Style guide =========== Key principle ------------- Highlight.js themes are language agnostic. Instead of trying to make a *rich* set of highlightable classes look good in a handful of languages we have a *limited* set of classes that work for all languages. Hence, there are two important implications: * Highlight.js styles tend to be minimalistic. * It's not possible to exactly emulate themes from other highlighting engines. Defining a theme ---------------- A theme is a single CSS defining styles for class names listed in the :doc:`class reference `. The general guideline is to style all available classes, however an author may deliberately choose to exclude some (for example, ``.attr`` is usually left unstyled). You are not required to invent a separate styling for every group of class names, it's perfectly okay to group them: :: .hljs-string, .hljs-section, .hljs-selector-class, .hljs-template-variable, .hljs-deletion { color: #800; } Use as few or as many unique style combinations as you want. Typography and layout dos and don'ts ------------------------------------ Don't use: * non-standard borders/margin/paddings for the root container ``.hljs`` * specific font faces * font size, line height and anything that affects position and size of characters within the container Okay to use: * colors (obviously!) * italic, bold, underlining, etc. * image backgrounds These may seem arbitrary at first but it's what has shown to make sense in practice. There's also a common set of rules that *has* to be defined for the root container verbatim: :: .hljs { display: block; overflow-x: auto; padding: 0.5em; } ``.subst`` ---------- One important caveat: don't forget to style ``.subst``. It's used for parsed sections within strings and almost always should be reset to the default color: :: .hljs, .hljs-subst { color: black; } Contributing ------------ You should include a comment at the top of the CSS file with attribution and other meta data if necessary. The format is free: :: /* Fancy style (c) John Smith */ If you're a new contributor add yourself to the authors list in AUTHORS.en.txt Also update CHANGES.md with your contribution. Send your contribution as a pull request on GitHub.