view runtime/syntax/cweb.vim @ 34638:857eb73fb6a7

NSIS: Redesigning the appearance of the vimrc settings page (#14292) Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/6dcf59b89fd4a65df4a68a333a66357c2480d7b0 Author: Restorer <69863286+RestorerZ@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Mon Mar 25 15:38:37 2024 +0000 NSIS: Redesigning the appearance of the vimrc settings page (https://github.com/vim/vim/issues/14292) Signed-off-by: RestorerZ <restorer@mail2k.ru> Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
author Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
date Mon, 25 Mar 2024 16:45:05 +0100
parents 46763b01cd9a
children
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" Vim syntax file
" Language:	CWEB
" Maintainer:	Andreas Scherer <andreas.scherer@pobox.com>
" Last Change:	2011 Dec 25 by Thilo Six

" Details of the CWEB language can be found in the article by Donald E. Knuth
" and Silvio Levy, "The CWEB System of Structured Documentation", included as
" file "cwebman.tex" in the standard CWEB distribution, available for
" anonymous ftp at ftp://labrea.stanford.edu/pub/cweb/.

" TODO: Section names and C/C++ comments should be treated as TeX material.
" TODO: The current version switches syntax highlighting off for section
" TODO: names, and leaves C/C++ comments as such. (On the other hand,
" TODO: switching to TeX mode in C/C++ comments might be colour overkill.)

" quit when a syntax file was already loaded
if exists("b:current_syntax")
  finish
endif

" For starters, read the TeX syntax; TeX syntax items are allowed at the top
" level in the CWEB syntax, e.g., in the preamble.  In general, a CWEB source
" code can be seen as a normal TeX document with some C/C++ material
" interspersed in certain defined regions.
runtime! syntax/tex.vim
unlet b:current_syntax

" Read the C/C++ syntax too; C/C++ syntax items are treated as such in the
" C/C++ section of a CWEB chunk or in inner C/C++ context in "|...|" groups.
syntax include @webIncludedC <sfile>:p:h/cpp.vim

let s:cpo_save = &cpo
set cpo&vim

" Inner C/C++ context (ICC) should be quite simple as it's comprised of
" material in "|...|"; however the naive definition for this region would
" hickup at the innocious "\|" TeX macro.  Note: For the time being we expect
" that an ICC begins either at the start of a line or after some white space.
syntax region webInnerCcontext start="\(^\|[ \t\~`(]\)|" end="|" contains=@webIncludedC,webSectionName,webRestrictedTeX,webIgnoredStuff

" Genuine C/C++ material.  This syntactic region covers both the definition
" part and the C/C++ part of a CWEB section; it is ended by the TeX part of
" the next section.
syntax region webCpart start="@[dfscp<(]" end="@[ \*]" contains=@webIncludedC,webSectionName,webRestrictedTeX,webIgnoredStuff

" Section names contain C/C++ material only in inner context.
syntax region webSectionName start="@[<(]" end="@>" contains=webInnerCcontext contained

" The contents of "control texts" is not treated as TeX material, because in
" non-trivial cases this completely clobbers the syntax recognition.  Instead,
" we highlight these elements as "strings".
syntax region webRestrictedTeX start="@[\^\.:t=q]" end="@>" oneline

" Double-@ means single-@, anywhere in the CWEB source.  (This allows e-mail
" address <someone@@fsf.org> without going into C/C++ mode.)
syntax match webIgnoredStuff "@@"

" Define the default highlighting.
" Only when an item doesn't have highlighting yet

hi def link webRestrictedTeX String


let b:current_syntax = "cweb"

let &cpo = s:cpo_save
unlet s:cpo_save
" vim: ts=8