361 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
361 lines
10 KiB
ReStructuredText
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Mode reference
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==============
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Types
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-----
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Types of attributes values in this reference:
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+------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| identifier | String suitable to be used as a Javascript variable and CSS class name |
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| | (i.e. mostly ``/[A-Za-z0-9_]+/``) |
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+------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| regexp | String representing a Javascript regexp. |
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| | Note that since it's not a literal regexp all back-slashes should be repeated twice |
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+------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| boolean | Javascript boolean: ``true`` or ``false`` |
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+------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| number | Javascript number |
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+------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| object | Javascript object: ``{ ... }`` |
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+------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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| array | Javascript array: ``[ ... ]`` |
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+------------+-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
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Attributes
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----------
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case_insensitive
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: boolean
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Case insensitivity of language keywords and regexps. Used only on the top-level mode.
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aliases
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^^^^^^^
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**type**: array
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A list of additional names (besides the canonical one given by the filename) that can be used to identify a language in HTML classes and in a call to :ref:`getLanguage <getLanguage>`.
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className
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^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: identifier
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The name of the mode. It is used as a class name in HTML markup.
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Multiple modes can have the same name. This is useful when a language has multiple variants of syntax
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for one thing like string in single or double quotes.
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begin
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^^^^^
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**type**: regexp
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Regular expression starting a mode. For example a single quote for strings or two forward slashes for C-style comments.
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If absent, ``begin`` defaults to a regexp that matches anything, so the mode starts immediately.
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end
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^^^
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**type**: regexp
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Regular expression ending a mode. For example a single quote for strings or "$" (end of line) for one-line comments.
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It's often the case that a beginning regular expression defines the entire mode and doesn't need any special ending.
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For example a number can be defined with ``begin: "\\b\\d+"`` which spans all the digits.
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If absent, ``end`` defaults to a regexp that matches anything, so the mode ends immediately.
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Sometimes a mode can end not by itself but implicitly with its containing (parent) mode.
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This is achieved with :ref:`endsWithParent <endsWithParent>` attribute.
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beginKeywords
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: string
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Used instead of ``begin`` for modes starting with keywords to avoid needless repetition:
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::
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{
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begin: '\\b(extends|implements) ',
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keywords: 'extends implements'
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}
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… becomes:
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::
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{
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beginKeywords: 'extends implements'
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}
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Unlike the :ref:`keywords <keywords>` attribute, this one allows only a simple list of space separated keywords.
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If you do need additional features of ``keywords`` or you just need more keywords for this mode you may include ``keywords`` along with ``beginKeywords``.
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.. _endsWithParent:
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endsWithParent
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: boolean
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A flag showing that a mode ends when its parent ends.
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This is best demonstrated by example. In CSS syntax a selector has a set of rules contained within symbols "{" and "}".
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Individual rules separated by ";" but the last one in a set can omit the terminating semicolon:
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::
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p {
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width: 100%; color: red
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}
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This is when ``endsWithParent`` comes into play:
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::
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{
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className: 'rules', begin: '{', end: '}',
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contains: [
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{className: 'rule', /* ... */ end: ';', endsWithParent: true}
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]
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}
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.. _endsParent:
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endsParent
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: boolean
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Forces closing of the parent mode right after the current mode is closed.
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This is used for modes that don't have an easily expressible ending lexeme but
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instead could be closed after the last interesting sub-mode is found.
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Here's an example with two ways of defining functions in Elixir, one using a
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keyword ``do`` and another using a comma:
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::
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def foo :clear, list do
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:ok
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end
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def foo, do: IO.puts "hello world"
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Note that in the first case the parameter list after the function title may also
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include a comma. And if we're only interested in highlighting a title we can
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tell it to end the function definition after itself:
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::
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{
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className: 'function',
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beginKeywords: 'def', end: /\B\b/,
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contains: [
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{
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className: 'title',
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begin: hljs.IDENT_RE, endsParent: true
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}
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]
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}
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(The ``end: /\B\b/`` regex tells function to never end by itself.)
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.. _endSameAsBegin:
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endSameAsBegin
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: boolean
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Acts as ``end`` matching exactly the same string that was found by the
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corresponding ``begin`` regexp.
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For example, in PostgreSQL string constants can uee "dollar quotes",
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consisting of a dollar sign, an optional tag of zero or more characters,
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and another dollar sign. String constant must be ended with the same
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construct using the same tag. It is possible to nest dollar-quoted string
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constants by choosing different tags at each nesting level:
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::
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$foo$
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...
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$bar$ nested $bar$
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...
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$foo$
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In this case you can't simply specify the same regexp for ``begin`` and
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``end`` (say, ``"\\$[a-z]\\$"``), but you can use ``begin: "\\$[a-z]\\$"``
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and ``endSameAsBegin: true``.
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.. _lexemes:
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lexemes
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^^^^^^^
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**type**: regexp
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A regular expression that extracts individual lexemes from language text to find :ref:`keywords <keywords>` among them.
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Default value is ``hljs.IDENT_RE`` which works for most languages.
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.. _keywords:
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keywords
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^^^^^^^^
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**type**: object
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Keyword definition comes in two forms:
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* ``'for while if else weird_voodoo|10 ... '`` -- a string of space-separated keywords with an optional relevance over a pipe
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* ``{'keyword': ' ... ', 'literal': ' ... '}`` -- an object whose keys are names of different kinds of keywords and values are keyword definition strings in the first form
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For detailed explanation see :doc:`Language definition guide </language-guide>`.
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illegal
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^^^^^^^
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**type**: regexp
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A regular expression that defines symbols illegal for the mode.
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When the parser finds a match for illegal expression it immediately drops parsing the whole language altogether.
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excludeBegin, excludeEnd
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: boolean
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Exclude beginning or ending lexemes out of mode's generated markup. For example in CSS syntax a rule ends with a semicolon.
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However visually it's better not to color it as the rule contents. Having ``excludeEnd: true`` forces a ``<span>`` element for the rule to close before the semicolon.
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returnBegin
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^^^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: boolean
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Returns just found beginning lexeme back into parser. This is used when beginning of a sub-mode is a complex expression
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that should not only be found within a parent mode but also parsed according to the rules of a sub-mode.
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Since the parser is effectively goes back it's quite possible to create a infinite loop here so use with caution!
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returnEnd
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^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: boolean
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Returns just found ending lexeme back into parser. This is used for example to parse Javascript embedded into HTML.
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A Javascript block ends with the HTML closing tag ``</script>`` that cannot be parsed with Javascript rules.
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So it is returned back into its parent HTML mode that knows what to do with it.
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Since the parser is effectively goes back it's quite possible to create a infinite loop here so use with caution!
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contains
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^^^^^^^^
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**type**: array
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The list of sub-modes that can be found inside the mode. For detailed explanation see :doc:`Language definition guide </language-guide>`.
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starts
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^^^^^^
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**type**: identifier
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The name of the mode that will start right after the current mode ends. The new mode won't be contained within the current one.
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Currently this attribute is used to highlight Javascript and CSS contained within HTML.
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Tags ``<script>`` and ``<style>`` start sub-modes that use another language definition to parse their contents (see :ref:`subLanguage`).
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variants
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^^^^^^^^
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**type**: array
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Modification to the main definitions of the mode, effectively expanding it into several similar modes
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each having all the attributes from the main definition augmented or overridden by the variants::
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{
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className: 'string',
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contains: [hljs.BACKSLASH_ESCAPE],
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relevance: 0,
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variants: [
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{begin: /"/, end: /"/},
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{begin: /'/, end: /'/, relevance: 1}
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]
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}
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.. _subLanguage:
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subLanguage
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^^^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: string or array
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Highlights the entire contents of the mode with another language.
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When using this attribute there's no point to define internal parsing rules like :ref:`lexemes` or :ref:`keywords`. Also it is recommended to skip ``className`` attribute since the sublanguage will wrap the text in its own ``<span class="language-name">``.
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The value of the attribute controls which language or languages will be used for highlighting:
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* language name: explicit highlighting with the specified language
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* empty array: auto detection with all the languages available
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* array of language names: auto detection constrained to the specified set
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skip
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^^^^
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**type**: boolean
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Skips any markup processing for the mode ensuring that it remains a part of its
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parent buffer along with the starting and the ending lexemes. This works in
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conjunction with the parent's :ref:`subLanguage` when it requires complex
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parsing.
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Consider parsing PHP inside HTML::
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<p><? echo 'PHP'; /* ?> */ ?></p>
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The ``?>`` inside the comment should **not** end the PHP part, so we have to
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handle pairs of ``/* .. */`` to correctly find the ending ``?>``::
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{
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begin: /<\?/, end: /\?>/,
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subLanguage: 'php',
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contains: [{begin: '/\\*', end: '\\*/', skip: true}]
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}
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Without ``skip: true`` every comment would cause the parser to drop out back
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into the HTML mode.
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disableAutodetect
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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**type**: boolean
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Disables autodetection for this language.
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