

defaults to XML.

You can set the type manually:

:let docbk_type = "sgml"

or:

:let docbk_type = "xml"

You need to do this before loading the syntax file, which is complicated.

Simpler is setting the filetype to "docbkxml" or "docbksgml":

:set filetype=docbksgml

or:

:set filetype=docbkxml

You can specify the DocBook version:

:let docbk_ver = 3

When not set 4 is used.

DOSBATCH dosbatch.vim ft-dosbatch-syntaxLINK

There is one option with highlighting DOS batch files. This covers new

extensions to the Command Interpreter introduced with Windows 2000 and

is controlled by the variable dosbatch_cmdextversion. For Windows NT

this should have the value 1, and for Windows 2000 it should be 2.

Select the version you want with the following line:

:let dosbatch_cmdextversion = 1

If this variable is not defined it defaults to a value of 2 to support

Windows 2000.

A second option covers whether *.btm files should be detected as type

"dosbatch" (MS-DOS batch files) or type "btm" (4DOS batch files). The latter

is used by default. You may select the former with the following line:

:let g:dosbatch_syntax_for_btm = 1

If this variable is undefined or zero, btm syntax is selected.

DOXYGEN doxygen.vim doxygen-syntaxLINK

Doxygen generates code documentation using a special documentation format

(similar to Javadoc). This syntax script adds doxygen highlighting to c, cpp,

idl and php files, and should also work with java.

There are a few of ways to turn on doxygen formatting. It can be done

explicitly or in a modeline by appending '.doxygen' to the syntax of the file.

Example:

:set syntax=c.doxygen

or

// vim:syntax=c.doxygen

It can also be done automatically for C, C++, C#, IDL and PHP files by setting

the global or buffer-local variable load_doxygen_syntax. This is done by

adding the following to your .vimrc.

:let g:load_doxygen_syntax=1

There are a couple of variables that have an effect on syntax highlighting, and

are to do with non-standard highlighting options.

Variable Default Effect

g:doxygen_enhanced_color

g:doxygen_enhanced_colour 0 Use non-standard highlighting for

doxygen comments.

doxygen_my_rendering 0 Disable rendering of HTML bold, italic

and html_my_rendering underline.

doxygen_javadoc_autobrief 1 Set to 0 to disable javadoc autobrief

colour highlighting.

doxygen_end_punctuation '[.]' Set to regexp match for the ending

punctuation of brief

There are also some hilight groups worth mentioning as they can be useful in

configuration.

Highlight Effect

doxygenErrorComment The colour of an end-comment when missing

punctuation in a code, verbatim or dot section

doxygenLinkError The colour of an end-comment when missing the

\endlink from a \link section.

DTD dtd.vim ft-dtd-syntaxLINK

The DTD syntax highlighting is case sensitive by default. To disable

case-sensitive highlighting, add the following line to your startup file:

:let dtd_ignore_case=1

The DTD syntax file will highlight unknown tags as errors. If

this is annoying, it can be turned off by setting:

:let dtd_no_tag_errors=1

before sourcing the dtd.vim syntax file.

Parameter entity names are highlighted in the definition using the

'Type' highlighting group and 'Comment' for punctuation and '%'.

Parameter entity instances are highlighted using the 'Constant'

highlighting group and the 'Type' highlighting group for the

delimiters % and ;. This can be turned off by setting:

:let dtd_no_param_entities=1

The DTD syntax file is also included by xml.vim to highlight included dtd's.

EIFFEL eiffel.vim ft-eiffel-syntaxLINK

While Eiffel is not case-sensitive, its style guidelines are, and the

syntax highlighting file encourages their use. This also allows to

highlight class names differently. If you want to disable case-sensitive

highlighting, add the following line to your startup file:

:let eiffel_ignore_case=1

Case still matters for class names and TODO marks in comments.

Conversely, for even stricter checks, add one of the following lines:

:let eiffel_strict=1

:let eiffel_pedantic=1

Setting eiffel_strict will only catch improper capitalization for the

five predefined words "Current", "Void", "Result", "Precursor", and

"NONE", to warn against their accidental use as feature or class names.

Setting eiffel_pedantic will enforce adherence to the Eiffel style

guidelines fairly rigorously (like arbitrary mixes of upper- and

lowercase letters as well as outdated ways to capitalize keywords).

If you want to use the lower-case version of "Current", "Void",

"Result", and "Precursor", you can use

:let eiffel_lower_case_predef=1

instead of completely turning case-sensitive highlighting off.

Support for ISE's proposed new creation syntax that is already

experimentally handled by some compilers can be enabled by:

:let eiffel_ise=1

Finally, some vendors support hexadecimal constants. To handle them, add

:let eiffel_hex_constants=1

to your startup file.

EUPHORIA euphoria3.vim euphoria4.vim ft-euphoria-syntaxLINK

Two syntax highlighting files exists for Euphoria. One for Euphoria

version 3.1.1, which is the default syntax highlighting file, and one for

Euphoria version 4.0.5 or later.

Euphoria version 3.1.1 (http://www.rapideuphoria.com/) is still necessary

for developing applications for the DOS platform, which Euphoria version 4

(http://www.openeuphoria.org/) does not support.

The following file extensions are auto-detected as Euphoria file type:

*.e, *.eu, *.ew, *.ex, *.exu, *.exw

*.E, *.EU, *.EW, *.EX, *.EXU, *.EXW

To select syntax highlighting file for Euphoria, as well as for

auto-detecting the *.e and *.E file extensions as Euphoria file type,

add the following line to your startup file:

:let filetype_euphoria="euphoria3"

or

:let filetype_euphoria="euphoria4"

ERLANG erlang.vim ft-erlang-syntaxLINK

Erlang is a functional programming language developed by Ericsson. Files with

the following extensions are recognized as Erlang files: erl, hrl, yaws.

The BIFs (built-in functions) are highlighted by default. To disable this,

put the following line in your vimrc:

:let g:erlang_highlight_bifs = 0

To enable highlighting some special atoms, put this in your vimrc:

:let g:erlang_highlight_special_atoms = 1

FLEXWIKI flexwiki.vim ft-flexwiki-syntaxLINK

FlexWiki is an ASP.NET-based wiki package available at http://www.flexwiki.com

NOTE: this site currently doesn't work, on Wikipedia is mentioned that

development stopped in 2009.

Syntax highlighting is available for the most common elements of FlexWiki

syntax. The associated ftplugin script sets some buffer-local options to make

editing FlexWiki pages more convenient. FlexWiki considers a newline as the

start of a new paragraph, so the ftplugin sets 'tw'=0 (unlimited line length),

'wrap' (wrap long lines instead of using horizontal scrolling), 'linebreak'

(to wrap at a character in 'breakat' instead of at the last char on screen),

and so on. It also includes some keymaps that are disabled by default.

If you want to enable the keymaps that make "j" and "k" and the cursor keys

move up and down by display lines, add this to your .vimrc:

:let flexwiki_maps = 1

FORM form.vim ft-form-syntaxLINK

The coloring scheme for syntax elements in the FORM file uses the default

modes Conditional, Number, Statement, Comment, PreProc, Type, and String,

following the language specifications in 'Symbolic Manipulation with FORM' by

J.A.M. Vermaseren, CAN, Netherlands, 1991.

If you want include your own changes to the default colors, you have to

redefine the following syntax groups:

- formConditional

- formNumber

- formStatement

- formHeaderStatement

- formComment

- formPreProc

- formDirective

- formType

- formString

Note that the form.vim syntax file implements FORM preprocessor commands and

directives per default in the same syntax group.

A predefined enhanced color mode for FORM is available to distinguish between

header statements and statements in the body of a FORM program. To activate

this mode define the following variable in your vimrc file

:let form_enhanced_color=1

The enhanced mode also takes advantage of additional color features for a dark

gvim display. Here, statements are colored LightYellow instead of Yellow, and

conditionals are LightBlue for better distinction.

FORTRAN fortran.vim ft-fortran-syntaxLINK

Default highlighting and dialect

Highlighting appropriate for Fortran 2008 is used by default. This choice

should be appropriate for most users most of the time because Fortran 2008 is

almost a superset of previous versions (Fortran 2003, 95, 90, and 77).

Fortran source code form

Fortran code can be in either fixed or free source form. Note that the

syntax highlighting will not be correct if the form is incorrectly set.

When you create a new fortran file, the syntax script assumes fixed source

form. If you always use free source form, then

:let fortran_free_source=1

in your .vimrc prior to the :syntax on command. If you always use fixed source

form, then

:let fortran_fixed_source=1

in your .vimrc prior to the :syntax on command.

If the form of the source code depends upon the file extension, then it is

most convenient to set fortran_free_source in a ftplugin file. For more

information on ftplugin files, see ftplugin. For example, if all your

fortran files with an .f90 extension are written in free source form and the

rest in fixed source form, add the following code to your ftplugin file

let s:extfname = expand("%:e")

if s:extfname ==? "f90"

let fortran_free_source=1

unlet! fortran_fixed_source

else

let fortran_fixed_source=1

unlet! fortran_free_source

endif

Note that this will work only if the "filetype plugin indent on" command

precedes the "syntax on" command in your .vimrc file.

When you edit an existing fortran file, the syntax script will assume free

source form if the fortran_free_source variable has been set, and assumes

fixed source form if the fortran_fixed_source variable has been set. If

neither of these variables have been set, the syntax script attempts to

determine which source form has been used by examining the first five columns

of the first 250 lines of your file. If no signs of free source form are

detected, then the file is assumed to be in fixed source form. The algorithm

should work in the vast majority of cases. In some cases, such as a file that

begins with 250 or more full-line comments, the script may incorrectly decide

that the fortran code is in fixed form. If that happens, just add a

non-comment statement beginning anywhere in the first five columns of the

first twenty five lines, save (:w) and then reload (:e!) the file.

Tabs in fortran files

Tabs are not recognized by the Fortran standards. Tabs are not a good idea in

fixed format fortran source code which requires fixed column boundaries.

Therefore, tabs are marked as errors. Nevertheless, some programmers like

using tabs. If your fortran files contain tabs, then you should set the

variable fortran_have_tabs in your .vimrc with a command such as

:let fortran_have_tabs=1

placed prior to the :syntax on command. Unfortunately, the use of tabs will

mean that the syntax file will not be able to detect incorrect margins.

Syntax folding of fortran files

If you wish to use foldmethod=syntax, then you must first set the variable

fortran_fold with a command such as

:let fortran_fold=1

to instruct the syntax script to define fold regions for program units, that

is main programs starting with a program statement, subroutines, function

subprograms, block data subprograms, interface blocks, and modules. If you

also set the variable fortran_fold_conditionals with a command such as

:let fortran_fold_conditionals=1

then fold regions will also be defined for do loops, if blocks, and select

case constructs. If you also set the variable

fortran_fold_multilinecomments with a command such as

:let fortran_fold_multilinecomments=1

then fold regions will also be defined for three or more consecutive comment

lines. Note that defining fold regions can be slow for large files.

If fortran_fold, and possibly fortran_fold_conditionals and/or

fortran_fold_multilinecomments, have been set, then vim will fold your file if

you set foldmethod=syntax. Comments or blank lines placed between two program

units are not folded because they are seen as not belonging to any program

unit.

More precise fortran syntax

If you set the variable fortran_more_precise with a command such as

:let fortran_more_precise=1

then the syntax coloring will be more precise but slower. In particular,

statement labels used in do, goto and arithmetic if statements will be

recognized, as will construct names at the end of a do, if, select or forall

construct.

Non-default fortran dialects

The syntax script supports two Fortran dialects: f08 and F. You will probably

find the default highlighting (f08) satisfactory. A few legacy constructs

deleted or declared obsolescent in the 2008 standard are highlighted as todo

items.

If you use F, the advantage of setting the dialect appropriately is that

other legacy features excluded from F will be highlighted as todo items and

that free source form will be assumed.

The dialect can be selected in various ways. If all your fortran files use

the same dialect, set the global variable fortran_dialect in your .vimrc prior

to your syntax on statement. The case-sensitive, permissible values of

fortran_dialect are "f08" or "F". Invalid values of fortran_dialect are

ignored.

If the dialect depends upon the file extension, then it is most convenient to

set a buffer-local variable in a ftplugin file. For more information on

ftplugin files, see ftplugin. For example, if all your fortran files with

an .f90 extension are written in the F subset, your ftplugin file should

contain the code

let s:extfname = expand("%:e")

if s:extfname ==? "f90"

let b:fortran_dialect="F"

else

unlet! b:fortran_dialect

endif

Note that this will work only if the "filetype plugin indent on" command

precedes the "syntax on" command in your .vimrc file.

Finer control is necessary if the file extension does not uniquely identify

the dialect. You can override the default dialect, on a file-by-file basis,

by including a comment with the directive "fortran_dialect=xx" (where xx=F or

f08) in one of the first three lines in your file. For example, your older .f

files may be legacy code but your newer ones may be F codes, and you would

identify the latter by including in the first three lines of those files a

Fortran comment of the form

! fortran_dialect=F

For previous versions of the syntax, you may have set fortran_dialect to the

now-obsolete values "f77", "f90", "f95", or "elf". Such settings will be

silently handled as "f08". Users of "elf" may wish to experiment with "F"

instead.

The syntax/fortran.vim script contains embedded comments that tell you how to

comment and/or uncomment some lines to (a) activate recognition of some

non-standard, vendor-supplied intrinsics and (b) to prevent features deleted

or declared obsolescent in the 2008 standard from being highlighted as todo

items.

Limitations

Parenthesis checking does not catch too few closing parentheses. Hollerith

strings are not recognized. Some keywords may be highlighted incorrectly

because Fortran90 has no reserved words.

For further information related to fortran, see ft-fortran-indent and

ft-fortran-plugin.

FVWM CONFIGURATION FILES fvwm.vim ft-fvwm-syntaxLINK

In order for Vim to recognize Fvwm configuration files that do not match

the patterns fvwmrc or fvwm2rc , you must put additional patternsLINK

appropriate to your system in your myfiletypes.vim file. For these

patterns, you must set the variable "b:fvwm_version" to the major version

number of Fvwm, and the 'filetype' option to fvwm.

For example, to make Vim identify all files in /etc/X11/fvwm2/

as Fvwm2 configuration files, add the following:

:au! BufNewFile,BufRead /etc/X11/fvwm2/* let b:fvwm_version = 2 |

\ set filetype=fvwm

If you'd like Vim to highlight all valid color names, tell it where to

find the color database (rgb.txt) on your system. Do this by setting

"rgb_file" to its location. Assuming your color database is located

in /usr/X11/lib/X11/, you should add the line

:let rgb_file = "/usr/X11/lib/X11/rgb.txt"

to your .vimrc file.

GSP gsp.vim ft-gsp-syntaxLINK

The default coloring style for GSP pages is defined by html.vim, and

the coloring for java code (within java tags or inline between backticks)

is defined by java.vim. The following HTML groups defined in html.vim

are redefined to incorporate and highlight inline java code:

htmlString

htmlValue

htmlEndTag

htmlTag

htmlTagN

Highlighting should look fine most of the places where you'd see inline

java code, but in some special cases it may not. To add another HTML

group where you will have inline java code where it does not highlight

correctly, just copy the line you want from html.vim and add gspJava

to the contains clause.

The backticks for inline java are highlighted according to the htmlError

group to make them easier to see.

GROFF groff.vim ft-groff-syntaxLINK

The groff syntax file is a wrapper for nroff.vim, see the notes

under that heading for examples of use and configuration. The purpose

of this wrapper is to set up groff syntax extensions by setting the

filetype from a modeline or in a personal filetype definitions file

(see filetype.txt).

HASKELL haskell.vim lhaskell.vim ft-haskell-syntaxLINK

The Haskell syntax files support plain Haskell code as well as literate

Haskell code, the latter in both Bird style and TeX style. The Haskell

syntax highlighting will also highlight C preprocessor directives.

If you want to highlight delimiter characters (useful if you have a

light-coloured background), add to your .vimrc:

:let hs_highlight_delimiters = 1

To treat True and False as keywords as opposed to ordinary identifiers,

add:

:let hs_highlight_boolean = 1

To also treat the names of primitive types as keywords:

:let hs_highlight_types = 1

And to treat the names of even more relatively common types as keywords:

:let hs_highlight_more_types = 1

If you want to highlight the names of debugging functions, put in

your .vimrc:

:let hs_highlight_debug = 1

The Haskell syntax highlighting also highlights C preprocessor

directives, and flags lines that start with # but are not valid

directives as erroneous. This interferes with Haskell's syntax for

operators, as they may start with #. If you want to highlight those

as operators as opposed to errors, put in your .vimrc:

:let hs_allow_hash_operator = 1

The syntax highlighting for literate Haskell code will try to

automatically guess whether your literate Haskell code contains

TeX markup or not, and correspondingly highlight TeX constructs

or nothing at all. You can override this globally by putting

in your .vimrc

:let lhs_markup = none

for no highlighting at all, or

:let lhs_markup = tex

to force the highlighting to always try to highlight TeX markup.

For more flexibility, you may also use buffer local versions of

this variable, so e.g.

:let b:lhs_markup = tex

will force TeX highlighting for a particular buffer. It has to be

set before turning syntax highlighting on for the buffer or

loading a file.

HTML html.vim ft-html-syntaxLINK

The coloring scheme for tags in the HTML file works as follows.

The <> of opening tags are colored differently than the </> of a closing tag.

This is on purpose! For opening tags the 'Function' color is used, while for

closing tags the 'Type' color is used (See syntax.vim to check how those are

defined for you)

Known tag names are colored the same way as statements in C. Unknown tag

names are colored with the same color as the <> or </> respectively which

makes it easy to spot errors

Note that the same is true for argument (or attribute) names. Known attribute

names are colored differently than unknown ones.

Some HTML tags are used to change the rendering of text. The following tags

are recognized by the html.vim syntax coloring file and change the way normal

text is shown: <B> <I> <U> <EM> <STRONG> (<EM> is used as an alias for <I>,

while <STRONG> as an alias for <B>), <H1> - <H6>, <HEAD>, <TITLE> and <A>, but

only if used as a link (that is, it must include a href as in

<A href="somefile.html">).

If you want to change how such text is rendered, you must redefine the

following syntax groups:

- htmlBold

- htmlBoldUnderline

- htmlBoldUnderlineItalic

- htmlUnderline

- htmlUnderlineItalic

- htmlItalic

- htmlTitle for titles

- htmlH1 - htmlH6 for headings

To make this redefinition work you must redefine them all with the exception

of the last two (htmlTitle and htmlH[1-6], which are optional) and define the

following variable in your vimrc (this is due to the order in which the files

are read during initialization)

:let html_my_rendering=1

If you'd like to see an example download mysyntax.vim at

http://www.fleiner.com/vim/download.html

You can also disable this rendering by adding the following line to your

vimrc file:

:let html_no_rendering=1

HTML comments are rather special (see an HTML reference document for the

details), and the syntax coloring scheme will highlight all errors.

However, if you prefer to use the wrong style (starts with <!-- and

ends with -->) you can define

:let html_wrong_comments=1

JavaScript and Visual Basic embedded inside HTML documents are highlighted as

'Special' with statements, comments, strings and so on colored as in standard

programming languages. Note that only JavaScript and Visual Basic are currently

supported, no other scripting language has been added yet.

Embedded and inlined cascading style sheets (CSS) are highlighted too.

There are several html preprocessor languages out there. html.vim has been

written such that it should be trivial to include it. To do so add the

following two lines to the syntax coloring file for that language

(the example comes from the asp.vim file):

runtime! syntax/html.vim

syn cluster htmlPreproc add=asp

Now you just need to make sure that you add all regions that contain

the preprocessor language to the cluster htmlPreproc.

HTML/OS (by Aestiva) htmlos.vim ft-htmlos-syntaxLINK

The coloring scheme for HTML/OS works as follows:

Functions and variable names are the same color by default, because VIM

doesn't specify different colors for Functions and Identifiers. To change

this (which is recommended if you want function names to be recognizable in a

different color) you need to add the following line to either your ~/.vimrc:

:hi Function term=underline cterm=bold ctermfg=LightGray

Of course, the ctermfg can be a different color if you choose.

Another issues that HTML/OS runs into is that there is no special filetype to

signify that it is a file with HTML/OS coding. You can change this by opening

a file and turning on HTML/OS syntax by doing the following:

:set syntax=htmlos

Lastly, it should be noted that the opening and closing characters to begin a

block of HTML/OS code can either be << or [[ and >> or ]], respectively.

IA64 ia64.vim intel-itanium ft-ia64-syntaxLINK

Highlighting for the Intel Itanium 64 assembly language. See asm.vim for

how to recognize this filetype.

To have *.inc files be recognized as IA64, add this to your .vimrc file:

:let g:filetype_inc = "ia64"

INFORM inform.vim ft-inform-syntaxLINK

Inform highlighting includes symbols provided by the Inform Library, as

most programs make extensive use of it. If do not wish Library symbols

to be highlighted add this to your vim startup:

:let inform_highlight_simple=1

By default it is assumed that Inform programs are Z-machine targeted,

and highlights Z-machine assembly language symbols appropriately. If

you intend your program to be targeted to a Glulx/Glk environment you

need to add this to your startup sequence:

:let inform_highlight_glulx=1

This will highlight Glulx opcodes instead, and also adds glk() to the

set of highlighted system functions.

The Inform compiler will flag certain obsolete keywords as errors when

it encounters them. These keywords are normally highlighted as errors

by Vim. To prevent such error highlighting, you must add this to your

startup sequence:

:let inform_suppress_obsolete=1

By default, the language features highlighted conform to Compiler

version 6.30 and Library version 6.11. If you are using an older

Inform development environment, you may with to add this to your

startup sequence:

:let inform_highlight_old=1

IDL idl.vim idl-syntaxLINK

IDL (Interface Definition Language) files are used to define RPC calls. In

Microsoft land, this is also used for defining COM interfaces and calls.

IDL's structure is simple enough to permit a full grammar based approach to

rather than using a few heuristics. The result is large and somewhat

repetitive but seems to work.

There are some Microsoft extensions to idl files that are here. Some of them

are disabled by defining idl_no_ms_extensions.

The more complex of the extensions are disabled by defining idl_no_extensions.

Variable Effect

idl_no_ms_extensions Disable some of the Microsoft specific

extensions

idl_no_extensions Disable complex extensions

idlsyntax_showerror Show IDL errors (can be rather intrusive, but

quite helpful)

idlsyntax_showerror_soft Use softer colours by default for errors

JAVA java.vim ft-java-syntaxLINK

The java.vim syntax highlighting file offers several options:

In Java 1.0.2 it was never possible to have braces inside parens, so this was

flagged as an error. Since Java 1.1 this is possible (with anonymous

classes), and therefore is no longer marked as an error. If you prefer the old

way, put the following line into your vim startup file:

:let java_mark_braces_in_parens_as_errors=1

All identifiers in java.lang.* are always visible in all classes. To

highlight them use:

:let java_highlight_java_lang_ids=1

You can also highlight identifiers of most standard Java packages if you

download the javaid.vim script at http://www.fleiner.com/vim/download.html.

If you prefer to only highlight identifiers of a certain package, say java.io

use the following:

:let java_highlight_java_io=1

Check the javaid.vim file for a list of all the packages that are supported.

Function names are not highlighted, as the way to find functions depends on

how you write Java code. The syntax file knows two possible ways to highlight

functions:

If you write function declarations that are always indented by either

a tab, 8 spaces or 2 spaces you may want to set

:let java_highlight_functions="indent"

However, if you follow the Java guidelines about how functions and classes are

supposed to be named (with respect to upper and lowercase), use

:let java_highlight_functions="style"

If both options do not work for you, but you would still want function

declarations to be highlighted create your own definitions by changing the

definitions in java.vim or by creating your own java.vim which includes the

original one and then adds the code to highlight functions.

In Java 1.1 the functions System.out.println() and System.err.println() should

only be used for debugging. Therefore it is possible to highlight debugging

statements differently. To do this you must add the following definition in

your startup file:

:let java_highlight_debug=1

The result will be that those statements are highlighted as 'Special'

characters. If you prefer to have them highlighted differently you must define

new highlightings for the following groups.:

Debug, DebugSpecial, DebugString, DebugBoolean, DebugType

which are used for the statement itself, special characters used in debug

strings, strings, boolean constants and types (this, super) respectively. I

have opted to chose another background for those statements.

Javadoc is a program that takes special comments out of Java program files and

creates HTML pages. The standard configuration will highlight this HTML code

similarly to HTML files (see html.vim). You can even add Javascript

and CSS inside this code (see below). There are four differences however:

1. The title (all characters up to the first '.' which is followed by

some white space or up to the first '@') is colored differently (to change

the color change the group CommentTitle).

2. The text is colored as 'Comment'.

3. HTML comments are colored as 'Special'

4. The special Javadoc tags (@see, @param, ...) are highlighted as specials

and the argument (for @see, @param, @exception) as Function.

To turn this feature off add the following line to your startup file:

:let java_ignore_javadoc=1

If you use the special Javadoc comment highlighting described above you

can also turn on special highlighting for Javascript, visual basic

scripts and embedded CSS (stylesheets). This makes only sense if you

actually have Javadoc comments that include either Javascript or embedded

CSS. The options to use are

:let java_javascript=1

:let java_css=1

:let java_vb=1

In order to highlight nested parens with different colors define colors

for javaParen, javaParen1 and javaParen2, for example with

:hi link javaParen Comment

or

:hi javaParen ctermfg=blue guifg=#0000ff

If you notice highlighting errors while scrolling backwards, which are fixed

when redrawing with CTRL-L, try setting the "java_minlines" internal variable

to a larger number:

:let java_minlines = 50

This will make the syntax synchronization start 50 lines before the first

displayed line. The default value is 10. The disadvantage of using a larger

number is that redrawing can become slow.

LACE lace.vim ft-lace-syntaxLINK

Lace (Language for Assembly of Classes in Eiffel) is case insensitive, but the

style guide lines are not. If you prefer case insensitive highlighting, just

define the vim variable 'lace_case_insensitive' in your startup file:

:let lace_case_insensitive=1

LEX lex.vim ft-lex-syntaxLINK

Lex uses brute-force synchronizing as the "^%%$" section delimiter

gives no clue as to what section follows. Consequently, the value for

:syn sync minlines=300

may be changed by the user if s/he is experiencing synchronization

difficulties (such as may happen with large lex files).

LIFELINES lifelines.vim ft-lifelines-syntaxLINK

To highlight deprecated functions as errors, add in your .vimrc:

:let g:lifelines_deprecated = 1

LISP lisp.vim ft-lisp-syntaxLINK

The lisp syntax highlighting provides two options:

g:lisp_instring : if it exists, then "(...)" strings are highlighted

as if the contents of the string were lisp.

Useful for AutoLisp.

g:lisp_rainbow : if it exists and is nonzero, then differing levels

of parenthesization will receive different

highlighting.

The g:lisp_rainbow option provides 10 levels of individual colorization for

the parentheses and backquoted parentheses. Because of the quantity of

colorization levels, unlike non-rainbow highlighting, the rainbow mode

specifies its highlighting using ctermfg and guifg, thereby bypassing the

usual colorscheme control using standard highlighting groups. The actual

highlighting used depends on the dark/bright setting (see 'bg').

LITE lite.vim ft-lite-syntaxLINK

There are two options for the lite syntax highlighting.

If you like SQL syntax highlighting inside Strings, use this:

:let lite_sql_query = 1

For syncing, minlines defaults to 100. If you prefer another value, you can

set "lite_minlines" to the value you desire. Example:

:let lite_minlines = 200

LPC lpc.vim ft-lpc-syntaxLINK

LPC stands for a simple, memory-efficient language: Lars Pensj| C. The

file name of LPC is usually *.c. Recognizing these files as LPC would bother

users writing only C programs. If you want to use LPC syntax in Vim, you

should set a variable in your .vimrc file:

:let lpc_syntax_for_c = 1

If it doesn't work properly for some particular C or LPC files, use a

modeline. For a LPC file:

// vim:set ft=lpc:

For a C file that is recognized as LPC:

// vim:set ft=c:

If you don't want to set the variable, use the modeline in EVERY LPC file.

There are several implementations for LPC, we intend to support most widely

used ones. Here the default LPC syntax is for MudOS series, for MudOS v22

and before, you should turn off the sensible modifiers, and this will also

assert the new efuns after v22 to be invalid, don't set this variable when

you are using the latest version of MudOS:

:let lpc_pre_v22 = 1

For LpMud 3.2 series of LPC:

:let lpc_compat_32 = 1

For LPC4 series of LPC:

:let lpc_use_lpc4_syntax = 1

For uLPC series of LPC:

uLPC has been developed to Pike, so you should use Pike syntax

instead, and the name of your source file should be *.pike

LUA lua.vim ft-lua-syntaxLINK

The Lua syntax file can be used for versions 4.0, 5.0, 5.1 and 5.2 (5.2 is

the default). You can select one of these versions using the global variables

lua_version and lua_subversion. For example, to activate Lua

5.1 syntax highlighting, set the variables like this:

:let lua_version = 5

:let lua_subversion = 1

MAIL mail.vim ft-mail.vimLINK

Vim highlights all the standard elements of an email (headers, signatures,

quoted text and URLs / email addresses). In keeping with standard conventions,

signatures begin in a line containing only "--" followed optionally by

whitespaces and end with a newline.

Vim treats lines beginning with ']', '}', '|', '>' or a word followed by '>'

as quoted text. However Vim highlights headers and signatures in quoted text

only if the text is quoted with '>' (optionally followed by one space).

By default mail.vim synchronises syntax to 100 lines before the first

displayed line. If you have a slow machine, and generally deal with emails

with short headers, you can change this to a smaller value:

:let mail_minlines = 30

MAKE make.vim ft-make-syntaxLINK

In makefiles, commands are usually highlighted to make it easy for you to spot

errors. However, this may be too much coloring for you. You can turn this

feature off by using:

:let make_no_commands = 1

MAPLE maple.vim ft-maple-syntaxLINK

Maple V, by Waterloo Maple Inc, supports symbolic algebra. The language

supports many packages of functions which are selectively loaded by the user.

The standard set of packages' functions as supplied in Maple V release 4 may be

highlighted at the user's discretion. Users may place in their .vimrc file:

:let mvpkg_all= 1

to get all package functions highlighted, or users may select any subset by

choosing a variable/package from the table below and setting that variable to

1, also in their .vimrc file (prior to sourcing

$VIMRUNTIME/syntax/syntax.vim).

Table of Maple V Package Function Selectors

mv_DEtools mv_genfunc mv_networks mv_process

mv_Galois mv_geometry mv_numapprox mv_simplex

mv_GaussInt mv_grobner mv_numtheory mv_stats

mv_LREtools mv_group mv_orthopoly mv_student

mv_combinat mv_inttrans mv_padic mv_sumtools

mv_combstruct mv_liesymm mv_plots mv_tensor

mv_difforms mv_linalg mv_plottools mv_totorder

mv_finance mv_logic mv_powseries

MATHEMATICA mma.vim ft-mma-syntax ft-mathematica-syntaxLINK

Empty *.m files will automatically be presumed to be Matlab files unless you

have the following in your .vimrc:

let filetype_m = "mma"

MOO moo.vim ft-moo-syntaxLINK

If you use C-style comments inside expressions and find it mangles your

highlighting, you may want to use extended (slow!) matches for C-style

comments:

:let moo_extended_cstyle_comments = 1

To disable highlighting of pronoun substitution patterns inside strings:

:let moo_no_pronoun_sub = 1

To disable highlighting of the regular expression operator '%|', and matching

'%(' and '%)' inside strings:

:let moo_no_regexp = 1

Unmatched double quotes can be recognized and highlighted as errors:

:let moo_unmatched_quotes = 1

To highlight builtin properties (.name, .location, .programmer etc.):

:let moo_builtin_properties = 1

Unknown builtin functions can be recognized and highlighted as errors. If you

use this option, add your own extensions to the mooKnownBuiltinFunction group.

To enable this option:

:let moo_unknown_builtin_functions = 1

An example of adding sprintf() to the list of known builtin functions:

:syn keyword mooKnownBuiltinFunction sprintf contained

MSQL msql.vim ft-msql-syntaxLINK

There are two options for the msql syntax highlighting.

If you like SQL syntax highlighting inside Strings, use this:

:let msql_sql_query = 1

For syncing, minlines defaults to 100. If you prefer another value, you can

set "msql_minlines" to the value you desire. Example:

:let msql_minlines = 200

NCF ncf.vim ft-ncf-syntaxLINK

There is one option for NCF syntax highlighting.

If you want to have unrecognized (by ncf.vim) statements highlighted as

errors, use this:

:let ncf_highlight_unknowns = 1

If you don't want to highlight these errors, leave it unset.

NROFF nroff.vim ft-nroff-syntaxLINK

The nroff syntax file works with AT&T n/troff out of the box. You need to

activate the GNU groff extra features included in the syntax file before you

can use them.

For example, Linux and BSD distributions use groff as their default text

processing package. In order to activate the extra syntax highlighting

features for groff, add the following option to your start-up files:

:let b:nroff_is_groff = 1

Groff is different from the old AT&T n/troff that you may still find in

Solaris. Groff macro and request names can be longer than 2 characters and

there are extensions to the language primitives. For example, in AT&T troff

you access the year as a 2-digit number with the request \(yr. In groff you

can use the same request, recognized for compatibility, or you can use groff's

native syntax, \[yr]. Furthermore, you can use a 4-digit year directly:

\[year]. Macro requests can be longer than 2 characters, for example, GNU mm

accepts the requests ".VERBON" and ".VERBOFF" for creating verbatim

environments.

In order to obtain the best formatted output g/troff can give you, you should

follow a few simple rules about spacing and punctuation.

1. Do not leave empty spaces at the end of lines.

2. Leave one space and one space only after an end-of-sentence period,

exclamation mark, etc.

3. For reasons stated below, it is best to follow all period marks with a

carriage return.

The reason behind these unusual tips is that g/n/troff have a line breaking

algorithm that can be easily upset if you don't follow the rules given above.

Unlike TeX, troff fills text line-by-line, not paragraph-by-paragraph and,

furthermore, it does not have a concept of glue or stretch, all horizontal and

vertical space input will be output as is.

Therefore, you should be careful about not using more space between sentences

than you intend to have in your final document. For this reason, the common

practice is to insert a carriage return immediately after all punctuation

marks. If you want to have "even" text in your final processed output, you

need to maintain regular spacing in the input text. To mark both trailing

spaces and two or more spaces after a punctuation as an error, use:

:let nroff_space_errors = 1

Another technique to detect extra spacing and other errors that will interfere

with the correct typesetting of your file, is to define an eye-catching

highlighting definition for the syntax groups "nroffDefinition" and

"nroffDefSpecial" in your configuration files. For example:

hi def nroffDefinition term=italic cterm=italic gui=reverse

hi def nroffDefSpecial term=italic,bold cterm=italic,bold

\ gui=reverse,bold

If you want to navigate preprocessor entries in your source file as easily as

with section markers, you can activate the following option in your .vimrc

file:

let b:preprocs_as_sections = 1

As well, the syntax file adds an extra paragraph marker for the extended

paragraph macro (.XP) in the ms package.

Finally, there is a groff.vim syntax file that can be used for enabling

groff syntax highlighting either on a file basis or globally by default.

OCAML ocaml.vim ft-ocaml-syntaxLINK

The OCaml syntax file handles files having the following prefixes: .ml,

.mli, .mll and .mly. By setting the following variable

:let ocaml_revised = 1

you can switch from standard OCaml-syntax to revised syntax as supported

by the camlp4 preprocessor. Setting the variable

:let ocaml_noend_error = 1

prevents highlighting of "end" as error, which is useful when sources

contain very long structures that Vim does not synchronize anymore.

PAPP papp.vim ft-papp-syntaxLINK

The PApp syntax file handles .papp files and, to a lesser extend, .pxml

and .pxsl files which are all a mixture of perl/xml/html/other using xml

as the top-level file format. By default everything inside phtml or pxml

sections is treated as a string with embedded preprocessor commands. If

you set the variable:

:let papp_include_html=1

in your startup file it will try to syntax-hilight html code inside phtml

sections, but this is relatively slow and much too colourful to be able to

edit sensibly. ;)

The newest version of the papp.vim syntax file can usually be found at

http://papp.plan9.de.

PASCAL pascal.vim ft-pascal-syntaxLINK

Files matching "*.p" could be Progress or Pascal. If the automatic detection

doesn't work for you, or you don't edit Progress at all, use this in your

startup vimrc:

:let filetype_p = "pascal"

The Pascal syntax file has been extended to take into account some extensions

provided by Turbo Pascal, Free Pascal Compiler and GNU Pascal Compiler.

Delphi keywords are also supported. By default, Turbo Pascal 7.0 features are

enabled. If you prefer to stick with the standard Pascal keywords, add the

following line to your startup file:

:let pascal_traditional=1

To switch on Delphi specific constructions (such as one-line comments,

keywords, etc):

:let pascal_delphi=1

The option pascal_symbol_operator controls whether symbol operators such as +,

*, .., etc. are displayed using the Operator color or not. To colorize symbol

operators, add the following line to your startup file:

:let pascal_symbol_operator=1

Some functions are highlighted by default. To switch it off:

:let pascal_no_functions=1

Furthermore, there are specific variables for some compilers. Besides

pascal_delphi, there are pascal_gpc and pascal_fpc. Default extensions try to

match Turbo Pascal.

:let pascal_gpc=1

or

:let pascal_fpc=1

To ensure that strings are defined on a single line, you can define the

pascal_one_line_string variable.

:let pascal_one_line_string=1

If you dislike <Tab> chars, you can set the pascal_no_tabs variable. Tabs

will be highlighted as Error.

:let pascal_no_tabs=1

PERL perl.vim ft-perl-syntaxLINK

There are a number of possible options to the perl syntax highlighting.

Inline POD highlighting is now turned on by default. If you don't wish

to have the added complexity of highlighting POD embedded within Perl

files, you may set the 'perl_include_pod' option to 0:

:let perl_include_pod = 0

To reduce the complexity of parsing (and increase performance) you can switch

off two elements in the parsing of variable names and contents.

To handle package references in variable and function names not differently

from the rest of the name (like 'PkgName::' in '$PkgName::VarName'):

:let perl_no_scope_in_variables = 1

(In Vim 6.x it was the other way around: "perl_want_scope_in_variables"

enabled it.)

If you do not want complex things like '@{${"foo"}}' to be parsed:

:let perl_no_extended_vars = 1

(In Vim 6.x it was the other way around: "perl_extended_vars" enabled it.)

The coloring strings can be changed. By default strings and qq friends will be

highlighted like the first line. If you set the variable

perl_string_as_statement, it will be highlighted as in the second line.

"hello world!"; qq|hello world|;

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^NN^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^N (unlet perl_string_as_statement)

S^^^^^^^^^^^^SNNSSS^^^^^^^^^^^SN (let perl_string_as_statement)

(^ = perlString, S = perlStatement, N = None at all)

The syncing has 3 options. The first two switch off some triggering of

synchronization and should only be needed in case it fails to work properly.

If while scrolling all of a sudden the whole screen changes color completely

then you should try and switch off one of those. Let me know if you can figure

out the line that causes the mistake.

One triggers on "^\s*sub\s*" and the other on "^[$@%]" more or less.

:let perl_no_sync_on_sub

:let perl_no_sync_on_global_var

Below you can set the maximum distance VIM should look for starting points for

its attempts in syntax highlighting.

:let perl_sync_dist = 100

If you want to use folding with perl, set perl_fold:

:let perl_fold = 1

If you want to fold blocks in if statements, etc. as well set the following:

:let perl_fold_blocks = 1

Subroutines are folded by default if 'perl_fold' is set. If you do not want

this, you can set 'perl_nofold_subs':

:let perl_nofold_subs = 1

Anonymous subroutines are not folded by default; you may enable their folding

via 'perl_fold_anonymous_subs':

:let perl_fold_anonymous_subs = 1

Packages are also folded by default if 'perl_fold' is set. To disable this

behavior, set 'perl_nofold_packages':

:let perl_nofold_packages = 1

PHP3 and PHP4 php.vim php3.vim ft-php-syntax ft-php3-syntaxLINK

[note: previously this was called "php3", but since it now also supports php4

it has been renamed to "php"]

There are the following options for the php syntax highlighting.

If you like SQL syntax highlighting inside Strings:

let php_sql_query = 1

For highlighting the Baselib methods:

let php_baselib = 1

Enable HTML syntax highlighting inside strings:

let php_htmlInStrings = 1

Using the old colorstyle:

let php_oldStyle = 1

Enable highlighting ASP-style short tags:

let php_asp_tags = 1

Disable short tags:

let php_noShortTags = 1

For highlighting parent error ] or ):

let php_parent_error_close = 1

For skipping a php end tag, if there exists an open ( or [ without a closing

one:

let php_parent_error_open = 1

Enable folding for classes and functions:

let php_folding = 1

Selecting syncing method:

let php_sync_method = x

x = -1 to sync by search (default),

x > 0 to sync at least x lines backwards,

x = 0 to sync from start.

PLAINTEX plaintex.vim ft-plaintex-syntaxLINK

TeX is a typesetting language, and plaintex is the file type for the "plain"

variant of TeX. If you never want your *.tex files recognized as plain TeX,

see ft-tex-plugin.

This syntax file has the option

let g:plaintex_delimiters = 1

if you want to highlight brackets "[]" and braces "{}".

PPWIZARD ppwiz.vim ft-ppwiz-syntaxLINK

PPWizard is a preprocessor for HTML and OS/2 INF files

This syntax file has the options:

- ppwiz_highlight_defs : determines highlighting mode for PPWizard's

definitions. Possible values are

ppwiz_highlight_defs = 1 : PPWizard #define statements retain the

colors of their contents (e.g. PPWizard macros and variables)

ppwiz_highlight_defs = 2 : preprocessor #define and #evaluate

statements are shown in a single color with the exception of line

continuation symbols

The default setting for ppwiz_highlight_defs is 1.

- ppwiz_with_html : If the value is 1 (the default), highlight literal

HTML code; if 0, treat HTML code like ordinary text.

PHTML phtml.vim ft-phtml-syntaxLINK

There are two options for the phtml syntax highlighting.

If you like SQL syntax highlighting inside Strings, use this:

:let phtml_sql_query = 1

For syncing, minlines defaults to 100. If you prefer another value, you can

set "phtml_minlines" to the value you desire. Example:

:let phtml_minlines = 200

POSTSCRIPT postscr.vim ft-postscr-syntaxLINK

There are several options when it comes to highlighting PostScript.

First which version of the PostScript language to highlight. There are

currently three defined language versions, or levels. Level 1 is the original

and base version, and includes all extensions prior to the release of level 2.

Level 2 is the most common version around, and includes its own set of

extensions prior to the release of level 3. Level 3 is currently the highest

level supported. You select which level of the PostScript language you want

highlighted by defining the postscr_level variable as follows:

:let postscr_level=2

If this variable is not defined it defaults to 2 (level 2) since this is

the most prevalent version currently.

Note, not all PS interpreters will support all language features for a

particular language level. In particular the %!PS-Adobe-3.0 at the start of

PS files does NOT mean the PostScript present is level 3 PostScript!

If you are working with Display PostScript, you can include highlighting of

Display PS language features by defining the postscr_display variable as

follows:

:let postscr_display=1

If you are working with Ghostscript, you can include highlighting of

Ghostscript specific language features by defining the variable

postscr_ghostscript as follows:

:let postscr_ghostscript=1

PostScript is a large language, with many predefined elements. While it

useful to have all these elements highlighted, on slower machines this can

cause Vim to slow down. In an attempt to be machine friendly font names and

character encodings are not highlighted by default. Unless you are working

explicitly with either of these this should be ok. If you want them to be

highlighted you should set one or both of the following variables:

:let postscr_fonts=1

:let postscr_encodings=1

There is a stylistic option to the highlighting of and, or, and not. In

PostScript the function of these operators depends on the types of their

operands - if the operands are booleans then they are the logical operators,

if they are integers then they are binary operators. As binary and logical

operators can be highlighted differently they have to be highlighted one way

or the other. By default they are treated as logical operators. They can be

highlighted as binary operators by defining the variable

postscr_andornot_binary as follows:

:let postscr_andornot_binary=1

ptcap.vim ft-printcap-syntaxLINK

PRINTCAP + TERMCAP ft-ptcap-syntax ft-termcap-syntaxLINK

This syntax file applies to the printcap and termcap databases.

In order for Vim to recognize printcap/termcap files that do not match

the patterns *printcap*, or *termcap*, you must put additional patterns

appropriate to your system in your myfiletypefile file. For these

patterns, you must set the variable "b:ptcap_type" to either "print" or

"term", and then the 'filetype' option to ptcap.

For example, to make Vim identify all files in /etc/termcaps/ as termcap

files, add the following:

:au BufNewFile,BufRead /etc/termcaps/* let b:ptcap_type = "term" |

\ set filetype=ptcap

If you notice highlighting errors while scrolling backwards, which

are fixed when redrawing with CTRL-L, try setting the "ptcap_minlines"

internal variable to a larger number:

:let ptcap_minlines = 50

(The default is 20 lines.)

PROGRESS progress.vim ft-progress-syntaxLINK

Files matching "*.w" could be Progress or cweb. If the automatic detection

doesn't work for you, or you don't edit cweb at all, use this in your

startup vimrc:

:let filetype_w = "progress"

The same happens for "*.i", which could be assembly, and "*.p", which could be

Pascal. Use this if you don't use assembly and Pascal:

:let filetype_i = "progress"

:let filetype_p = "progress"

PYTHON python.vim ft-python-syntaxLINK

There are six options to control Python syntax highlighting.

For highlighted numbers:

:let python_no_number_highlight = 1

For highlighted builtin functions:

:let python_no_builtin_highlight = 1

For highlighted standard exceptions:

:let python_no_exception_highlight = 1

For highlighted doctests and code inside:

:let python_no_doctest_highlight = 1

or

:let python_no_doctest_code_highlight = 1

(first option implies second one).

For highlighted trailing whitespace and mix of spaces and tabs:

:let python_space_error_highlight = 1

If you want all possible Python highlighting (the same as setting the

preceding last option and unsetting all other ones):

:let python_highlight_all = 1

Note: only existence of these options matter, not their value. You can replace

1 above with anything.

QUAKE quake.vim ft-quake-syntaxLINK

The Quake syntax definition should work for most any FPS (First Person

Shooter) based on one of the Quake engines. However, the command names vary

a bit between the three games (Quake, Quake 2, and Quake 3 Arena) so the

syntax definition checks for the existence of three global variables to allow

users to specify what commands are legal in their files. The three variables

can be set for the following effects:

set to highlight commands only available in Quake:

:let quake_is_quake1 = 1

set to highlight commands only available in Quake 2:

:let quake_is_quake2 = 1

set to highlight commands only available in Quake 3 Arena:

:let quake_is_quake3 = 1

Any combination of these three variables is legal, but might highlight more

commands than are actually available to you by the game.

READLINE readline.vim ft-readline-syntaxLINK

The readline library is primarily used by the BASH shell, which adds quite a

few commands and options to the ones already available. To highlight these

items as well you can add the following to your vimrc or just type it in the

command line before loading a file with the readline syntax:

let readline_has_bash = 1

This will add highlighting for the commands that BASH (version 2.05a and

later, and part earlier) adds.

RESTRUCTURED TEXT rst.vim ft-rst-syntaxLINK

You may set what syntax definitions should be used for code blocks via

let rst_syntax_code_list = ['vim', 'lisp', ...]

REXX rexx.vim ft-rexx-syntaxLINK

If you notice highlighting errors while scrolling backwards, which are fixed

when redrawing with CTRL-L, try setting the "rexx_minlines" internal variable

to a larger number:

:let rexx_minlines = 50

This will make the syntax synchronization start 50 lines before the first

displayed line. The default value is 10. The disadvantage of using a larger

number is that redrawing can become slow.

Vim tries to guess what type a ".r" file is. If it can't be detected (from

comment lines), the default is "r". To make the default rexx add this line to

your .vimrc: g:filetype_rLINK

:let g:filetype_r = "r"

RUBY ruby.vim ft-ruby-syntaxLINK

There are a number of options to the Ruby syntax highlighting.

By default, the "end" keyword is colorized according to the opening statement

of the block it closes. While useful, this feature can be expensive; if you

experience slow redrawing (or you are on a terminal with poor color support)

you may want to turn it off by defining the "ruby_no_expensive" variable:

:let ruby_no_expensive = 1

In this case the same color will be used for all control keywords.

If you do want this feature enabled, but notice highlighting errors while

scrolling backwards, which are fixed when redrawing with CTRL-L, try setting

the "ruby_minlines" variable to a value larger than 50:

:let ruby_minlines = 100

Ideally, this value should be a number of lines large enough to embrace your

largest class or module.

Highlighting of special identifiers can be disabled by removing the

rubyIdentifier highlighting:

:hi link rubyIdentifier NONE

This will prevent highlighting of special identifiers like "ConstantName",

"$global_var", "@@class_var", "@instance_var", "| block_param |", and

":symbol".

Significant methods of Kernel, Module and Object are highlighted by default.

This can be disabled by defining "ruby_no_special_methods":

:let ruby_no_special_methods = 1

This will prevent highlighting of important methods such as "require", "attr",

"private", "raise" and "proc".

Ruby operators can be highlighted. This is enabled by defining

"ruby_operators":

:let ruby_operators = 1

Whitespace errors can be highlighted by defining "ruby_space_errors":

:let ruby_space_errors = 1

This will highlight trailing whitespace and tabs preceded by a space character

as errors. This can be refined by defining "ruby_no_trail_space_error" and

"ruby_no_tab_space_error" which will ignore trailing whitespace and tabs after

spaces respectively.

Folding can be enabled by defining "ruby_fold":

:let ruby_fold = 1

This will set the 'foldmethod' option to "syntax" and allow folding of

classes, modules, methods, code blocks, heredocs and comments.

Folding of multiline comments can be disabled by defining

"ruby_no_comment_fold":

:let ruby_no_comment_fold = 1

SCHEME scheme.vim ft-scheme-syntaxLINK

By default only R5RS keywords are highlighted and properly indented.

MzScheme-specific stuff will be used if b:is_mzscheme or g:is_mzscheme

variables are defined.

Also scheme.vim supports keywords of the Chicken Scheme->C compiler. Define

b:is_chicken or g:is_chicken, if you need them.

SDL sdl.vim ft-sdl-syntaxLINK

The SDL highlighting probably misses a few keywords, but SDL has so many

of them it's almost impossibly to cope.

The new standard, SDL-2000, specifies that all identifiers are

case-sensitive (which was not so before), and that all keywords can be

used either completely lowercase or completely uppercase. To have the

highlighting reflect this, you can set the following variable:

:let sdl_2000=1

This also sets many new keywords. If you want to disable the old

keywords, which is probably a good idea, use:

:let SDL_no_96=1

The indentation is probably also incomplete, but right now I am very

satisfied with it for my own projects.

SED sed.vim ft-sed-syntaxLINK

To make tabs stand out from regular blanks (accomplished by using Todo

highlighting on the tabs), define "highlight_sedtabs" by putting

:let highlight_sedtabs = 1

in the vimrc file. (This special highlighting only applies for tabs

inside search patterns, replacement texts, addresses or text included

by an Append/Change/Insert command.) If you enable this option, it is

also a good idea to set the tab width to one character; by doing that,

you can easily count the number of tabs in a string.

Bugs:

The transform command (y) is treated exactly like the substitute

command. This means that, as far as this syntax file is concerned,

transform accepts the same flags as substitute, which is wrong.

(Transform accepts no flags.) I tolerate this bug because the

involved commands need very complex treatment (95 patterns, one for

each plausible pattern delimiter).

SGML sgml.vim ft-sgml-syntaxLINK

The coloring scheme for tags in the SGML file works as follows.

The <> of opening tags are colored differently than the </> of a closing tag.

This is on purpose! For opening tags the 'Function' color is used, while for

closing tags the 'Type' color is used (See syntax.vim to check how those are

defined for you)

Known tag names are colored the same way as statements in C. Unknown tag

names are not colored which makes it easy to spot errors.

Note that the same is true for argument (or attribute) names. Known attribute

names are colored differently than unknown ones.

Some SGML tags are used to change the rendering of text. The following tags

are recognized by the sgml.vim syntax coloring file and change the way normal

text is shown: <varname> <emphasis> <command> <function> <literal>

<replaceable> <ulink> and <link>.

If you want to change how such text is rendered, you must redefine the

following syntax groups:

- sgmlBold

- sgmlBoldItalic

- sgmlUnderline

- sgmlItalic

- sgmlLink for links

To make this redefinition work you must redefine them all and define the

following variable in your vimrc (this is due to the order in which the files

are read during initialization)

let sgml_my_rendering=1

You can also disable this rendering by adding the following line to your

vimrc file:

let sgml_no_rendering=1

(Adapted from the html.vim help text by Claudio Fleiner <claudio@fleiner.com>)

SH sh.vim ft-sh-syntax ft-bash-syntax ft-ksh-syntaxLINK

This covers the "normal" Unix (Bourne) sh, bash and the Korn shell.

Vim attempts to determine which shell type is in use by specifying that

various filenames are of specific types:

ksh : .kshrc* *.ksh

bash: .bashrc* bashrc bash.bashrc .bash_profile* *.bash

If none of these cases pertain, then the first line of the file is examined

(ex. /bin/sh /bin/ksh /bin/bash). If the first line specifies a shelltype,

then that shelltype is used. However some files (ex. .profile) are known to

be shell files but the type is not apparent. Furthermore, on many systems

sh is symbolically linked to "bash" (Linux, Windows+cygwin) or "ksh" (Posix).

One may specify a global default by instantiating one of the following three

variables in your <.vimrc>:

ksh:

let g:is_kornshell = 1

posix: (using this is the same as setting is_kornshell to 1)

let g:is_posix = 1

bash:

let g:is_bash = 1

sh: (default) Bourne shell

let g:is_sh = 1

If there's no "#! ..." line, and the user hasn't availed himself/herself of a

default sh.vim syntax setting as just shown, then syntax/sh.vim will assume

the Bourne shell syntax. No need to quote RFCs or market penetration

statistics in error reports, please -- just select the default version of the

sh your system uses in your <.vimrc>.

The syntax/sh.vim file provides several levels of syntax-based folding:

let g:sh_fold_enabled= 0 (default, no syntax folding)

let g:sh_fold_enabled= 1 (enable function folding)

let g:sh_fold_enabled= 2 (enable heredoc folding)

let g:sh_fold_enabled= 4 (enable if/do/for folding)

then various syntax items (HereDocuments and function bodies) become

syntax-foldable (see :syn-fold). You also may add these together

to get multiple types of folding:

let g:sh_fold_enabled= 3 (enables function and heredoc folding)

If you notice highlighting errors while scrolling backwards which are fixed

when one redraws with CTRL-L, try setting the "sh_minlines" internal variable

to a larger number. Example:

let sh_minlines = 500

This will make syntax synchronization start 500 lines before the first

displayed line. The default value is 200. The disadvantage of using a larger

number is that redrawing can become slow.

If you don't have much to synchronize on, displaying can be very slow. To

reduce this, the "sh_maxlines" internal variable can be set. Example:

let sh_maxlines = 100

The default is to use the twice sh_minlines. Set it to a smaller number to

speed up displaying. The disadvantage is that highlight errors may appear.

g:sh_isk g:sh_noiskLINK

The shell languages appear to let "." be part of words, commands, etc;

consequently it should be in the isk for sh.vim. As of v116 of syntax/sh.vim,

syntax/sh.vim will append the "." to 'iskeyword' by default; you may control

this behavior with:

let g:sh_isk = '..whatever characters you want as part of iskeyword'

let g:sh_noisk= 1 " otherwise, if this exists, the isk will NOT chg

sh-embed sh-awkLINK

Sh: EMBEDDING LANGUAGES

You may wish to embed languages into sh. I'll give an example courtesy of

Lorance Stinson on how to do this with awk as an example. Put the following

file into $HOME/.vim/after/syntax/sh/awkembed.vim:

" AWK Embedding: {{{1

" ==============

" Shamelessly ripped from aspperl.vim by Aaron Hope.

if exists("b:current_syntax")

unlet b:current_syntax

endif

syn include @AWKScript syntax/awk.vim

syn region AWKScriptCode matchgroup=AWKCommand start=+[=\\]\@<!'+ skip=+\\'+ end=+'+ contains=@AWKScript contained

syn region AWKScriptEmbedded matchgroup=AWKCommand start=+\<awk\>+ skip=+\\$+ end=+[=\\]\@<!'+me=e-1 contains=@shIdList,@shExprList2 nextgroup=AWKScriptCode

syn cluster shCommandSubList add=AWKScriptEmbedded

hi def link AWKCommand Type

This code will then let the awk code in the single quotes:

awk '...awk code here...'

be highlighted using the awk highlighting syntax. Clearly this may be

extended to other languages.

SPEEDUP spup.vim ft-spup-syntaxLINK

(AspenTech plant simulator)

The Speedup syntax file has some options:

- strict_subsections : If this variable is defined, only keywords for

sections and subsections will be highlighted as statements but not

other keywords (like WITHIN in the OPERATION section).

- highlight_types : Definition of this variable causes stream types

like temperature or pressure to be highlighted as Type, not as a

plain Identifier. Included are the types that are usually found in

the DECLARE section; if you defined own types, you have to include

them in the syntax file.

- oneline_comments : this value ranges from 1 to 3 and determines the

highlighting of # style comments.

oneline_comments = 1 : allow normal Speedup code after an even

number of #s.

oneline_comments = 2 : show code starting with the second # as

error. This is the default setting.

oneline_comments = 3 : show the whole line as error if it contains

more than one #.

Since especially OPERATION sections tend to become very large due to

PRESETting variables, syncing may be critical. If your computer is

fast enough, you can increase minlines and/or maxlines near the end of

the syntax file.

SQL sql.vim ft-sql-syntaxLINK

sqlinformix.vim ft-sqlinformix-syntaxLINK

sqlanywhere.vim ft-sqlanywhere-syntaxLINK

While there is an ANSI standard for SQL, most database engines add their own

custom extensions. Vim currently supports the Oracle and Informix dialects of

SQL. Vim assumes "*.sql" files are Oracle SQL by default.

Vim currently has SQL support for a variety of different vendors via syntax

scripts. You can change Vim's default from Oracle to any of the current SQL

supported types. You can also easily alter the SQL dialect being used on a

buffer by buffer basis.

For more detailed instructions see ft_sql.txt.

TCSH tcsh.vim ft-tcsh-syntaxLINK

This covers the shell named "tcsh". It is a superset of csh. See csh.vim

for how the filetype is detected.

Tcsh does not allow \" in strings unless the "backslash_quote" shell variable

is set. If you want VIM to assume that no backslash quote constructs exist add

this line to your .vimrc:

:let tcsh_backslash_quote = 0

If you notice highlighting errors while scrolling backwards, which are fixed

when redrawing with CTRL-L, try setting the "tcsh_minlines" internal variable

to a larger number:

:let tcsh_minlines = 1000

This will make the syntax synchronization start 1000 lines before the first

displayed line. If you set "tcsh_minlines" to "fromstart", then

synchronization is done from the start of the file. The default value for

tcsh_minlines is 100. The disadvantage of using a larger number is that

redrawing can become slow.

TEX tex.vim ft-tex-syntax latex-syntaxLINK

Tex Contents

Tex: Want Syntax Folding? tex-folding

Tex: No Spell Checking Wanted g:tex_nospell

Tex: Don't Want Spell Checking In Comments? tex-nospell

Tex: Want Spell Checking in Verbatim Zones? tex-verb

Tex: Run-on Comments or MathZones tex-runon

Tex: Slow Syntax Highlighting? tex-slow

Tex: Want To Highlight More Commands? tex-morecommands

Tex: Excessive Error Highlighting? tex-error

Tex: Need a new Math Group? tex-math

Tex: Starting a New Style? tex-style

Tex: Taking Advantage of Conceal Mode tex-conceal

Tex: Selective Conceal Mode g:tex_conceal

Tex: Controlling iskeyword g:tex_isk

Tex: Fine Subscript and Superscript Control tex-supersub

tex-folding g:tex_fold_enabledLINK

Tex: Want Syntax Folding?

As of version 28 of <syntax/tex.vim>, syntax-based folding of parts, chapters,

sections, subsections, etc are supported. Put

let g:tex_fold_enabled=1

in your <.vimrc>, and :set fdm=syntax. I suggest doing the latter via a

modeline at the end of your LaTeX file:

% vim: fdm=syntax

If your system becomes too slow, then you might wish to look into

https://vimhelp.appspot.com/vim_faq.txt.html#faq-29.7

g:tex_nospellLINK

Tex: No Spell Checking Wanted

If you don't want spell checking anywhere in your LaTeX document, put

let g:tex_nospell=1

into your .vimrc. If you merely wish to suppress spell checking inside

comments only, see g:tex_comment_nospell.

tex-nospell g:tex_comment_nospellLINK

Tex: Don't Want Spell Checking In Comments?

Some folks like to include things like source code in comments and so would

prefer that spell checking be disabled in comments in LaTeX files. To do

this, put the following in your <.vimrc>:

let g:tex_comment_nospell= 1

If you want to suppress spell checking everywhere inside your LaTeX document,

see g:tex_nospell.

tex-verb g:tex_verbspellLINK

Tex: Want Spell Checking in Verbatim Zones?

Often verbatim regions are used for things like source code; seldom does

one want source code spell-checked. However, for those of you who do

want your verbatim zones spell-checked, put the following in your <.vimrc>:

let g:tex_verbspell= 1

tex-runon tex-stopzoneLINK

Tex: Run-on Comments or MathZones

The <syntax/tex.vim> highlighting supports TeX, LaTeX, and some AmsTeX. The

highlighting supports three primary zones/regions: normal, texZone, and

texMathZone. Although considerable effort has been made to have these zones

terminate properly, zones delineated by $..$ and $$..$$ cannot be synchronized

as there's no difference between start and end patterns. Consequently, a

special "TeX comment" has been provided

%stopzone

which will forcibly terminate the highlighting of either a texZone or a

texMathZone.

tex-slow tex-syncLINK

Tex: Slow Syntax Highlighting?

If you have a slow computer, you may wish to reduce the values for

:syn sync maxlines=200

:syn sync minlines=50

(especially the latter). If your computer is fast, you may wish to

increase them. This primarily affects synchronizing (i.e. just what group,

if any, is the text at the top of the screen supposed to be in?).

Another cause of slow highlighting is due to syntax-driven folding; see

tex-folding for a way around this.

g:tex_fastLINK

Finally, if syntax highlighting is still too slow, you may set

:let g:tex_fast= ""

in your .vimrc. Used this way, the g:tex_fast variable causes the syntax

highlighting script to avoid defining any regions and associated

synchronization. The result will be much faster syntax highlighting; the

price: you will no longer have as much highlighting or any syntax-based

folding, and you will be missing syntax-based error checking.

You may decide that some syntax is acceptable; you may use the following table

selectively to enable just some syntax highlighting:

b : allow bold and italic syntax

c : allow texComment syntax

m : allow texMatcher syntax (ie. {...} and [...])

M : allow texMath syntax

p : allow parts, chapter, section, etc syntax

r : allow texRefZone syntax (nocite, bibliography, label, pageref, eqref)

s : allow superscript/subscript regions

S : allow texStyle syntax

v : allow verbatim syntax

V : allow texNewEnv and texNewCmd syntax

As an example, let g:tex_fast= "M" will allow math-associated highlighting

but suppress all the other region-based syntax highlighting.

(also see: g:tex_conceal and tex-supersub)

tex-morecommands tex-packageLINK

Tex: Want To Highlight More Commands?

LaTeX is a programmable language, and so there are thousands of packages full

of specialized LaTeX commands, syntax, and fonts. If you're using such a

package you'll often wish that the distributed syntax/tex.vim would support

it. However, clearly this is impractical. So please consider using the

techniques in mysyntaxfile-add to extend or modify the highlighting provided

by syntax/tex.vim. Please consider uploading any extensions that you write,

which typically would go in $HOME/after/syntax/tex/[pkgname].vim, to

http://vim.sf.net/.

tex-error g:tex_no_errorLINK

Tex: Excessive Error Highlighting?

The <tex.vim> supports lexical error checking of various sorts. Thus,

although the error checking is ofttimes very useful, it can indicate

errors where none actually are. If this proves to be a problem for you,

you may put in your <.vimrc> the following statement:

let g:tex_no_error=1

and all error checking by <syntax/tex.vim> will be suppressed.

tex-mathLINK

Tex: Need a new Math Group?

If you want to include a new math group in your LaTeX, the following

code shows you an example as to how you might do so:

call TexNewMathZone(sfx,mathzone,starform)

You'll want to provide the new math group with a unique suffix

(currently, A-L and V-Z are taken by <syntax/tex.vim> itself).

As an example, consider how eqnarray is set up by <syntax/tex.vim>:

call TexNewMathZone("D","eqnarray",1)

You'll need to change "mathzone" to the name of your new math group,

and then to the call to it in .vim/after/syntax/tex.vim.

The "starform" variable, if true, implies that your new math group

has a starred form (ie. eqnarray*).

tex-style b:tex_stylishLINK

Tex: Starting a New Style?

One may use "\makeatletter" in *.tex files, thereby making the use of "@" in

commands available. However, since the *.tex file doesn't have one of the

following suffices: sty cls clo dtx ltx, the syntax highlighting will flag

such use of @ as an error. To solve this:

:let b:tex_stylish = 1

:set ft=tex

Putting "let g:tex_stylish=1" into your <.vimrc> will make <syntax/tex.vim>

always accept such use of @.

tex-cchar tex-cole tex-concealLINK

Tex: Taking Advantage of Conceal Mode

If you have 'conceallevel' set to 2 and if your encoding is utf-8, then a

number of character sequences can be translated into appropriate utf-8 glyphs,

including various accented characters, Greek characters in MathZones, and

superscripts and subscripts in MathZones. Not all characters can be made into

superscripts or subscripts; the constraint is due to what utf-8 supports.

In fact, only a few characters are supported as subscripts.

One way to use this is to have vertically split windows (see CTRL-W_v); one

with 'conceallevel' at 0 and the other at 2; and both using 'scrollbind'.

g:tex_concealLINK

Tex: Selective Conceal Mode

You may selectively use conceal mode by setting g:tex_conceal in your

<.vimrc>. By default, g:tex_conceal is set to "admgs" to enable concealment

for the following sets of characters:

a = accents/ligatures

b = bold and italic

d = delimiters

m = math symbols

g = Greek

s = superscripts/subscripts

By leaving one or more of these out, the associated conceal-character

substitution will not be made.

g:tex_isk g:tex_stylishLINK

Tex: Controlling iskeyword

Normally, LaTeX keywords support 0-9, a-z, A-z, and 192-255 only. Latex

keywords don't support the underscore - except when in *.sty files. The

syntax highlighting script handles this with the following logic:

* If g:tex_stylish exists and is 1

then the file will be treated as a "sty" file, so the "_"

will be allowed as part of keywords

(irregardless of g:tex_isk)

* Else if the file's suffix is sty, cls, clo, dtx, or ltx,

then the file will be treated as a "sty" file, so the "_"

will be allowed as part of keywords

(irregardless of g:tex_isk)

* If g:tex_isk exists, then it will be used for the local 'iskeyword'

* Else the local 'iskeyword' will be set to 48-57,a-z,A-Z,192-255

tex-supersub g:tex_superscripts g:tex_subscriptsLINK

Tex: Fine Subscript and Superscript Control

See tex-conceal for how to enable concealed character replacement.

See g:tex_conceal for selectively concealing accents, bold/italic,

math, Greek, and superscripts/subscripts.

One may exert fine control over which superscripts and subscripts one

wants syntax-based concealment for (see :syn-cchar). Since not all

fonts support all characters, one may override the

concealed-replacement lists; by default these lists are given by:

let g:tex_superscripts= "[0-9a-zA-W.,:;+-<>/()=]"

let g:tex_subscripts= "[0-9aehijklmnoprstuvx,+-/().]"

For example, I use Luxi Mono Bold; it doesn't support subscript

characters for "hklmnpst", so I put

let g:tex_subscripts= "[0-9aeijoruvx,+-/().]"

in ~/.vim/ftplugin/tex/tex.vim in order to avoid having inscrutable

utf-8 glyphs appear.

TF tf.vim ft-tf-syntaxLINK

There is one option for the tf syntax highlighting.

For syncing, minlines defaults to 100. If you prefer another value, you can

set "tf_minlines" to the value you desire. Example:

:let tf_minlines = your choice

VIM vim.vim ft-vim-syntaxLINK

g:vimsyn_minlines g:vimsyn_maxlinesLINK

There is a trade-off between more accurate syntax highlighting versus screen

updating speed. To improve accuracy, you may wish to increase the

g:vimsyn_minlines variable. The g:vimsyn_maxlines variable may be used to

improve screen updating rates (see :syn-sync for more on this).

g:vimsyn_minlines : used to set synchronization minlines

g:vimsyn_maxlines : used to set synchronization maxlines

(g:vim_minlines and g:vim_maxlines are deprecated variants of

these two options)

g:vimsyn_embedLINK

The g:vimsyn_embed option allows users to select what, if any, types of

embedded script highlighting they wish to have.

g:vimsyn_embed == 0 : don't embed any scripts

g:vimsyn_embed =~ 'm' : support embedded mzscheme

g:vimsyn_embed =~ 'p' : support embedded perl

g:vimsyn_embed =~ 'P' : support embedded python

g:vimsyn_embed =~ 'r' : support embedded ruby

g:vimsyn_embed =~ 't' : support embedded tcl

By default, g:vimsyn_embed is a string supporting interpreters that your vim

itself supports. Concatenate multiple characters to support multiple types

of embedded interpreters; ie. g:vimsyn_embed= "mp" supports embedded mzscheme

and embedded perl.

g:vimsyn_foldingLINK

Some folding is now supported with syntax/vim.vim:

g:vimsyn_folding == 0 or doesn't exist: no syntax-based folding

g:vimsyn_folding =~ 'a' : augroups

g:vimsyn_folding =~ 'f' : fold functions

g:vimsyn_folding =~ 'm' : fold mzscheme script

g:vimsyn_folding =~ 'p' : fold perl script

g:vimsyn_folding =~ 'P' : fold python script

g:vimsyn_folding =~ 'r' : fold ruby script

g:vimsyn_folding =~ 't' : fold tcl script

g:vimsyn_noerrorLINK

Not all error highlighting that syntax/vim.vim does may be correct; VimL is a

difficult language to highlight correctly. A way to suppress error

highlighting is to put the following line in your vimrc:

let g:vimsyn_noerror = 1

XF86CONFIG xf86conf.vim ft-xf86conf-syntaxLINK

The syntax of XF86Config file differs in XFree86 v3.x and v4.x. Both

variants are supported. Automatic detection is used, but is far from perfect.

You may need to specify the version manually. Set the variable

xf86conf_xfree86_version to 3 or 4 according to your XFree86 version in

your .vimrc. Example:

:let xf86conf_xfree86_version=3

When using a mix of versions, set the b:xf86conf_xfree86_version variable.

Note that spaces and underscores in option names are not supported. Use

"SyncOnGreen" instead of "__s yn con gr_e_e_n" if you want the option name

highlighted.

XML xml.vim ft-xml-syntaxLINK

Xml namespaces are highlighted by default. This can be inhibited by

setting a global variable:

:let g:xml_namespace_transparent=1

xml-foldingLINK

The xml syntax file provides syntax folding (see :syn-fold) between

start and end tags. This can be turned on by

:let g:xml_syntax_folding = 1

:set foldmethod=syntax

Note: syntax folding might slow down syntax highlighting significantly,

especially for large files.

X Pixmaps (XPM) xpm.vim ft-xpm-syntaxLINK

xpm.vim creates its syntax items dynamically based upon the contents of the

XPM file. Thus if you make changes e.g. in the color specification strings,

you have to source it again e.g. with ":set syn=xpm".

To copy a pixel with one of the colors, yank a "pixel" with "yl" and insert it

somewhere else with "P".

Do you want to draw with the mouse? Try the following:

:function! GetPixel()

: let c = getline(".")[col(".") - 1]

: echo c

: exe "noremap <LeftMouse> <LeftMouse>r".c

: exe "noremap <LeftDrag> <LeftMouse>r".c

:endfunction

:noremap <RightMouse> <LeftMouse>:call GetPixel()<CR>

:set guicursor=n:hor20 " to see the color beneath the cursor

This turns the right button into a pipette and the left button into a pen.

It will work with XPM files that have one character per pixel only and you

must not click outside of the pixel strings, but feel free to improve it.

It will look much better with a font in a quadratic cell size, e.g. for X:

:set guifont=-*-clean-medium-r-*-*-8-*-*-*-*-80-*

==============================================================================

5. Defining a syntax :syn-define E410LINK

Vim understands three types of syntax items:

1. Keyword

It can only contain keyword characters, according to the 'iskeyword'

option. It cannot contain other syntax items. It will only match with a

complete word (there are no keyword characters before or after the match).

The keyword "if" would match in "if(a=b)", but not in "ifdef x", because

"(" is not a keyword character and "d" is.

2. Match

This is a match with a single regexp pattern.

3. Region

This starts at a match of the "start" regexp pattern and ends with a match

with the "end" regexp pattern. Any other text can appear in between. A

"skip" regexp pattern can be used to avoid matching the "end" pattern.

Several syntax ITEMs can be put into one syntax GROUP. For a syntax group

you can give highlighting attributes. For example, you could have an item

to define a "/* .. */" comment and another one that defines a "// .." comment,

and put them both in the "Comment" group. You can then specify that a

"Comment" will be in bold font and have a blue color. You are free to make

one highlight group for one syntax item, or put all items into one group.

This depends on how you want to specify your highlighting attributes. Putting

each item in its own group results in having to specify the highlighting

for a lot of groups.

Note that a syntax group and a highlight group are similar. For a highlight

group you will have given highlight attributes. These attributes will be used

for the syntax group with the same name.

In case more than one item matches at the same position, the one that was

defined LAST wins. Thus you can override previously defined syntax items by

using an item that matches the same text. But a keyword always goes before a

match or region. And a keyword with matching case always goes before a

keyword with ignoring case.

PRIORITY :syn-priorityLINK

When several syntax items may match, these rules are used:

1. When multiple Match or Region items start in the same position, the item

defined last has priority.

2. A Keyword has priority over Match and Region items.

3. An item that starts in an earlier position has priority over items that

start in later positions.

DEFINING CASE :syn-case E390LINK

:sy[ntax] case [match | ignore]

This defines if the following ":syntax" commands will work with

matching case, when using "match", or with ignoring case, when using

"ignore". Note that any items before this are not affected, and all

items until the next ":syntax case" command are affected.

SPELL CHECKING :syn-spellLINK

:sy[ntax] spell [toplevel | notoplevel | default]

This defines where spell checking is to be done for text that is not

in a syntax item:

toplevel: Text is spell checked.

notoplevel: Text is not spell checked.

default: When there is a @Spell cluster no spell checking.

For text in syntax items use the @Spell and @NoSpell clusters

spell-syntax. When there is no @Spell and no @NoSpell cluster then

spell checking is done for "default" and "toplevel".

To activate spell checking the 'spell' option must be set.

DEFINING KEYWORDS :syn-keywordLINK

:sy[ntax] keyword {group-name} [{options}] {keyword} .. [{options}]

This defines a number of keywords.

{group-name} Is a syntax group name such as "Comment".

[{options}] See :syn-arguments below.

{keyword} .. Is a list of keywords which are part of this group.

Example:

:syntax keyword Type int long char

The {options} can be given anywhere in the line. They will apply to

all keywords given, also for options that come after a keyword.

These examples do exactly the same:

:syntax keyword Type contained int long char

:syntax keyword Type int long contained char

:syntax keyword Type int long char contained

E789LINK

When you have a keyword with an optional tail, like Ex commands in

Vim, you can put the optional characters inside [], to define all the

variations at once:

:syntax keyword vimCommand ab[breviate] n[ext]

Don't forget that a keyword can only be recognized if all the

characters are included in the 'iskeyword' option. If one character

isn't, the keyword will never be recognized.

Multi-byte characters can also be used. These do not have to be in

'iskeyword'.

A keyword always has higher priority than a match or region, the

keyword is used if more than one item matches. Keywords do not nest

and a keyword can't contain anything else.

Note that when you have a keyword that is the same as an option (even

one that isn't allowed here), you can not use it. Use a match

instead.

The maximum length of a keyword is 80 characters.

The same keyword can be defined multiple times, when its containment

differs. For example, you can define the keyword once not contained

and use one highlight group, and once contained, and use a different

highlight group. Example:

:syn keyword vimCommand tag

:syn keyword vimSetting contained tag

When finding "tag" outside of any syntax item, the "vimCommand"

highlight group is used. When finding "tag" in a syntax item that

contains "vimSetting", the "vimSetting" group is used.

DEFINING MATCHES :syn-matchLINK

:sy[ntax] match {group-name} [{options}] [excludenl] {pattern} [{options}]

This defines one match.

{group-name} A syntax group name such as "Comment".

[{options}] See :syn-arguments below.

[excludenl] Don't make a pattern with the end-of-line "$"

extend a containing match or region. Must be

given before the pattern. :syn-excludenl

{pattern} The search pattern that defines the match.

See :syn-pattern below.

Note that the pattern may match more than one

line, which makes the match depend on where

Vim starts searching for the pattern. You

need to make sure syncing takes care of this.

Example (match a character constant):

:syntax match Character /'.'/hs=s+1,he=e-1

DEFINING REGIONS :syn-region :syn-start :syn-skip :syn-endLINK

E398 E399LINK

:sy[ntax] region {group-name} [{options}]

[matchgroup={group-name}]

[keepend]

[extend]

[excludenl]

start={start_pattern} ..

[skip={skip_pattern}]

end={end_pattern} ..

[{options}]

This defines one region. It may span several lines.

{group-name} A syntax group name such as "Comment".

[{options}] See :syn-arguments below.

[matchgroup={group-name}] The syntax group to use for the following

start or end pattern matches only. Not used

for the text in between the matched start and

end patterns. Use NONE to reset to not using

a different group for the start or end match.

See :syn-matchgroup.

keepend Don't allow contained matches to go past a

match with the end pattern. See

:syn-keepend.

extend Override a "keepend" for an item this region

is contained in. See :syn-extend.

excludenl Don't make a pattern with the end-of-line "$"

extend a containing match or item. Only

useful for end patterns. Must be given before

the patterns it applies to. :syn-excludenl

start={start_pattern} The search pattern that defines the start of

the region. See :syn-pattern below.

skip={skip_pattern} The search pattern that defines text inside

the region where not to look for the end

pattern. See :syn-pattern below.

end={end_pattern} The search pattern that defines the end of

the region. See :syn-pattern below.

Example:

:syntax region String start=+"+ skip=+\\"+ end=+"+

The start/skip/end patterns and the options can be given in any order.

There can be zero or one skip pattern. There must be one or more

start and end patterns. This means that you can omit the skip

pattern, but you must give at least one start and one end pattern. It

is allowed to have white space before and after the equal sign

(although it mostly looks better without white space).

When more than one start pattern is given, a match with one of these

is sufficient. This means there is an OR relation between the start

patterns. The last one that matches is used. The same is true for

the end patterns.

The search for the end pattern starts right after the start pattern.

Offsets are not used for this. This implies that the match for the

end pattern will never overlap with the start pattern.

The skip and end pattern can match across line breaks, but since the

search for the pattern can start in any line it often does not do what

you want. The skip pattern doesn't avoid a match of an end pattern in

the next line. Use single-line patterns to avoid trouble.

Note: The decision to start a region is only based on a matching start

pattern. There is no check for a matching end pattern. This does NOT

work:

:syn region First start="(" end=":"

:syn region Second start="(" end=";"

The Second always matches before the First (last defined pattern has

higher priority). The Second region then continues until the next

';', no matter if there is a ':' before it. Using a match does work:

:syn match First "(\_.\{-}:"

:syn match Second "(\_.\{-};"

This pattern matches any character or line break with "\_." and

repeats that with "\{-}" (repeat as few as possible).

:syn-keependLINK

By default, a contained match can obscure a match for the end pattern.

This is useful for nesting. For example, a region that starts with

"{" and ends with "}", can contain another region. An encountered "}"

will then end the contained region, but not the outer region:

{ starts outer "{}" region

{ starts contained "{}" region

} ends contained "{}" region

} ends outer "{} region

If you don't want this, the "keepend" argument will make the matching

of an end pattern of the outer region also end any contained item.

This makes it impossible to nest the same region, but allows for

contained items to highlight parts of the end pattern, without causing

that to skip the match with the end pattern. Example:

:syn match vimComment +"[^"]\+$+

:syn region vimCommand start="set" end="$" contains=vimComment keepend

The "keepend" makes the vimCommand always end at the end of the line,

even though the contained vimComment includes a match with the <EOL>.

When "keepend" is not used, a match with an end pattern is retried

after each contained match. When "keepend" is included, the first

encountered match with an end pattern is used, truncating any

contained matches.

:syn-extendLINK

The "keepend" behavior can be changed by using the "extend" argument.

When an item with "extend" is contained in an item that uses

"keepend", the "keepend" is ignored and the containing region will be

extended.

This can be used to have some contained items extend a region while

others don't. Example:

:syn region htmlRef start=+<a>+ end=+</a>+ keepend contains=htmlItem,htmlScript

:syn match htmlItem +<[^>]*>+ contained

:syn region htmlScript start=+<script+ end=+</script[^>]*>+ contained extend

Here the htmlItem item does not make the htmlRef item continue

further, it is only used to highlight the <> items. The htmlScript

item does extend the htmlRef item.

Another example:

:syn region xmlFold start="<a>" end="</a>" fold transparent keepend extend

This defines a region with "keepend", so that its end cannot be

changed by contained items, like when the "</a>" is matched to

highlight it differently. But when the xmlFold region is nested (it

includes itself), the "extend" applies, so that the "</a>" of a nested

region only ends that region, and not the one it is contained in.

:syn-excludenlLINK

When a pattern for a match or end pattern of a region includes a '$'

to match the end-of-line, it will make a region item that it is

contained in continue on the next line. For example, a match with

"\\$" (backslash at the end of the line) can make a region continue

that would normally stop at the end of the line. This is the default

behavior. If this is not wanted, there are two ways to avoid it:

1. Use "keepend" for the containing item. This will keep all

contained matches from extending the match or region. It can be

used when all contained items must not extend the containing item.

2. Use "excludenl" in the contained item. This will keep that match

from extending the containing match or region. It can be used if

only some contained items must not extend the containing item.

"excludenl" must be given before the pattern it applies to.

:syn-matchgroupLINK

"matchgroup" can be used to highlight the start and/or end pattern

differently than the body of the region. Example:

:syntax region String matchgroup=Quote start=+"+ skip=+\\"+ end=+"+

This will highlight the quotes with the "Quote" group, and the text in

between with the "String" group.

The "matchgroup" is used for all start and end patterns that follow,

until the next "matchgroup". Use "matchgroup=NONE" to go back to not

using a matchgroup.

In a start or end pattern that is highlighted with "matchgroup" the

contained items of the region are not used. This can be used to avoid

that a contained item matches in the start or end pattern match. When

using "transparent", this does not apply to a start or end pattern

match that is highlighted with "matchgroup".

Here is an example, which highlights three levels of parentheses in

different colors:

:sy region par1 matchgroup=par1 start=/(/ end=/)/ contains=par2

:sy region par2 matchgroup=par2 start=/(/ end=/)/ contains=par3 contained

:sy region par3 matchgroup=par3 start=/(/ end=/)/ contains=par1 contained

:hi par1 ctermfg=red guifg=red

:hi par2 ctermfg=blue guifg=blue

:hi par3 ctermfg=darkgreen guifg=darkgreen

E849LINK

The maximum number of syntax groups is 19999.

==============================================================================

6. :syntax arguments :syn-argumentsLINK

The :syntax commands that define syntax items take a number of arguments.

The common ones are explained here. The arguments may be given in any order

and may be mixed with patterns.

Not all commands accept all arguments. This table shows which arguments

can not be used for all commands:

E395LINK

contains oneline fold display extend concealends

:syntax keyword - - - - - -

:syntax match yes - yes yes yes -

:syntax region yes yes yes yes yes yes

These arguments can be used for all three commands:

conceal

cchar

contained

containedin

nextgroup

transparent

skipwhite

skipnl

skipempty

conceal conceal :syn-concealLINK

When the "conceal" argument is given, the item is marked as concealable.

Whether or not it is actually concealed depends on the value of the

'conceallevel' option. The 'concealcursor' option is used to decide whether

concealable items in the current line are displayed unconcealed to be able to

edit the line.

concealends :syn-concealendsLINK

When the "concealends" argument is given, the start and end matches of

the region, but not the contents of the region, are marked as concealable.

Whether or not they are actually concealed depends on the setting on the

'conceallevel' option. The ends of a region can only be concealed separately

in this way when they have their own highlighting via "matchgroup"

cchar :syn-ccharLINK

E844LINK

The "cchar" argument defines the character shown in place of the item

when it is concealed (setting "cchar" only makes sense when the conceal

argument is given.) If "cchar" is not set then the default conceal

character defined in the 'listchars' option is used. The character cannot be

a control character such as Tab. Example:

:syntax match Entity "&amp;" conceal cchar=&

See hl-Conceal for highlighting.

contained :syn-containedLINK

When the "contained" argument is given, this item will not be recognized at

the top level, but only when it is mentioned in the "contains" field of

another match. Example:

:syntax keyword Todo TODO contained

:syntax match Comment "//.*" contains=Todo

display :syn-displayLINK

If the "display" argument is given, this item will be skipped when the

detected highlighting will not be displayed. This will speed up highlighting,

by skipping this item when only finding the syntax state for the text that is

to be displayed.

Generally, you can use "display" for match and region items that meet these

conditions:

- The item does not continue past the end of a line. Example for C: A region

for a "/*" comment can't contain "display", because it continues on the next

line.

- The item does not contain items that continue past the end of the line or

make it continue on the next line.

- The item does not change the size of any item it is contained in. Example

for C: A match with "\\$" in a preprocessor match can't have "display",

because it may make that preprocessor match shorter.

- The item does not allow other items to match that didn't match otherwise,

and that item may extend the match too far. Example for C: A match for a

"//" comment can't use "display", because a "/*" inside that comment would

match then and start a comment which extends past the end of the line.

Examples, for the C language, where "display" can be used:

- match with a number

- match with a label

transparent :syn-transparentLINK

If the "transparent" argument is given, this item will not be highlighted

itself, but will take the highlighting of the item it is contained in. This

is useful for syntax items that don't need any highlighting but are used

only to skip over a part of the text.

The "contains=" argument is also inherited from the item it is contained in,

unless a "contains" argument is given for the transparent item itself. To

avoid that unwanted items are contained, use "contains=NONE". Example, which

highlights words in strings, but makes an exception for "vim":

:syn match myString /'[^']*'/ contains=myWord,myVim

:syn match myWord /\<[a-z]*\>/ contained

:syn match myVim /\<vim\>/ transparent contained contains=NONE

:hi link myString String

:hi link myWord Comment

Since the "myVim" match comes after "myWord" it is the preferred match (last

match in the same position overrules an earlier one). The "transparent"

argument makes the "myVim" match use the same highlighting as "myString". But

it does not contain anything. If the "contains=NONE" argument would be left

out, then "myVim" would use the contains argument from myString and allow

"myWord" to be contained, which will be highlighted as a Constant. This

happens because a contained match doesn't match inside itself in the same

position, thus the "myVim" match doesn't overrule the "myWord" match here.

When you look at the colored text, it is like looking at layers of contained

items. The contained item is on top of the item it is contained in, thus you

see the contained item. When a contained item is transparent, you can look

through, thus you see the item it is contained in. In a picture:

look from here

| | | | | |

V V V V V V

xxxx yyy more contained items

.................... contained item (transparent)

============================= first item

The 'x', 'y' and '=' represent a highlighted syntax item. The '.' represent a

transparent group.

What you see is:

=======xxxx=======yyy========

Thus you look through the transparent "....".

oneline :syn-onelineLINK

The "oneline" argument indicates that the region does not cross a line

boundary. It must match completely in the current line. However, when the

region has a contained item that does cross a line boundary, it continues on

the next line anyway. A contained item can be used to recognize a line

continuation pattern. But the "end" pattern must still match in the first

line, otherwise the region doesn't even start.

When the start pattern includes a "\n" to match an end-of-line, the end

pattern must be found in the same line as where the start pattern ends. The

end pattern may also include an end-of-line. Thus the "oneline" argument

means that the end of the start pattern and the start of the end pattern must

be within one line. This can't be changed by a skip pattern that matches a

line break.

fold :syn-foldLINK

The "fold" argument makes the fold level increase by one for this item.

Example:

:syn region myFold start="{" end="}" transparent fold

:syn sync fromstart

:set foldmethod=syntax

This will make each {} block form one fold.

The fold will start on the line where the item starts, and end where the item

ends. If the start and end are within the same line, there is no fold.

The 'foldnestmax' option limits the nesting of syntax folds.

{not available when Vim was compiled without +folding feature}

:syn-contains E405 E406 E407 E408 E409LINK

contains={group-name},..

The "contains" argument is followed by a list of syntax group names. These

groups will be allowed to begin inside the item (they may extend past the

containing group's end). This allows for recursive nesting of matches and

regions. If there is no "contains" argument, no groups will be contained in

this item. The group names do not need to be defined before they can be used

here.

contains=ALL

If the only item in the contains list is "ALL", then all

groups will be accepted inside the item.

contains=ALLBUT,{group-name},..

If the first item in the contains list is "ALLBUT", then all

groups will be accepted inside the item, except the ones that

are listed. Example:

:syntax region Block start="{" end="}" ... contains=ALLBUT,Function

contains=TOP

If the first item in the contains list is "TOP", then all

groups will be accepted that don't have the "contained"

argument.

contains=TOP,{group-name},..

Like "TOP", but excluding the groups that are listed.

contains=CONTAINED

If the first item in the contains list is "CONTAINED", then

all groups will be accepted that have the "contained"

argument.

contains=CONTAINED,{group-name},..

Like "CONTAINED", but excluding the groups that are

listed.

The {group-name} in the "contains" list can be a pattern. All group names

that match the pattern will be included (or excluded, if "ALLBUT" is used).

The pattern cannot contain white space or a ','. Example:

... contains=Comment.*,Keyw[0-3]

The matching will be done at moment the syntax command is executed. Groups

that are defined later will not be matched. Also, if the current syntax

command defines a new group, it is not matched. Be careful: When putting

syntax commands in a file you can't rely on groups NOT being defined, because

the file may have been sourced before, and ":syn clear" doesn't remove the

group names.

The contained groups will also match in the start and end patterns of a

region. If this is not wanted, the "matchgroup" argument can be used

:syn-matchgroup. The "ms=" and "me=" offsets can be used to change the

region where contained items do match. Note that this may also limit the

area that is highlighted

containedin={group-name}... :syn-containedinLINK

The "containedin" argument is followed by a list of syntax group names. The

item will be allowed to begin inside these groups. This works as if the

containing item has a "contains=" argument that includes this item.

The {group-name}... can be used just like for "contains", as explained above.

This is useful when adding a syntax item afterwards. An item can be told to

be included inside an already existing item, without changing the definition

of that item. For example, to highlight a word in a C comment after loading

the C syntax:

:syn keyword myword HELP containedin=cComment contained

Note that "contained" is also used, to avoid that the item matches at the top

level.

Matches for "containedin" are added to the other places where the item can

appear. A "contains" argument may also be added as usual. Don't forget that

keywords never contain another item, thus adding them to "containedin" won't

work.

nextgroup={group-name},.. :syn-nextgroupLINK

The "nextgroup" argument is followed by a list of syntax group names,

separated by commas (just like with "contains", so you can also use patterns).

If the "nextgroup" argument is given, the mentioned syntax groups will be

tried for a match, after the match or region ends. If none of the groups have

a match, highlighting continues normally. If there is a match, this group

will be used, even when it is not mentioned in the "contains" field of the

current group. This is like giving the mentioned group priority over all

other groups. Example:

:syntax match ccFoobar "Foo.\{-}Bar" contains=ccFoo

:syntax match ccFoo "Foo" contained nextgroup=ccFiller

:syntax region ccFiller start="." matchgroup=ccBar end="Bar" contained

This will highlight "Foo" and "Bar" differently, and only when there is a

"Bar" after "Foo". In the text line below, "f" shows where ccFoo is used for

highlighting, and "bbb" where ccBar is used.

Foo asdfasd Bar asdf Foo asdf Bar asdf

fff bbb fff bbb

Note the use of ".\{-}" to skip as little as possible until the next Bar.

when ".*" would be used, the "asdf" in between "Bar" and "Foo" would be

highlighted according to the "ccFoobar" group, because the ccFooBar match

would include the first "Foo" and the last "Bar" in the line (see pattern).

skipwhite :syn-skipwhiteLINK

skipnl :syn-skipnlLINK

skipempty :syn-skipemptyLINK

These arguments are only used in combination with "nextgroup". They can be

used to allow the next group to match after skipping some text:

skipwhite skip over space and tab characters

skipnl skip over the end of a line

skipempty skip over empty lines (implies a "skipnl")

When "skipwhite" is present, the white space is only skipped if there is no

next group that matches the white space.

When "skipnl" is present, the match with nextgroup may be found in the next

line. This only happens when the current item ends at the end of the current

line! When "skipnl" is not present, the nextgroup will only be found after

the current item in the same line.

When skipping text while looking for a next group, the matches for other

groups are ignored. Only when no next group matches, other items are tried

for a match again. This means that matching a next group and skipping white

space and <EOL>s has a higher priority than other items.

Example:

:syn match ifstart "\<if.*" nextgroup=ifline skipwhite skipempty

:syn match ifline "[^ \t].*" nextgroup=ifline skipwhite skipempty contained

:syn match ifline "endif" contained

Note that the "[^ \t].*" match matches all non-white text. Thus it would also

match "endif". Therefore the "endif" match is put last, so that it takes

precedence.

Note that this example doesn't work for nested "if"s. You need to add

"contains" arguments to make that work (omitted for simplicity of the

example).

IMPLICIT CONCEAL :syn-conceal-implicitLINK

:sy[ntax] conceal [on|off]

This defines if the following ":syntax" commands will define keywords,

matches or regions with the "conceal" flag set. After ":syn conceal

on", all subsequent ":syn keyword", ":syn match" or ":syn region"

defined will have the "conceal" flag set implicitly. ":syn conceal

off" returns to the normal state where the "conceal" flag must be

given explicitly.

==============================================================================

7. Syntax patterns :syn-pattern E401 E402LINK

In the syntax commands, a pattern must be surrounded by two identical

characters. This is like it works for the ":s" command. The most common to

use is the double quote. But if the pattern contains a double quote, you can

use another character that is not used in the pattern. Examples:

:syntax region Comment start="/\*" end="\*/"

:syntax region String start=+"+ end=+"+ skip=+\\"+

See pattern for the explanation of what a pattern is. Syntax patterns are

always interpreted like the 'magic' option is set, no matter what the actual

value of 'magic' is. And the patterns are interpreted like the 'l' flag is

not included in 'cpoptions'. This was done to make syntax files portable and

independent of 'compatible' and 'magic' settings.

Try to avoid patterns that can match an empty string, such as "[a-z]*".

This slows down the highlighting a lot, because it matches everywhere.

:syn-pattern-offsetLINK

The pattern can be followed by a character offset. This can be used to

change the highlighted part, and to change the text area included in the

match or region (which only matters when trying to match other items). Both

are relative to the matched pattern. The character offset for a skip

pattern can be used to tell where to continue looking for an end pattern.

The offset takes the form of "{what}={offset}"

The {what} can be one of seven strings:

ms Match Start offset for the start of the matched text

me Match End offset for the end of the matched text

hs Highlight Start offset for where the highlighting starts

he Highlight End offset for where the highlighting ends

rs Region Start offset for where the body of a region starts

re Region End offset for where the body of a region ends

lc Leading Context offset past "leading context" of pattern

The {offset} can be:

s start of the matched pattern

s+{nr} start of the matched pattern plus {nr} chars to the right

s-{nr} start of the matched pattern plus {nr} chars to the left

e end of the matched pattern

e+{nr} end of the matched pattern plus {nr} chars to the right

e-{nr} end of the matched pattern plus {nr} chars to the left

{nr} (for "lc" only): start matching {nr} chars right of the start

Examples: "ms=s+1", "hs=e-2", "lc=3".

Although all offsets are accepted after any pattern, they are not always

meaningful. This table shows which offsets are actually used:

ms me hs he rs re lc

match item yes yes yes yes - - yes

region item start yes - yes - yes - yes

region item skip - yes - - - - yes

region item end - yes - yes - yes yes

Offsets can be concatenated, with a ',' in between. Example:

:syn match String /"[^"]*"/hs=s+1,he=e-1

some "string" text

^^^^^^ highlighted

Notes:

- There must be no white space between the pattern and the character

offset(s).

- The highlighted area will never be outside of the matched text.

- A negative offset for an end pattern may not always work, because the end

pattern may be detected when the highlighting should already have stopped.

- Before Vim 7.2 the offsets were counted in bytes instead of characters.

This didn't work well for multi-byte characters, so it was changed with the

Vim 7.2 release.

- The start of a match cannot be in a line other than where the pattern

matched. This doesn't work: "a\nb"ms=e. You can make the highlighting

start in another line, this does work: "a\nb"hs=e.

Example (match a comment but don't highlight the /* and */):

:syntax region Comment start="/\*"hs=e+1 end="\*/"he=s-1

/* this is a comment */

^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ highlighted

A more complicated Example:

:syn region Exa matchgroup=Foo start="foo"hs=s+2,rs=e+2 matchgroup=Bar end="bar"me=e-1,he=e-1,re=s-1

abcfoostringbarabc

mmmmmmmmmmm match

sssrrreee highlight start/region/end ("Foo", "Exa" and "Bar")

Leading context :syn-lc :syn-leading :syn-contextLINK

Note: This is an obsolete feature, only included for backwards compatibility

with previous Vim versions. It's now recommended to use the /\@<= construct

in the pattern.

The "lc" offset specifies leading context -- a part of the pattern that must

be present, but is not considered part of the match. An offset of "lc=n" will

cause Vim to step back n columns before attempting the pattern match, allowing

characters which have already been matched in previous patterns to also be

used as leading context for this match. This can be used, for instance, to

specify that an "escaping" character must not precede the match:

:syn match ZNoBackslash "[^\\]z"ms=s+1

:syn match WNoBackslash "[^\\]w"lc=1

:syn match Underline "_\+"

___zzzz ___wwww

^^^ ^^^ matches Underline

^ ^ matches ZNoBackslash

^^^^ matches WNoBackslash

The "ms" offset is automatically set to the same value as the "lc" offset,

unless you set "ms" explicitly.

Multi-line patterns :syn-multi-lineLINK

The patterns can include "\n" to match an end-of-line. Mostly this works as

expected, but there are a few exceptions.

When using a start pattern with an offset, the start of the match is not

allowed to start in a following line. The highlighting can start in a

following line though. Using the "\zs" item also requires that the start of

the match doesn't move to another line.

The skip pattern can include the "\n", but the search for an end pattern will

continue in the first character of the next line, also when that character is

matched by the skip pattern. This is because redrawing may start in any line

halfway a region and there is no check if the skip pattern started in a

previous line. For example, if the skip pattern is "a\nb" and an end pattern

is "b", the end pattern does match in the second line of this:

x x a

b x x

Generally this means that the skip pattern should not match any characters

after the "\n".

External matches :syn-ext-matchLINK

These extra regular expression items are available in region patterns:

/\z( /\z(\) E50 E52 E879LINK

\z(\) Marks the sub-expression as "external", meaning that it can be

accessed from another pattern match. Currently only usable in

defining a syntax region start pattern.

/\z1 /\z2 /\z3 /\z4 /\z5LINK

\z1 ... \z9 /\z6 /\z7 /\z8 /\z9 E66 E67LINK

Matches the same string that was matched by the corresponding

sub-expression in a previous start pattern match.

Sometimes the start and end patterns of a region need to share a common

sub-expression. A common example is the "here" document in Perl and many Unix

shells. This effect can be achieved with the "\z" special regular expression

items, which marks a sub-expression as "external", in the sense that it can be

referenced from outside the pattern in which it is defined. The here-document

example, for instance, can be done like this:

:syn region hereDoc start="<<\z(\I\i*\)" end="^\z1$"

As can be seen here, the \z actually does double duty. In the start pattern,

it marks the "\(\I\i*\)" sub-expression as external; in the end pattern, it

changes the \1 back-reference into an external reference referring to the

first external sub-expression in the start pattern. External references can

also be used in skip patterns:

:syn region foo start="start \(\I\i*\)" skip="not end \z1" end="end \z1"

Note that normal and external sub-expressions are completely orthogonal and

indexed separately; for instance, if the pattern "\z(..\)\(..\)" is applied

to the string "aabb", then \1 will refer to "bb" and \z1 will refer to "aa".

Note also that external sub-expressions cannot be accessed as back-references

within the same pattern like normal sub-expressions. If you want to use one

sub-expression as both a normal and an external sub-expression, you can nest

the two, as in "\(\z(...\)\)".

Note that only matches within a single line can be used. Multi-line matches

cannot be referred to.

==============================================================================

8. Syntax clusters :syn-cluster E400LINK

:sy[ntax] cluster {cluster-name} [contains={group-name}..]

[add={group-name}..]

[remove={group-name}..]

This command allows you to cluster a list of syntax groups together under a

single name.

contains={group-name}..

The cluster is set to the specified list of groups.

add={group-name}..

The specified groups are added to the cluster.

remove={group-name}..

The specified groups are removed from the cluster.

A cluster so defined may be referred to in a contains=.., containedin=..,

nextgroup=.., add=.. or remove=.. list with a "@" prefix. You can also use

this notation to implicitly declare a cluster before specifying its contents.

Example:

:syntax match Thing "# [^#]\+ #" contains=@ThingMembers

:syntax cluster ThingMembers contains=ThingMember1,ThingMember2

As the previous example suggests, modifications to a cluster are effectively

retroactive; the membership of the cluster is checked at the last minute, so

to speak:

:syntax keyword A aaa

:syntax keyword B bbb

:syntax cluster AandB contains=A

:syntax match Stuff "( aaa bbb )" contains=@AandB

:syntax cluster AandB add=B " now both keywords are matched in Stuff

This also has implications for nested clusters:

:syntax keyword A aaa

:syntax keyword B bbb

:syntax cluster SmallGroup contains=B

:syntax cluster BigGroup contains=A,@SmallGroup

:syntax match Stuff "( aaa bbb )" contains=@BigGroup

:syntax cluster BigGroup remove=B " no effect, since B isn't in BigGroup

:syntax cluster SmallGroup remove=B " now bbb isn't matched within Stuff

E848LINK

The maximum number of clusters is 9767.

==============================================================================

9. Including syntax files :syn-include E397LINK

It is often useful for one language's syntax file to include a syntax file for

a related language. Depending on the exact relationship, this can be done in

two different ways:

- If top-level syntax items in the included syntax file are to be

allowed at the top level in the including syntax, you can simply use

the :runtime command:

" In cpp.vim:

:runtime! syntax/c.vim

:unlet b:current_syntax

- If top-level syntax items in the included syntax file are to be

contained within a region in the including syntax, you can use the

":syntax include" command:

:sy[ntax] include [@{grouplist-name}] {file-name}

All syntax items declared in the included file will have the

"contained" flag added. In addition, if a group list is specified,

all top-level syntax items in the included file will be added to

that list.

" In perl.vim:

:syntax include @Pod <sfile>:p:h/pod.vim

:syntax region perlPOD start="^=head" end="^=cut" contains=@Pod

When {file-name} is an absolute path (starts with "/", "c:", "$VAR"

or "<sfile>") that file is sourced. When it is a relative path

(e.g., "syntax/pod.vim") the file is searched for in 'runtimepath'.

All matching files are loaded. Using a relative path is

recommended, because it allows a user to replace the included file

with his own version, without replacing the file that does the ":syn

include".

E847LINK

The maximum number of includes is 999.

==============================================================================

10. Synchronizing :syn-sync E403 E404LINK

Vim wants to be able to start redrawing in any position in the document. To

make this possible it needs to know the syntax state at the position where

redrawing starts.

:sy[ntax] sync [ccomment [group-name] | minlines={N} | ...]

There are four ways to synchronize:

1. Always parse from the start of the file.

:syn-sync-first

2. Based on C-style comments. Vim understands how C-comments work and can

figure out if the current line starts inside or outside a comment.

:syn-sync-second

3. Jumping back a certain number of lines and start parsing there.

:syn-sync-third

4. Searching backwards in the text for a pattern to sync on.

:syn-sync-fourth

:syn-sync-maxlines :syn-sync-minlinesLINK

For the last three methods, the line range where the parsing can start is

limited by "minlines" and "maxlines".

If the "minlines={N}" argument is given, the parsing always starts at least

that many lines backwards. This can be used if the parsing may take a few

lines before it's correct, or when it's not possible to use syncing.

If the "maxlines={N}" argument is given, the number of lines that are searched

for a comment or syncing pattern is restricted to N lines backwards (after

adding "minlines"). This is useful if you have few things to sync on and a

slow machine. Example:

:syntax sync ccomment maxlines=500

:syn-sync-linebreaksLINK

When using a pattern that matches multiple lines, a change in one line may

cause a pattern to no longer match in a previous line. This means has to

start above where the change was made. How many lines can be specified with

the "linebreaks" argument. For example, when a pattern may include one line

break use this:

:syntax sync linebreaks=1

The result is that redrawing always starts at least one line before where a

change was made. The default value for "linebreaks" is zero. Usually the

value for "minlines" is bigger than "linebreaks".

First syncing method: :syn-sync-firstLINK

:syntax sync fromstart

The file will be parsed from the start. This makes syntax highlighting

accurate, but can be slow for long files. Vim caches previously parsed text,

so that it's only slow when parsing the text for the first time. However,

when making changes some part of the text needs to be parsed again (worst

case: to the end of the file).

Using "fromstart" is equivalent to using "minlines" with a very large number.

Second syncing method: :syn-sync-second :syn-sync-ccommentLINK

For the second method, only the "ccomment" argument needs to be given.

Example:

:syntax sync ccomment

When Vim finds that the line where displaying starts is inside a C-style

comment, the last region syntax item with the group-name "Comment" will be

used. This requires that there is a region with the group-name "Comment"!

An alternate group name can be specified, for example:

:syntax sync ccomment javaComment

This means that the last item specified with "syn region javaComment" will be

used for the detected C comment region. This only works properly if that

region does have a start pattern "\/*" and an end pattern "*\/".

The "maxlines" argument can be used to restrict the search to a number of

lines. The "minlines" argument can be used to at least start a number of

lines back (e.g., for when there is some construct that only takes a few

lines, but it hard to sync on).

Note: Syncing on a C comment doesn't work properly when strings are used

that cross a line and contain a "*/". Since letting strings cross a line

is a bad programming habit (many compilers give a warning message), and the

chance of a "*/" appearing inside a comment is very small, this restriction

is hardly ever noticed.

Third syncing method: :syn-sync-thirdLINK

For the third method, only the "minlines={N}" argument needs to be given.

Vim will subtract {N} from the line number and start parsing there. This

means {N} extra lines need to be parsed, which makes this method a bit slower.

Example:

:syntax sync minlines=50

"lines" is equivalent to "minlines" (used by older versions).

Fourth syncing method: :syn-sync-fourthLINK

The idea is to synchronize on the end of a few specific regions, called a

sync pattern. Only regions can cross lines, so when we find the end of some

region, we might be able to know in which syntax item we are. The search

starts in the line just above the one where redrawing starts. From there

the search continues backwards in the file.

This works just like the non-syncing syntax items. You can use contained

matches, nextgroup, etc. But there are a few differences:

- Keywords cannot be used.

- The syntax items with the "sync" keyword form a completely separated group

of syntax items. You can't mix syncing groups and non-syncing groups.

- The matching works backwards in the buffer (line by line), instead of

forwards.

- A line continuation pattern can be given. It is used to decide which group

of lines need to be searched like they were one line. This means that the

search for a match with the specified items starts in the first of the

consecutive that contain the continuation pattern.

- When using "nextgroup" or "contains", this only works within one line (or

group of continued lines).

- When using a region, it must start and end in the same line (or group of

continued lines). Otherwise the end is assumed to be at the end of the

line (or group of continued lines).

- When a match with a sync pattern is found, the rest of the line (or group of

continued lines) is searched for another match. The last match is used.

This is used when a line can contain both the start end the end of a region

(e.g., in a C-comment like /* this */, the last "*/" is used).

There are two ways how a match with a sync pattern can be used:

1. Parsing for highlighting starts where redrawing starts (and where the

search for the sync pattern started). The syntax group that is expected

to be valid there must be specified. This works well when the regions

that cross lines cannot contain other regions.

2. Parsing for highlighting continues just after the match. The syntax group

that is expected to be present just after the match must be specified.

This can be used when the previous method doesn't work well. It's much

slower, because more text needs to be parsed.

Both types of sync patterns can be used at the same time.

Besides the sync patterns, other matches and regions can be specified, to

avoid finding unwanted matches.

[The reason that the sync patterns are given separately, is that mostly the

search for the sync point can be much simpler than figuring out the

highlighting. The reduced number of patterns means it will go (much)

faster.]

syn-sync-grouphere E393 E394LINK

:syntax sync match {sync-group-name} grouphere {group-name} "pattern" ..

Define a match that is used for syncing. {group-name} is the

name of a syntax group that follows just after the match. Parsing

of the text for highlighting starts just after the match. A region

must exist for this {group-name}. The first one defined will be used.

"NONE" can be used for when there is no syntax group after the match.

syn-sync-groupthereLINK

:syntax sync match {sync-group-name} groupthere {group-name} "pattern" ..

Like "grouphere", but {group-name} is the name of a syntax group that

is to be used at the start of the line where searching for the sync

point started. The text between the match and the start of the sync

pattern searching is assumed not to change the syntax highlighting.

For example, in C you could search backwards for "/*" and "*/". If

"/*" is found first, you know that you are inside a comment, so the

"groupthere" is "cComment". If "*/" is found first, you know that you

are not in a comment, so the "groupthere" is "NONE". (in practice

it's a bit more complicated, because the "/*" and "*/" could appear

inside a string. That's left as an exercise to the reader...).

:syntax sync match ..

:syntax sync region ..

Without a "groupthere" argument. Define a region or match that is

skipped while searching for a sync point.

syn-sync-linecontLINK

:syntax sync linecont {pattern}

When {pattern} matches in a line, it is considered to continue in

the next line. This means that the search for a sync point will

consider the lines to be concatenated.

If the "maxlines={N}" argument is given too, the number of lines that are

searched for a match is restricted to N. This is useful if you have very

few things to sync on and a slow machine. Example:

:syntax sync maxlines=100

You can clear all sync settings with:

:syntax sync clear

You can clear specific sync patterns with:

:syntax sync clear {sync-group-name} ..

==============================================================================

11. Listing syntax items :syntax :sy :syn :syn-listLINK

This command lists all the syntax items:

:sy[ntax] [list]

To show the syntax items for one syntax group:

:sy[ntax] list {group-name}

To list the syntax groups in one cluster: E392 LINK

:sy[ntax] list @{cluster-name}

See above for other arguments for the ":syntax" command.

Note that the ":syntax" command can be abbreviated to ":sy", although ":syn"

is mostly used, because it looks better.

==============================================================================

12. Highlight command :highlight :hi E28 E411 E415LINK

There are three types of highlight groups:

- The ones used for specific languages. For these the name starts with the

name of the language. Many of these don't have any attributes, but are

linked to a group of the second type.

- The ones used for all syntax languages.

- The ones used for the 'highlight' option.

hitest.vimLINK

You can see all the groups currently active with this command:

:so $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/hitest.vim

This will open a new window containing all highlight group names, displayed

in their own color.

:colo :colorscheme E185LINK

:colo[rscheme] Output the name of the currently active color scheme.

This is basically the same as

:echo g:colors_name

In case g:colors_name has not been defined :colo will

output "default". When compiled without the +eval

feature it will output "unknown".

:colo[rscheme] {name} Load color scheme {name}. This searches 'runtimepath'

for the file "colors/{name}.vim". The first one that

is found is loaded.

To see the name of the currently active color scheme:

:colo

The name is also stored in the g:colors_name variable.

Doesn't work recursively, thus you can't use

":colorscheme" in a color scheme script.

After the color scheme has been loaded the

ColorScheme autocommand event is triggered.

For info about writing a colorscheme file:

:edit $VIMRUNTIME/colors/README.txt

:hi[ghlight] List all the current highlight groups that have

attributes set.

:hi[ghlight] {group-name}

List one highlight group.

:hi[ghlight] clear Reset all highlighting to the defaults. Removes all

highlighting for groups added by the user!

Uses the current value of 'background' to decide which

default colors to use.

:hi[ghlight] clear {group-name}

:hi[ghlight] {group-name} NONE

Disable the highlighting for one highlight group. It

is _not_ set back to the default colors.

:hi[ghlight] [default] {group-name} {key}={arg} ..

Add a highlight group, or change the highlighting for

an existing group.

See highlight-args for the {key}={arg} arguments.

See :highlight-default for the optional [default]

argument.

Normally a highlight group is added once when starting up. This sets the

default values for the highlighting. After that, you can use additional

highlight commands to change the arguments that you want to set to non-default

values. The value "NONE" can be used to switch the value off or go back to

the default value.

A simple way to change colors is with the :colorscheme command. This loads

a file with ":highlight" commands such as this:

:hi Comment gui=bold

Note that all settings that are not included remain the same, only the

specified field is used, and settings are merged with previous ones. So, the

result is like this single command has been used:

:hi Comment term=bold ctermfg=Cyan guifg=#80a0ff gui=bold

:highlight-verboseLINK

When listing a highlight group and 'verbose' is non-zero, the listing will

also tell where it was last set. Example:

:verbose hi Comment

Comment xxx term=bold ctermfg=4 guifg=Blue

Last set from /home/mool/vim/vim7/runtime/syntax/syncolor.vim

When ":hi clear" is used then the script where this command is used will be

mentioned for the default values. See :verbose-cmd for more information.

highlight-args E416 E417 E423LINK

There are three types of terminals for highlighting:

term a normal terminal (vt100, xterm)

cterm a color terminal (MS-DOS console, color-xterm, these have the "Co"

termcap entry)

gui the GUI

For each type the highlighting can be given. This makes it possible to use

the same syntax file on all terminals, and use the optimal highlighting.

1. highlight arguments for normal terminals

bold underline undercurlLINK

inverse italic standoutLINK

term={attr-list} attr-list highlight-term E418LINK

attr-list is a comma separated list (without spaces) of the

following items (in any order):

bold

underline

undercurl not always available

reverse

inverse same as reverse

italic

standout

NONE no attributes used (used to reset it)

Note that "bold" can be used here and by using a bold font. They

have the same effect.

"undercurl" is a curly underline. When "undercurl" is not possible

then "underline" is used. In general "undercurl" is only available in

the GUI. The color is set with highlight-guisp.

start={term-list} highlight-start E422LINK

stop={term-list} term-list highlight-stopLINK

These lists of terminal codes can be used to get

non-standard attributes on a terminal.

The escape sequence specified with the "start" argument

is written before the characters in the highlighted

area. It can be anything that you want to send to the

terminal to highlight this area. The escape sequence

specified with the "stop" argument is written after the

highlighted area. This should undo the "start" argument.

Otherwise the screen will look messed up.

The {term-list} can have two forms:

1. A string with escape sequences.

This is any string of characters, except that it can't start with

"t_" and blanks are not allowed. The <> notation is recognized

here, so you can use things like "<Esc>" and "<Space>". Example:

start=<Esc>[27h;<Esc>[<Space>r;

2. A list of terminal codes.

Each terminal code has the form "t_xx", where "xx" is the name of

the termcap entry. The codes have to be separated with commas.

White space is not allowed. Example:

start=t_C1,t_BL

The terminal codes must exist for this to work.

2. highlight arguments for color terminals

cterm={attr-list} highlight-ctermLINK

See above for the description of {attr-list} attr-list.

The "cterm" argument is likely to be different from "term", when

colors are used. For example, in a normal terminal comments could

be underlined, in a color terminal they can be made Blue.

Note: Many terminals (e.g., DOS console) can't mix these attributes

with coloring. Use only one of "cterm=" OR "ctermfg=" OR "ctermbg=".

ctermfg={color-nr} highlight-ctermfg E421LINK

ctermbg={color-nr} highlight-ctermbgLINK

The {color-nr} argument is a color number. Its range is zero to

(not including) the number given by the termcap entry "Co".

The actual color with this number depends on the type of terminal

and its settings. Sometimes the color also depends on the settings of

"cterm". For example, on some systems "cterm=bold ctermfg=3" gives

another color, on others you just get color 3.

For an xterm this depends on your resources, and is a bit

unpredictable. See your xterm documentation for the defaults. The

colors for a color-xterm can be changed from the .Xdefaults file.

Unfortunately this means that it's not possible to get the same colors

for each user. See xterm-color for info about color xterms.

The MSDOS standard colors are fixed (in a console window), so these

have been used for the names. But the meaning of color names in X11

are fixed, so these color settings have been used, to make the

highlighting settings portable (complicated, isn't it?). The

following names are recognized, with the color number used:

cterm-colorsLINK

NR-16 NR-8 COLOR NAME

0 0 Black

1 4 DarkBlue

2 2 DarkGreen

3 6 DarkCyan

4 1 DarkRed

5 5 DarkMagenta

6 3 Brown, DarkYellow

7 7 LightGray, LightGrey, Gray, Grey

8 0* DarkGray, DarkGrey

9 4* Blue, LightBlue

10 2* Green, LightGreen

11 6* Cyan, LightCyan

12 1* Red, LightRed

13 5* Magenta, LightMagenta

14 3* Yellow, LightYellow

15 7* White

The number under "NR-16" is used for 16-color terminals ('t_Co'

greater than or equal to 16). The number under "NR-8" is used for

8-color terminals ('t_Co' less than 16). The '*' indicates that the

bold attribute is set for ctermfg. In many 8-color terminals (e.g.,

"linux"), this causes the bright colors to appear. This doesn't work

for background colors! Without the '*' the bold attribute is removed.

If you want to set the bold attribute in a different way, put a

"cterm=" argument AFTER the "ctermfg=" or "ctermbg=" argument. Or use

a number instead of a color name.

The case of the color names is ignored.

Note that for 16 color ansi style terminals (including xterms), the

numbers in the NR-8 column is used. Here '*' means 'add 8' so that Blue

is 12, DarkGray is 8 etc.

Note that for some color terminals these names may result in the wrong

colors!

:hi-normal-ctermLINK

When setting the "ctermfg" or "ctermbg" colors for the Normal group,

these will become the colors used for the non-highlighted text.

Example:

:highlight Normal ctermfg=grey ctermbg=darkblue

When setting the "ctermbg" color for the Normal group, the

'background' option will be adjusted automatically. This causes the

highlight groups that depend on 'background' to change! This means

you should set the colors for Normal first, before setting other

colors.

When a colorscheme is being used, changing 'background' causes it to

be reloaded, which may reset all colors (including Normal). First

delete the "g:colors_name" variable when you don't want this.

When you have set "ctermfg" or "ctermbg" for the Normal group, Vim

needs to reset the color when exiting. This is done with the "op"

termcap entry t_op. If this doesn't work correctly, try setting the

't_op' option in your .vimrc.

E419 E420LINK

When Vim knows the normal foreground and background colors, "fg" and

"bg" can be used as color names. This only works after setting the

colors for the Normal group and for the MS-DOS console. Example, for

reverse video:

:highlight Visual ctermfg=bg ctermbg=fg

Note that the colors are used that are valid at the moment this

command are given. If the Normal group colors are changed later, the

"fg" and "bg" colors will not be adjusted.

3. highlight arguments for the GUI

gui={attr-list} highlight-guiLINK

These give the attributes to use in the GUI mode.

See attr-list for a description.

Note that "bold" can be used here and by using a bold font. They

have the same effect.

Note that the attributes are ignored for the "Normal" group.

font={font-name} highlight-fontLINK

font-name is the name of a font, as it is used on the system Vim

runs on. For X11 this is a complicated name, for example:

font=-misc-fixed-bold-r-normal--14-130-75-75-c-70-iso8859-1

The font-name "NONE" can be used to revert to the default font.

When setting the font for the "Normal" group, this becomes the default

font (until the 'guifont' option is changed; the last one set is

used).

The following only works with Motif and Athena, not with other GUIs:

When setting the font for the "Menu" group, the menus will be changed.

When setting the font for the "Tooltip" group, the tooltips will be

changed.

All fonts used, except for Menu and Tooltip, should be of the same

character size as the default font! Otherwise redrawing problems will

occur.

guifg={color-name} highlight-guifgLINK

guibg={color-name} highlight-guibgLINK

guisp={color-name} highlight-guispLINK

These give the foreground (guifg), background (guibg) and special

(guisp) color to use in the GUI. "guisp" is used for undercurl.

There are a few special names:

NONE no color (transparent)

bg use normal background color

background use normal background color

fg use normal foreground color

foreground use normal foreground color

To use a color name with an embedded space or other special character,

put it in single quotes. The single quote cannot be used then.

Example:

:hi comment guifg='salmon pink'

gui-colorsLINK

Suggested color names (these are available on most systems):

Red LightRed DarkRed

Green LightGreen DarkGreen SeaGreen

Blue LightBlue DarkBlue SlateBlue

Cyan LightCyan DarkCyan

Magenta LightMagenta DarkMagenta

Yellow LightYellow Brown DarkYellow

Gray LightGray DarkGray

Black White

Orange Purple Violet

In the Win32 GUI version, additional system colors are available. See

win32-colors.

You can also specify a color by its Red, Green and Blue values.

The format is "#rrggbb", where

"rr" is the Red value

"gg" is the Green value

"bb" is the Blue value

All values are hexadecimal, range from "00" to "ff". Examples:

:highlight Comment guifg=#11f0c3 guibg=#ff00ff

highlight-groups highlight-defaultLINK

These are the default highlighting groups. These groups are used by the

'highlight' option default. Note that the highlighting depends on the value

of 'background'. You can see the current settings with the ":highlight"

command.

hl-ColorColumnLINK

ColorColumn used for the columns set with 'colorcolumn'

hl-ConcealLINK

Conceal placeholder characters substituted for concealed

text (see 'conceallevel')

hl-CursorLINK

Cursor the character under the cursor

hl-CursorIMLINK

CursorIM like Cursor, but used when in IME mode CursorIM

hl-CursorColumnLINK

CursorColumn the screen column that the cursor is in when 'cursorcolumn' is

set

hl-CursorLineLINK

CursorLine the screen line that the cursor is in when 'cursorline' is

set

hl-DirectoryLINK

Directory directory names (and other special names in listings)

hl-DiffAddLINK

DiffAdd diff mode: Added line diff.txt

hl-DiffChangeLINK

DiffChange diff mode: Changed line diff.txt

hl-DiffDeleteLINK

DiffDelete diff mode: Deleted line diff.txt

hl-DiffTextLINK

DiffText diff mode: Changed text within a changed line diff.txt

hl-ErrorMsgLINK

ErrorMsg error messages on the command line

hl-VertSplitLINK

VertSplit the column separating vertically split windows

hl-FoldedLINK

Folded line used for closed folds

hl-FoldColumnLINK

FoldColumn 'foldcolumn'

hl-SignColumnLINK

SignColumn column where signs are displayed

hl-IncSearchLINK

IncSearch 'incsearch' highlighting; also used for the text replaced with

":s///c"

hl-LineNrLINK

LineNr Line number for ":number" and ":#" commands, and when 'number'

or 'relativenumber' option is set.

hl-CursorLineNrLINK

CursorLineNr Like LineNr when 'cursorline' or 'relativenumber' is set for

the cursor line.

hl-MatchParenLINK

MatchParen The character under the cursor or just before it, if it

is a paired bracket, and its match. pi_paren.txt

hl-ModeMsgLINK

ModeMsg 'showmode' message (e.g., "-- INSERT --")

hl-MoreMsgLINK

MoreMsg more-prompt

hl-NonTextLINK

NonText '~' and '@' at the end of the window, characters from

'showbreak' and other characters that do not really exist in

the text (e.g., ">" displayed when a double-wide character

doesn't fit at the end of the line).

hl-NormalLINK

Normal normal text

hl-PmenuLINK

Pmenu Popup menu: normal item.

hl-PmenuSelLINK

PmenuSel Popup menu: selected item.

hl-PmenuSbarLINK

PmenuSbar Popup menu: scrollbar.

hl-PmenuThumbLINK

PmenuThumb Popup menu: Thumb of the scrollbar.

hl-QuestionLINK

Question hit-enter prompt and yes/no questions

hl-SearchLINK

Search Last search pattern highlighting (see 'hlsearch').

Also used for highlighting the current line in the quickfix

window and similar items that need to stand out.

hl-SpecialKeyLINK

SpecialKey Meta and special keys listed with ":map", also for text used

to show unprintable characters in the text, 'listchars'.

Generally: text that is displayed differently from what it

really is.

hl-SpellBadLINK

SpellBad Word that is not recognized by the spellchecker. spell

This will be combined with the highlighting used otherwise.

hl-SpellCapLINK

SpellCap Word that should start with a capital. spell

This will be combined with the highlighting used otherwise.

hl-SpellLocalLINK

SpellLocal Word that is recognized by the spellchecker as one that is

used in another region. spell

This will be combined with the highlighting used otherwise.

hl-SpellRareLINK

SpellRare Word that is recognized by the spellchecker as one that is

hardly ever used. spell

This will be combined with the highlighting used otherwise.

hl-StatusLineLINK

StatusLine status line of current window

hl-StatusLineNCLINK

StatusLineNC status lines of not-current windows

Note: if this is equal to "StatusLine" Vim will use "^^^" in

the status line of the current window.

hl-TabLineLINK

TabLine tab pages line, not active tab page label

hl-TabLineFillLINK

TabLineFill tab pages line, where there are no labels

hl-TabLineSelLINK

TabLineSel tab pages line, active tab page label

hl-TitleLINK

Title titles for output from ":set all", ":autocmd" etc.

hl-VisualLINK

Visual Visual mode selection

hl-VisualNOSLINK

VisualNOS Visual mode selection when vim is "Not Owning the Selection".

Only X11 Gui's gui-x11 and xterm-clipboard supports this.

hl-WarningMsgLINK

WarningMsg warning messages

hl-WildMenuLINK

WildMenu current match in 'wildmenu' completion

hl-User1 hl-User1..9 hl-User9LINK

The 'statusline' syntax allows the use of 9 different highlights in the

statusline and ruler (via 'rulerformat'). The names are User1 to User9.

For the GUI you can use the following groups to set the colors for the menu,

scrollbars and tooltips. They don't have defaults. This doesn't work for the

Win32 GUI. Only three highlight arguments have any effect here: font, guibg,

and guifg.

hl-MenuLINK

Menu Current font, background and foreground colors of the menus.

Also used for the toolbar.

Applicable highlight arguments: font, guibg, guifg.

NOTE: For Motif and Athena the font argument actually

specifies a fontset at all times, no matter if 'guifontset' is

empty, and as such it is tied to the current :language when

set.

hl-ScrollbarLINK

Scrollbar Current background and foreground of the main window's

scrollbars.

Applicable highlight arguments: guibg, guifg.

hl-TooltipLINK

Tooltip Current font, background and foreground of the tooltips.

Applicable highlight arguments: font, guibg, guifg.

NOTE: For Motif and Athena the font argument actually

specifies a fontset at all times, no matter if 'guifontset' is

empty, and as such it is tied to the current :language when

set.

==============================================================================

13. Linking groups :hi-link :highlight-link E412 E413LINK

When you want to use the same highlighting for several syntax groups, you

can do this more easily by linking the groups into one common highlight

group, and give the color attributes only for that group.

To set a link:

:hi[ghlight][!] [default] link {from-group} {to-group}

To remove a link:

:hi[ghlight][!] [default] link {from-group} NONE

Notes: E414LINK

- If the {from-group} and/or {to-group} doesn't exist, it is created. You

don't get an error message for a non-existing group.

- As soon as you use a ":highlight" command for a linked group, the link is

removed.

- If there are already highlight settings for the {from-group}, the link is

not made, unless the '!' is given. For a ":highlight link" command in a

sourced file, you don't get an error message. This can be used to skip

links for groups that already have settings.

:hi-default :highlight-defaultLINK

The [default] argument is used for setting the default highlighting for a

group. If highlighting has already been specified for the group the command

will be ignored. Also when there is an existing link.

Using [default] is especially useful to overrule the highlighting of a

specific syntax file. For example, the C syntax file contains:

:highlight default link cComment Comment

If you like Question highlighting for C comments, put this in your vimrc file:

:highlight link cComment Question

Without the "default" in the C syntax file, the highlighting would be

overruled when the syntax file is loaded.

==============================================================================

14. Cleaning up :syn-clear E391LINK

If you want to clear the syntax stuff for the current buffer, you can use this

command:

:syntax clear

This command should be used when you want to switch off syntax highlighting,

or when you want to switch to using another syntax. It's normally not needed

in a syntax file itself, because syntax is cleared by the autocommands that

load the syntax file.

The command also deletes the "b:current_syntax" variable, since no syntax is

loaded after this command.

If you want to disable syntax highlighting for all buffers, you need to remove

the autocommands that load the syntax files:

:syntax off

What this command actually does, is executing the command

:source $VIMRUNTIME/syntax/nosyntax.vim

See the "nosyntax.vim" file for details. Note that for this to work

$VIMRUNTIME must be valid. See $VIMRUNTIME.

To clean up specific syntax groups for the current buffer:

:syntax clear {group-name} ..

This removes all patterns and keywords for {group-name}.

To clean up specific syntax group lists for the current buffer:

:syntax clear @{grouplist-name} ..

This sets {grouplist-name}'s contents to an empty list.

:syntax-reset :syn-resetLINK

If you have changed the colors and messed them up, use this command to get the

defaults back:

:syntax reset

This doesn't change the colors for the 'highlight' option.

Note that the syntax colors that you set in your vimrc file will also be reset

back to their Vim default.

Note that if you are using a color scheme, the colors defined by the color

scheme for syntax highlighting will be lost.

What this actually does is:

let g:syntax_cmd = "reset"

runtime! syntax/syncolor.vim

Note that this uses the 'runtimepath' option.

syncolorLINK

If you want to use different colors for syntax highlighting, you can add a Vim

script file to set these colors. Put this file in a directory in

'runtimepath' which comes after $VIMRUNTIME, so that your settings overrule

the default colors. This way these colors will be used after the ":syntax

reset" command.

For Unix you can use the file ~/.vim/after/syntax/syncolor.vim. Example:

if &background == "light"

highlight comment ctermfg=darkgreen guifg=darkgreen

else

highlight comment ctermfg=green guifg=green

endif

*E679*LINK

Do make sure this syncolor.vim script does not use a "syntax on", set the

'background' option or uses a "colorscheme" command, because it results in an

endless loop.

Note that when a color scheme is used, there might be some confusion whether

your defined colors are to be used or the colors from the scheme. This

depends on the color scheme file. See :colorscheme.

syntax_cmdLINK

The "syntax_cmd" variable is set to one of these values when the

syntax/syncolor.vim files are loaded:

"on" ":syntax on" command. Highlight colors are overruled but

links are kept

"enable" ":syntax enable" command. Only define colors for groups that

don't have highlighting yet. Use ":syntax default".

"reset" ":syntax reset" command or loading a color scheme. Define all

the colors.

"skip" Don't define colors. Used to skip the default settings when a

syncolor.vim file earlier in 'runtimepath' has already set

them.

==============================================================================

15. Highlighting tags tag-highlightLINK

If you want to highlight all the tags in your file, you can use the following

mappings.

<F11> -- Generate tags.vim file, and highlight tags.

<F12> -- Just highlight tags based on existing tags.vim file.

:map <F11> :sp tags<CR>:%s/^\([^ :]*:\)\=\([^ ]*\).*/syntax keyword Tag \2/<CR>:wq! tags.vim<CR>/^<CR><F12>

:map <F12> :so tags.vim<CR>

WARNING: The longer the tags file, the slower this will be, and the more

memory Vim will consume.

Only highlighting typedefs, unions and structs can be done too. For this you

must use Exuberant ctags (found at http://ctags.sf.net).

Put these lines in your Makefile:

# Make a highlight file for types. Requires Exuberant ctags and awk

types: types.vim

types.vim: *.[ch]

ctags --c-kinds=gstu -o- *.[ch] |\

awk 'BEGIN{printf("syntax keyword Type\t")}\

{printf("%s ", $$1)}END{print ""}' > $@

And put these lines in your .vimrc:

" load the types.vim highlighting file, if it exists

autocmd BufRead,BufNewFile *.[ch] let fname = expand('<afile>:p:h') . '/types.vim'

autocmd BufRead,BufNewFile *.[ch] if filereadable(fname)

autocmd BufRead,BufNewFile *.[ch] exe 'so ' . fname

autocmd BufRead,BufNewFile *.[ch] endif

==============================================================================

16. Window-local syntax :ownsyntaxLINK

Normally all windows on a buffer share the same syntax settings. It is

possible, however, to set a particular window on a file to have its own

private syntax setting. A possible example would be to edit LaTeX source

with conventional highlighting in one window, while seeing the same source

highlighted differently (so as to hide control sequences and indicate bold,

italic etc regions) in another. The 'scrollbind' option is useful here.

To set the current window to have the syntax "foo", separately from all other

windows on the buffer:

:ownsyntax foo

w:current_syntaxLINK

This will set the "w:current_syntax" variable to "foo". The value of

"b:current_syntax" does not change. This is implemented by saving and

restoring "b:current_syntax", since the syntax files do set

"b:current_syntax". The value set by the syntax file is assigned to

"w:current_syntax".

Note: This resets the 'spell', 'spellcapcheck' and 'spellfile' options.

Once a window has its own syntax, syntax commands executed from other windows

on the same buffer (including :syntax clear) have no effect. Conversely,

syntax commands executed from that window do not affect other windows on the

same buffer.

A window with its own syntax reverts to normal behavior when another buffer

is loaded into that window or the file is reloaded.

When splitting the window, the new window will use the original syntax.

==============================================================================

17. Color xterms xterm-color color-xtermLINK

Most color xterms have only eight colors. If you don't get colors with the

default setup, it should work with these lines in your .vimrc:

:if &term =~ "xterm"

: if has("terminfo")

: set t_Co=8

: set t_Sf=<Esc>[3%p1%dm

: set t_Sb=<Esc>[4%p1%dm

: else

: set t_Co=8

: set t_Sf=<Esc>[3%dm

: set t_Sb=<Esc>[4%dm

: endif

:endif

[<Esc> is a real escape, type CTRL-V <Esc>]

You might want to change the first "if" to match the name of your terminal,

e.g. "dtterm" instead of "xterm".

Note: Do these settings BEFORE doing ":syntax on". Otherwise the colors may

be wrong.

xiterm rxvtLINK

The above settings have been mentioned to work for xiterm and rxvt too.

But for using 16 colors in an rxvt these should work with terminfo:

:set t_AB=<Esc>[%?%p1%{8}%<%t25;%p1%{40}%+%e5;%p1%{32}%+%;%dm

:set t_AF=<Esc>[%?%p1%{8}%<%t22;%p1%{30}%+%e1;%p1%{22}%+%;%dm

colortest.vimLINK

To test your color setup, a file has been included in the Vim distribution.

To use it, execute this command:

:runtime syntax/colortest.vim

Some versions of xterm (and other terminals, like the Linux console) can

output lighter foreground colors, even though the number of colors is defined

at 8. Therefore Vim sets the "cterm=bold" attribute for light foreground

colors, when 't_Co' is 8.

xfree-xtermLINK

To get 16 colors or more, get the newest xterm version (which should be

included with XFree86 3.3 and later). You can also find the latest version

at:

http://invisible-island.net/xterm/xterm.html

Here is a good way to configure it. This uses 88 colors and enables the

termcap-query feature, which allows Vim to ask the xterm how many colors it

supports.

./configure --disable-bold-color --enable-88-color --enable-tcap-query

If you only get 8 colors, check the xterm compilation settings.

(Also see UTF8-xterm for using this xterm with UTF-8 character encoding).

This xterm should work with these lines in your .vimrc (for 16 colors):

:if has("terminfo")

: set t_Co=16

: set t_AB=<Esc>[%?%p1%{8}%<%t%p1%{40}%+%e%p1%{92}%+%;%dm

: set t_AF=<Esc>[%?%p1%{8}%<%t%p1%{30}%+%e%p1%{82}%+%;%dm

:else

: set t_Co=16

: set t_Sf=<Esc>[3%dm

: set t_Sb=<Esc>[4%dm

:endif

[<Esc> is a real escape, type CTRL-V <Esc>]

Without +terminfo, Vim will recognize these settings, and automatically

translate cterm colors of 8 and above to "<Esc>[9%dm" and "<Esc>[10%dm".

Colors above 16 are also translated automatically.

For 256 colors this has been reported to work:

:set t_AB=<Esc>[48;5;%dm

:set t_AF=<Esc>[38;5;%dm

Or just set the TERM environment variable to "xterm-color" or "xterm-16color"

and try if that works.

You probably want to use these X resources (in your ~/.Xdefaults file):

XTerm*color0: #000000

XTerm*color1: #c00000

XTerm*color2: #008000

XTerm*color3: #808000

XTerm*color4: #0000c0

XTerm*color5: #c000c0

XTerm*color6: #008080

XTerm*color7: #c0c0c0

XTerm*color8: #808080

XTerm*color9: #ff6060

XTerm*color10: #00ff00

XTerm*color11: #ffff00

XTerm*color12: #8080ff

XTerm*color13: #ff40ff

XTerm*color14: #00ffff

XTerm*color15: #ffffff

Xterm*cursorColor: Black

[Note: The cursorColor is required to work around a bug, which changes the

cursor color to the color of the last drawn text. This has been fixed by a

newer version of xterm, but not everybody is using it yet.]

To get these right away, reload the .Xdefaults file to the X Option database

Manager (you only need to do this when you just changed the .Xdefaults file):

xrdb -merge ~/.Xdefaults

xterm-blink xterm-blinking-cursorLINK

To make the cursor blink in an xterm, see tools/blink.c. Or use Thomas

Dickey's xterm above patchlevel 107 (see above for where to get it), with

these resources:

XTerm*cursorBlink: on

XTerm*cursorOnTime: 400

XTerm*cursorOffTime: 250

XTerm*cursorColor: White

hpterm-colorLINK

These settings work (more or less) for an hpterm, which only supports 8

foreground colors:

:if has("terminfo")

: set t_Co=8

: set t_Sf=<Esc>[&v%p1%dS

: set t_Sb=<Esc>[&v7S

:else

: set t_Co=8

: set t_Sf=<Esc>[&v%dS

: set t_Sb=<Esc>[&v7S

:endif

[<Esc> is a real escape, type CTRL-V <Esc>]

Eterm enlightened-terminalLINK

These settings have been reported to work for the Enlightened terminal

emulator, or Eterm. They might work for all xterm-like terminals that use the

bold attribute to get bright colors. Add an ":if" like above when needed.

:set t_Co=16

:set t_AF=^[[%?%p1%{8}%<%t3%p1%d%e%p1%{22}%+%d;1%;m

:set t_AB=^[[%?%p1%{8}%<%t4%p1%d%e%p1%{32}%+%d;1%;m

TTpro-telnetLINK

These settings should work for TTpro telnet. Tera Term Pro is a freeware /

open-source program for MS-Windows.

set t_Co=16

set t_AB=^[[%?%p1%{8}%<%t%p1%{40}%+%e%p1%{32}%+5;%;%dm

set t_AF=^[[%?%p1%{8}%<%t%p1%{30}%+%e%p1%{22}%+1;%;%dm

Also make sure TTpro's Setup / Window / Full Color is enabled, and make sure

that Setup / Font / Enable Bold is NOT enabled.

(info provided by John Love-Jensen <eljay@Adobe.COM>)

==============================================================================

18. When syntax is slow :syntimeLINK

This is aimed at authors of a syntax file.

If your syntax causes redrawing to be slow, here are a few hints on making it

faster. To see slowness switch on some features that usually interfere, such

as 'relativenumber' and folding.

Note: this is only available when compiled with the +profile feature.

You many need to build Vim with "huge" features.

To find out what patterns are consuming most time, get an overview with this

sequence:

:syntime on

[ redraw the text at least once with CTRL-L ]

:syntime report

This will display a list of syntax patterns that were used, sorted by the time

it took to match them against the text.

:syntime on Start measuring syntax times. This will add some

overhead to compute the time spent on syntax pattern

matching.

:syntime off Stop measuring syntax times.

:syntime clear Set all the counters to zero, restart measuring.

:syntime report Show the syntax items used since ":syntime on" in the

current window. Use a wider display to see more of

the output.

The list is sorted by total time. The columns are:

TOTAL Total time in seconds spent on

matching this pattern.

COUNT Number of times the pattern was used.

MATCH Number of times the pattern actually

matched

SLOWEST The longest time for one try.

AVERAGE The average time for one try.

NAME Name of the syntax item. Note that

this is not unique.

PATTERN The pattern being used.

Pattern matching gets slow when it has to try many alternatives. Try to

include as much literal text as possible to reduce the number of ways a

pattern does NOT match.

When using the "\@<=" and "\@<!" items, add a maximum size to avoid trying at

all positions in the current and previous line. For example, if the item is

literal text specify the size of that text (in bytes):

"<\@<=span" Matches "span" in "<span". This tries matching with "<" in

many places.

"<\@1<=span" Matches the same, but only tries one byte before "span".

vim:tw=78:sw=4:ts=8:ft=help:norl: