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# Chroma Guide for F-Sy-H
## Motivation
Someone might want to create a detailed highlighting for a **specific program**
and this document helps achieving this. It explains how chroma functions the
code behind such detailed highlighting are constructed and used.
## Keywords
- `chroma` - a shorthand for `chroma function` the thing that literally colorizes selected commands, like `git`, `grep`, etc. invocations, see `chroma function` below,
- `big loop` - main highlighting code, a loop over tokens and at least 2 large structular constructs (big `if` and `case`);
it is advanced, e.g. parses `case` statements, here-string, it basically constitutes 90% of the F-Sy-H project,
- `chroma function` - a plugin-function that is called when a specific command occurs (e.g. when user enters `git` at
command line) suppressing activity of `big loop` (i.e. no standard highlighting unless requested),
- `token` - result of splitting whole command line (i.e. `$BUFFER`, the Zle variable) into bits called tokens, which are
words in general, separated by spaces on the command line.
## Overview Of Functioning
1. Big loop is working token by token processes command line, changes states (e.g. enters state "inside case
statement") and in the end decides on color of the token currently processed.
2. Big loop occurs a command that has a chroma, e.g. `git`.
3. Big loop enters "chroma" state, calls associated chroma function.
4. Chroma takes care of "chroma" state, ensures it will be set also for next token.
5. "chroma" state is active, so all following tokens are routed to the chroma (in general skipping big-loop, see next items),
6. When processing of a single token is complete, the associated chroma returns 0
(shell-truth) to request no further processing by the big loop.
7. It can also return 1 so that single, current token will be passed into big-loop
for processing (to do a standard highlighting).
## Chroma-Function Arguments
- `$1` - 0 or 1, denoting if it's the first call to the chroma, or a following one,
- `$2` - the current token, also accessible by `$\__arg` from the upper scope -
basically a private copy of `$__arg`; the token can be eg.: "grep",
- `$3` - a private copy of `$_start_pos`, i.e. the position of the token in the
command line buffer, used to add region_highlight entry (see man),
because Zsh colorizes by *ranges* applied onto command line buffer (e.g.
`from-10 to-13 fg=red`),
- `$4` - a private copy of `$_end_pos` from the upper scope; denotes where current token
ends (at which index in the string being the command line).
So example invocation could look like this:
----
chroma/-example.ch 1 "grep" "$_start_pos" "$_end_pos"
----
Big-loop will be doing such calls for the user, after occurring a specific chroma-enabled command (like e.g. `awk`), and then until chroma will detect end of this chroma-enabled command (end of whole invocation, with arguments, etc.; in other words, when e.g. new line or `;`-character occurs, etc.).
## Example Chroma-Function
[source,zsh]
----
# -*- mode: sh; sh-indentation: 4; indent-tabs-mode: nil; sh-basic-offset: 4; -*-
# Copyright (c) 2018 Sebastian Gniazdowski
#
# Example chroma function. It colorizes first two arguments as `builtin' style,
# third and following arguments as `globbing' style. First two arguments may
# be "strings", they will be passed through to normal higlighter (by returning 1).
#
# $1 - 0 or 1, denoting if it's first call to the chroma, or following one
#
# $2 - like above document says
#
# $3 - ...
#
# $4 - ...
#
# Other tips are:
# - $CURSOR holds cursor position
# - $BUFFER holds whole command line buffer
# - $LBUFFER holds command line buffer that is left from the cursor, i.e. it's a
# BUFFER substring 1 .. $CURSOR
# - $RBUFFER is the same as LBUFFER but holds part of BUFFER right to the cursor
#
# The function receives $BUFFER but via sequence of tokens, which are shell words,
# e.g. "a b c" is a shell word, while a b c are 3 shell words.
#
# FAST_HIGHLIGHT is a friendly hash array which allows to store strings without
# creating global parameters (variables). If you need hash, go ahead and use it,
# declaring first, under some distinct name like: typeset -gA CHROMA_EXPLE_DICT.
# Remember to reset the hash and others at __first_call == 1, so that you have
# a fresh state for new command.
# Keep chroma-takever state meaning: until ;, handle highlighting via chroma.
# So the below 8192 assignment takes care that next token will be routed to chroma.
(( next_word = 2 | 8192 ))
local __first_call="$1" __wrd="$2" __start_pos="$3" __end_pos="$4"
local __style
integer __idx1 __idx2
(( __first_call )) && {
# Called for the first time - new command.
# FAST_HIGHLIGHT is used because it survives between calls, and
# allows to use a single global hash only, instead of multiple
# global string variables.
FAST_HIGHLIGHT[chroma-example-counter]=0
# Set style for region_highlight entry. It is used below in
# '[[ -n "$__style" ]] ...' line, which adds highlight entry,
# like "10 12 fg=green", through `reply' array.
#
# Could check if command `example' exists and set `unknown-token'
# style instead of `command'
__style=${FAST_THEME_NAME}command
} || {
# Following call, i.e. not the first one
# Check if chroma should end test if token is of type
# "starts new command", if so pass-through chroma ends
[[ "$__arg_type" = 3 ]] && return 2
if [[ "$__wrd" = -* ]]; then
# Detected option, add style for it.
[[ "$__wrd" = --* ]] && __style=${FAST_THEME_NAME}double-hyphen-option || \
__style=${FAST_THEME_NAME}single-hyphen-option
else
# Count non-option tokens
(( FAST_HIGHLIGHT[chroma-example-counter] += 1, __idx1 = FAST_HIGHLIGHT[chroma-example-counter] ))
# Colorize 1..2 as builtin, 3.. as glob
if (( FAST_HIGHLIGHT[chroma-example-counter] <= 2 )); then
if [[ "$__wrd" = \"* ]]; then
# Pass through, fsh main code will do the highlight!
return 1
else
__style=${FAST_THEME_NAME}builtin
fi
else
__style=${FAST_THEME_NAME}globbing
fi
fi
}
# Add region_highlight entry (via `reply' array).
# If 1 will be added to __start_pos, this will highlight "oken".
# If 1 will be subtracted from __end_pos, this will highlight "toke".
# $PREBUFFER is for specific situations when users does command \<ENTER>
# i.e. when multi-line command using backslash is entered.
#
# This is a common place of adding such entry, but any above code can do
# it itself (and it does in other chromas) and skip setting __style to
# this way disable this code.
[[ -n "$__style" ]] && (( __start=__start_pos-${#PREBUFFER}, __end=__end_pos-${#PREBUFFER}, __start >= 0 )) && reply+=("$__start $__end ${FAST_HIGHLIGHT_STYLES[$__style]}")
# We aren't passing-through, do obligatory things ourselves.
# _start_pos=$_end_pos advainces pointers in command line buffer.
(( this_word = next_word ))
_start_pos=$_end_pos
return 0
----