zsh-syntax-highlighting/highlighters/main
Daniel Shahaf 26a82113b0 'main': Highlight 'sudo' correctly when it's not installed.
No test because _zsh_highlight_main__type() falls back to 'type -w' which runs
'rehash' implicitly, so on systems where 'sudo' is installed it's not possible
to simulate its being absent.

Test by forcing _zsh_highlight_main__type() to return 'none' when the
argument is [[ $1 == 'sudo' ]], and: (1) Run 'make test' and confirm
that all tests either pass, or fail and the first test point that fails
is one that expects "sudo" at command position to be highlighted as
'command'; (2) In an interactive zsh, 'sudo' at command position is
highlighted as an error.
2017-12-07 00:00:13 +00:00
..
test-data 'main': Skip tests that break on msys2 2017-11-06 07:11:55 -06:00
main-highlighter.zsh 'main': Highlight 'sudo' correctly when it's not installed. 2017-12-07 00:00:13 +00:00
README.md

zsh-syntax-highlighting / highlighters / main

This is the main highlighter, that highlights:

  • Commands
  • Options
  • Arguments
  • Paths
  • Strings

This highlighter is active by default.

How to tweak it

This highlighter defines the following styles:

  • unknown-token - unknown tokens / errors
  • reserved-word - shell reserved words (if, for)
  • alias - aliases
  • suffix-alias - suffix aliases (requires zsh 5.1.1 or newer)
  • builtin - shell builtin commands (shift, pwd, zstyle)
  • function - function names
  • command - command names
  • precommand - precommand modifiers (e.g., noglob, builtin)
  • commandseparator - command separation tokens (;, &&)
  • hashed-command - hashed commands
  • path - existing filenames
  • path_pathseparator - path separators in filenames (/); if unset, path is used (default)
  • path_prefix - prefixes of existing filenames
  • path_prefix_pathseparator - path separators in prefixes of existing filenames (/); if unset, path_prefix is used (default)
  • globbing - globbing expressions (*.txt)
  • history-expansion - history expansion expressions (!foo and ^foo^bar)
  • single-hyphen-option - single hyphen options (-o)
  • double-hyphen-option - double hyphen options (--option)
  • back-quoted-argument - backquoted expressions (`foo`)
  • single-quoted-argument - single quoted arguments ('foo')
  • double-quoted-argument - double quoted arguments ("foo")
  • dollar-quoted-argument - dollar quoted arguments ($'foo')
  • dollar-double-quoted-argument - parameter expansion inside double quotes ($foo inside "")
  • back-double-quoted-argument - back double quoted arguments (\x inside "")
  • back-dollar-quoted-argument - back dollar quoted arguments (\x inside $'')
  • assign - parameter assignments
  • redirection - redirection operators (<, >, etc)
  • comment - comments, when setopt INTERACTIVE_COMMENTS is in effect (echo # foo)
  • arg0 - a command word other than one of those enumrated above (other than a command, precommand, alias, function, or shell builtin command).
  • default - everything else

To override one of those styles, change its entry in ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES, for example in ~/.zshrc:

# Declare the variable
typeset -A ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES

# To differentiate aliases from other command types
ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES[alias]='fg=magenta,bold'

# To have paths colored instead of underlined
ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES[path]='fg=cyan'

# To disable highlighting of globbing expressions
ZSH_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES[globbing]='none'

The syntax for values is the same as the syntax of "types of highlighting" of the zsh builtin $zle_highlight array, which is documented in the zshzle(1) manual page.

Useless trivia

Forward compatibility.

zsh-syntax-highlighting attempts to be forward-compatible with zsh. Specifically, we attempt to facilitate highlighting command word types that had not yet been invented when this version of zsh-syntax-highlighting was released.

A command word is something like a function name, external command name, et cetera. (See Simple Commands & Pipelines in zshmisc(1) for a formal definition.)

If a new kind of command word is ever added to zsh — something conceptually different than "function" and "alias" and "external command" — then command words of that (new) kind will be highlighted by the style arg0_$kind, where $kind is the output of type -w on the new kind of command word. If that style is not defined, then the style arg0 will be used instead.