hugo-theme-relearn/exampleSite/content/shortcodes/highlight.en.md

6.8 KiB

+++ description = "Render code with a syntax highlighter" title = "Highlight" +++

The highlight shortcode renders your code with a syntax highlighter.

{{< highlight lineNos="true" type="py" wrap="true" title="python" >}} print("Hello World!") {{< /highlight >}}

Usage

This shortcode is fully compatible with Hugo's highlight shortcode but offers some extensions.

It is called interchangeably in the same way as Hugo's own shortcode providing positional parameter or by simply using codefences.

You are free to also call this shortcode from your own partials. In this case it resembles Hugo's highlight function syntax if you call this shortcode as a partial using compatiblity syntax.

While the examples are using shortcodes with named parameter it is recommended to use codefences instead. This is because more and more other software supports codefences (eg. GitHub) and so your markdown becomes more portable.

{{< tabs groupid="shortcode-parameter">}} {{% tab title="codefence" %}}

```py { lineNos="true" wrap="true" title="python" }
print("Hello World!")
```

{{% /tab %}} {{% tab title="shortcode" %}}

{{</* highlight lineNos="true" type="py" wrap="true" title="python" */>}}
print("Hello World!")
{{</* /highlight */>}}

{{% /tab %}} {{% tab title="shortcode (positional)" %}}

{{</* highlight py "lineNos=true,wrap=true,title=python" */>}}
print("Hello World!")
{{</* /highlight */>}}

{{% /tab %}} {{% tab title="partial" %}}

{{ partial "shortcodes/highlight.html" (dict
  "page"    .
  "content" "print(\"Hello World!\")"
  "lineNos" "true"
  "type"    "py"
  "wrap"    "true"
  "title"   "python"
)}}

{{% /tab %}} {{% tab title="partial (compat)" %}}

{{ partial "shortcodes/highlight.html" (dict
  "page"    .
  "content" "print(\"Hello World!\")"
  "options" "lineNos=true,wrap=true,title=python"
  "type"    "py"
)}}

{{% /tab %}} {{< /tabs >}}

Parameter

Name Position Default Notes
type 1 <empty> The language of the code to highlight. Choose from one of the supported languages. Case-insensitive.
title <empty> Extension. Arbitrary title for code. This displays the code like a [single tab]({{% relref "shortcodes/tab" %}}) if hl_inline=false (which is Hugos default).
wrap see notes Extension. When true the content may wrap on long lines otherwise it will be scrollable.

The default value can be set in your config.toml and overwritten via frontmatter. See below.
options 2 <empty> An optional, comma-separated list of zero or more Hugo supported options as well as extension parameter from this table.
<option> <empty> Any of Hugo's supported options.
<content> <empty> Your code to highlight.

Configuration

Default values for Hugo's supported options can be set via goldmark settings in your config.toml

Default values for extension options can be set via params settings in your config.toml or be overwritten by frontmatter for each individual page.

Global Configuration File

[markup]
  [markup.highlight]
    # line numbers in a table layout will shift if code is wrapping, so better
    # use inline; besides that visually both layouts have the same look and behavior
    lineNumbersInTable = false

    # if `guessSyntax = true`, there will be no unstyled code even if no language
    # was given BUT Mermaid and Math codefences will not work anymore! So this is a
    # mandatory setting for your site if you want to use Mermaid or Math codefences
    guessSyntax = false

    # the shipped variants come with their own modified chroma syntax highlightning
    # style which is imported in theme-relearn-light.css, theme-relearn-dark.css, etc.;
    # if you want to use a predefined style instead:
    # - remove `noClasses` or set `noClasses = true`
    # - set `style` to a predefined style name
    noClasses = false
    # style = "tango"

Optional Settings

[params]
  highlightWrap = true

Page's Frontmatter

+++
highlightWrap = true
+++

Examples

Line Numbers with Starting Offset

As mentioned above, line numbers in a table layout will shift if code is wrapping, so better use inline. To make things easier for you, set lineNumbersInTable = false in your config.toml and add lineNos = true when calling the shortcode instead of the specific values table or inline.

{{</* highlight lineNos="true" lineNoStart="666" type="py" */>}}
# the hardest part is to start writing code; here's a kickstart; just copy and paste this; it's free; the next lines will cost you serious credits
print("Hello")
print(" ")
print("World")
print("!")
{{</* /highlight */>}}

{{< highlight lineNos="true" lineNoStart="666" type="py" >}}

the hardest part is to start writing code; here's a kickstart; just copy and paste this; it's free; the next lines will cost you serious credits

print("Hello") print(" ") print("World") print("!") {{< /highlight >}}

Codefence with Title

```py { title="python" }
# a bit shorter
print("Hello World!")
```
# a bit shorter
print("Hello World!")

With Wrap

{{</* highlight type="py" wrap="true" hl_lines="2" */>}}
# Quicksort Python One-liner
lambda L: [] if L==[] else qsort([x for x in L[1:] if x< L[0]]) + L[0:1] + qsort([x for x in L[1:] if x>=L[0]])
# Some more stuff
{{</* /highlight */>}}

{{< highlight type="py" wrap="true" hl_lines="2" >}}

Quicksort Python One-liner

lambda L: [] if L==[] else qsort([x for x in L[1:] if x< L[0]]) + L[0:1] + qsort([x for x in L[1:] if x>=L[0]])

Some more stuff

{{< /highlight >}}

Without Wrap

{{</* highlight type="py" wrap="false" hl_lines="2" */>}}
# Quicksort Python One-liner
lambda L: [] if L==[] else qsort([x for x in L[1:] if x< L[0]]) + L[0:1] + qsort([x for x in L[1:] if x>=L[0]])
# Some more stuff
{{</* /highlight */>}}

{{< highlight type="py" wrap="false" hl_lines="2">}}

Quicksort Python One-liner

lambda L: [] if L==[] else qsort([x for x in L[1:] if x< L[0]]) + L[0:1] + qsort([x for x in L[1:] if x>=L[0]])

Some more stuff

{{< /highlight >}}