[![Mend Renovate](https://app.renovatebot.com/images/banner.svg)](https://renovatebot.com) This PR contains the following updates: | Package | Type | Update | Change | Age | Adoption | Passing | Confidence | |---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---| | [esbuild](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild) | | minor | `0.21.5` -> `0.23.0` | [![age](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/age/hermit/esbuild/0.23.0?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![adoption](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/adoption/hermit/esbuild/0.23.0?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![passing](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/compatibility/hermit/esbuild/0.21.5/0.23.0?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![confidence](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/confidence/hermit/esbuild/0.21.5/0.23.0?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | | [github.com/dlclark/regexp2](https://togithub.com/dlclark/regexp2) | require | patch | `v1.11.0` -> `v1.11.2` | [![age](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/age/go/github.com%2fdlclark%2fregexp2/v1.11.2?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![adoption](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/adoption/go/github.com%2fdlclark%2fregexp2/v1.11.2?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![passing](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/compatibility/go/github.com%2fdlclark%2fregexp2/v1.11.0/v1.11.2?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![confidence](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/confidence/go/github.com%2fdlclark%2fregexp2/v1.11.0/v1.11.2?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | | [go](https://togithub.com/golang/go) | | patch | `1.22.4` -> `1.22.5` | [![age](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/age/hermit/go/1.22.5?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![adoption](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/adoption/hermit/go/1.22.5?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![passing](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/compatibility/hermit/go/1.22.4/1.22.5?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![confidence](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/confidence/hermit/go/1.22.4/1.22.5?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | | [watchexec](https://togithub.com/watchexec/watchexec) | | patch | `2.1.1` -> `2.1.2` | [![age](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/age/hermit/watchexec/2.1.2?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![adoption](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/adoption/hermit/watchexec/2.1.2?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![passing](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/compatibility/hermit/watchexec/2.1.1/2.1.2?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | [![confidence](https://developer.mend.io/api/mc/badges/confidence/hermit/watchexec/2.1.1/2.1.2?slim=true)](https://docs.renovatebot.com/merge-confidence/) | --- ### Release Notes <details> <summary>evanw/esbuild (esbuild)</summary> ### [`v0.23.0`](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/blob/HEAD/CHANGELOG.md#0230) [Compare Source](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/compare/v0.22.0...v0.23.0) ***This release deliberately contains backwards-incompatible changes.*** To avoid automatically picking up releases like this, you should either be pinning the exact version of `esbuild` in your `package.json` file (recommended) or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as `^0.22.0` or `~0.22.0`. See npm's documentation about [semver](https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v6/using-npm/semver/) for more information. - Revert the recent change to avoid bundling dependencies for node ([#​3819](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3819)) This release reverts the recent change in version 0.22.0 that made `--packages=external` the default behavior with `--platform=node`. The default is now back to `--packages=bundle`. I've just been made aware that Amazon doesn't pin their dependencies in their "AWS CDK" product, which means that whenever esbuild publishes a new release, many people (potentially everyone?) using their SDK around the world instantly starts using it without Amazon checking that it works first. This change in version 0.22.0 happened to break their SDK. I'm amazed that things haven't broken before this point. This revert attempts to avoid these problems for Amazon's customers. Hopefully Amazon will pin their dependencies in the future. In addition, this is probably a sign that esbuild is used widely enough that it now needs to switch to a more complicated release model. I may have esbuild use a beta channel model for further development. - Fix preserving collapsed JSX whitespace ([#​3818](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3818)) When transformed, certain whitespace inside JSX elements is ignored completely if it collapses to an empty string. However, the whitespace should only be ignored if the JSX is being transformed, not if it's being preserved. This release fixes a bug where esbuild was previously incorrectly ignoring collapsed whitespace with `--jsx=preserve`. Here is an example: ```jsx // Original code <Foo> <Bar /> </Foo> // Old output (with --jsx=preserve) <Foo><Bar /></Foo>; // New output (with --jsx=preserve) <Foo> <Bar /> </Foo>; ``` ### [`v0.22.0`](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/blob/HEAD/CHANGELOG.md#0220) [Compare Source](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/compare/v0.21.5...v0.22.0) **This release deliberately contains backwards-incompatible changes.** To avoid automatically picking up releases like this, you should either be pinning the exact version of `esbuild` in your `package.json` file (recommended) or be using a version range syntax that only accepts patch upgrades such as `^0.21.0` or `~0.21.0`. See npm's documentation about [semver](https://docs.npmjs.com/cli/v6/using-npm/semver/) for more information. - Omit packages from bundles by default when targeting node ([#​1874](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/1874), [#​2830](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/2830), [#​2846](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/2846), [#​2915](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/2915), [#​3145](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3145), [#​3294](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3294), [#​3323](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3323), [#​3582](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3582), [#​3809](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3809), [#​3815](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3815)) This breaking change is an experiment. People are commonly confused when using esbuild to bundle code for node (i.e. for `--platform=node`) because some packages may not be intended for bundlers, and may use node-specific features that don't work with a bundler. Even though esbuild's "getting started" instructions say to use `--packages=external` to work around this problem, many people don't read the documentation and don't do this, and are then confused when it doesn't work. So arguably this is a bad default behavior for esbuild to have if people keep tripping over this. With this release, esbuild will now omit packages from the bundle by default when the platform is `node` (i.e. the previous behavior of `--packages=external` is now the default in this case). *Note that your dependencies must now be present on the file system when your bundle is run.* If you don't want this behavior, you can do `--packages=bundle` to allow packages to be included in the bundle (i.e. the previous default behavior). Note that `--packages=bundle` doesn't mean all packages are bundled, just that packages are allowed to be bundled. You can still exclude individual packages from the bundle using `--external:` even when `--packages=bundle` is present. The `--packages=` setting considers all import paths that "look like" package imports in the original source code to be package imports. Specifically import paths that don't start with a path segment of `/` or `.` or `..` are considered to be package imports. The only two exceptions to this rule are [subpath imports](https://nodejs.org/api/packages.html#subpath-imports) (which start with a `#` character) and TypeScript path remappings via `paths` and/or `baseUrl` in `tsconfig.json` (which are applied first). - Drop support for older platforms ([#​3802](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3802)) This release drops support for the following operating systems: - Windows 7 - Windows 8 - Windows Server 2008 - Windows Server 2012 This is because the Go programming language dropped support for these operating system versions in [Go 1.21](https://go.dev/doc/go1.21#windows), and this release updates esbuild from Go 1.20 to Go 1.22. Note that this only affects the binary esbuild executables that are published to the `esbuild` npm package. It's still possible to compile esbuild's source code for these older operating systems. If you need to, you can compile esbuild for yourself using an older version of the Go compiler (before Go version 1.21). That might look something like this: git clone https://github.com/evanw/esbuild.git cd esbuild go build ./cmd/esbuild ./esbuild.exe --version In addition, this release increases the minimum required node version for esbuild's JavaScript API from node 12 to node 18. Node 18 is the oldest version of node that is still being supported (see node's [release schedule](https://nodejs.org/en/about/previous-releases) for more information). This increase is because of an incompatibility between the JavaScript that the Go compiler generates for the `esbuild-wasm` package and versions of node before node 17.4 (specifically the `crypto.getRandomValues` function). - Update `await using` behavior to match TypeScript TypeScript 5.5 subtly changes the way `await using` behaves. This release updates esbuild to match these changes in TypeScript. You can read more about these changes in [microsoft/TypeScript#58624](https://togithub.com/microsoft/TypeScript/pull/58624). - Allow `es2024` as a target environment The ECMAScript 2024 specification was just approved, so it has been added to esbuild as a possible compilation target. You can read more about the features that it adds here: <https://2ality.com/2024/06/ecmascript-2024.html>. The only addition that's relevant for esbuild is the regular expression `/v` flag. With `--target=es2024`, regular expressions that use the `/v` flag will now be passed through untransformed instead of being transformed into a call to `new RegExp`. - Publish binaries for OpenBSD on 64-bit ARM ([#​3665](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3665), [#​3674](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/pull/3674)) With this release, you should now be able to install the `esbuild` npm package in OpenBSD on 64-bit ARM, such as on an Apple device with an M1 chip. This was contributed by [@​ikmckenz](https://togithub.com/ikmckenz). - Publish binaries for WASI (WebAssembly System Interface) preview 1 ([#​3300](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3300), [#​3779](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/pull/3779)) The upcoming WASI (WebAssembly System Interface) standard is going to be a way to run WebAssembly outside of a JavaScript host environment. In this scenario you only need a `.wasm` file without any supporting JavaScript code. Instead of JavaScript providing the APIs for the host environment, the WASI standard specifies a "system interface" that WebAssembly code can access directly (e.g. for file system access). Development versions of the WASI specification are being released using preview numbers. The people behind WASI are currently working on preview 2 but the Go compiler has [released support for preview 1](https://go.dev/blog/wasi), which from what I understand is now considered an unsupported legacy release. However, some people have requested that esbuild publish binary executables that support WASI preview 1 so they can experiment with them. This release publishes esbuild precompiled for WASI preview 1 to the `@esbuild/wasi-preview1` package on npm (specifically the file `@esbuild/wasi-preview1/esbuild.wasm`). This binary executable has not been tested and won't be officially supported, as it's for an old preview release of a specification that has since moved in another direction. If it works for you, great! If not, then you'll likely have to wait for the ecosystem to evolve before using esbuild with WASI. For example, it sounds like perhaps WASI preview 1 doesn't include support for opening network sockets so esbuild's local development server is unlikely to work with WASI preview 1. - Warn about `onResolve` plugins not setting a path ([#​3790](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/issues/3790)) Plugins that return values from `onResolve` without resolving the path (i.e. without setting either `path` or `external: true`) will now cause a warning. This is because esbuild only uses return values from `onResolve` if it successfully resolves the path, and it's not good for invalid input to be silently ignored. - Add a new Go API for running the CLI with plugins ([#​3539](https://togithub.com/evanw/esbuild/pull/3539)) With esbuild's Go API, you can now call `cli.RunWithPlugins(args, plugins)` to pass an array of esbuild plugins to be used during the build process. This allows you to create a CLI that behaves similarly to esbuild's CLI but with additional Go plugins enabled. This was contributed by [@​edewit](https://togithub.com/edewit). </details> <details> <summary>dlclark/regexp2 (github.com/dlclark/regexp2)</summary> ### [`v1.11.2`](https://togithub.com/dlclark/regexp2/compare/v1.11.1...v1.11.2) [Compare Source](https://togithub.com/dlclark/regexp2/compare/v1.11.1...v1.11.2) ### [`v1.11.1`](https://togithub.com/dlclark/regexp2/compare/v1.11.0...v1.11.1) [Compare Source](https://togithub.com/dlclark/regexp2/compare/v1.11.0...v1.11.1) </details> <details> <summary>golang/go (go)</summary> ### [`v1.22.5`](https://togithub.com/golang/go/compare/go1.22.4...go1.22.5) </details> <details> <summary>watchexec/watchexec (watchexec)</summary> ### [`v2.1.2`](https://togithub.com/watchexec/watchexec/releases/tag/v2.1.2): CLI v2.1.2 - New feature: `--watch-file` ([#​849](https://togithub.com/watchexec/watchexec/issues/849)) - Fix: manpage entry in deb/rpm packagings </details> --- ### Configuration 📅 **Schedule**: Branch creation - "before 4am on Monday" (UTC), Automerge - At any time (no schedule defined). 🚦 **Automerge**: Disabled by config. Please merge this manually once you are satisfied. ♻ **Rebasing**: Whenever PR becomes conflicted, or you tick the rebase/retry checkbox. 👻 **Immortal**: This PR will be recreated if closed unmerged. Get [config help](https://togithub.com/renovatebot/renovate/discussions) if that's undesired. --- - [ ] <!-- rebase-check -->If you want to rebase/retry this PR, check this box --- This PR has been generated by [Mend Renovate](https://www.mend.io/free-developer-tools/renovate/). View repository job log [here](https://developer.mend.io/github/alecthomas/chroma). <!--renovate-debug:eyJjcmVhdGVkSW5WZXIiOiIzNy40MjEuOSIsInVwZGF0ZWRJblZlciI6IjM3LjQyNS4xIiwidGFyZ2V0QnJhbmNoIjoibWFzdGVyIiwibGFiZWxzIjpbXX0=--> Co-authored-by: renovate[bot] <29139614+renovate[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
Chroma — A general purpose syntax highlighter in pure Go
Chroma takes source code and other structured text and converts it into syntax highlighted HTML, ANSI-coloured text, etc.
Chroma is based heavily on Pygments, and includes translators for Pygments lexers and styles.
Table of Contents
- Supported languages
- Try it
- Using the library
- More detail
- Command-line interface
- Testing lexers
- What's missing compared to Pygments?
Supported languages
Prefix | Language |
---|---|
A | ABAP, ABNF, ActionScript, ActionScript 3, Ada, Agda, AL, Alloy, Angular2, ANTLR, ApacheConf, APL, AppleScript, ArangoDB AQL, Arduino, ArmAsm, AutoHotkey, AutoIt, Awk |
B | Ballerina, Bash, Bash Session, Batchfile, BibTeX, Bicep, BlitzBasic, BNF, BQN, Brainfuck |
C | C, C#, C++, Caddyfile, Caddyfile Directives, Cap'n Proto, Cassandra CQL, Ceylon, CFEngine3, cfstatement, ChaiScript, Chapel, Cheetah, Clojure, CMake, COBOL, CoffeeScript, Common Lisp, Coq, Crystal, CSS, Cython |
D | D, Dart, Dax, Desktop Entry, Diff, Django/Jinja, dns, Docker, DTD, Dylan |
E | EBNF, Elixir, Elm, EmacsLisp, Erlang |
F | Factor, Fennel, Fish, Forth, Fortran, FortranFixed, FSharp |
G | GAS, GDScript, Genshi, Genshi HTML, Genshi Text, Gherkin, GLSL, Gnuplot, Go, Go HTML Template, Go Text Template, GraphQL, Groff, Groovy |
H | Handlebars, Hare, Haskell, Haxe, HCL, Hexdump, HLB, HLSL, HolyC, HTML, HTTP, Hy |
I | Idris, Igor, INI, Io, ISCdhcpd |
J | J, Java, JavaScript, JSON, Julia, Jungle |
K | Kotlin |
L | Lighttpd configuration file, LLVM, Lua |
M | Makefile, Mako, markdown, Mason, Materialize SQL dialect, Mathematica, Matlab, mcfunction, Meson, Metal, MiniZinc, MLIR, Modula-2, MonkeyC, MorrowindScript, Myghty, MySQL |
N | NASM, Natural, Newspeak, Nginx configuration file, Nim, Nix |
O | Objective-C, OCaml, Octave, Odin, OnesEnterprise, OpenEdge ABL, OpenSCAD, Org Mode |
P | PacmanConf, Perl, PHP, PHTML, Pig, PkgConfig, PL/pgSQL, plaintext, Plutus Core, Pony, PostgreSQL SQL dialect, PostScript, POVRay, PowerQuery, PowerShell, Prolog, PromQL, Promela, properties, Protocol Buffer, PRQL, PSL, Puppet, Python, Python 2 |
Q | QBasic, QML |
R | R, Racket, Ragel, Raku, react, ReasonML, reg, Rego, reStructuredText, Rexx, RPMSpec, Ruby, Rust |
S | SAS, Sass, Scala, Scheme, Scilab, SCSS, Sed, Sieve, Smali, Smalltalk, Smarty, Snobol, Solidity, SourcePawn, SPARQL, SQL, SquidConf, Standard ML, stas, Stylus, Svelte, Swift, SYSTEMD, systemverilog |
T | TableGen, Tal, TASM, Tcl, Tcsh, Termcap, Terminfo, Terraform, TeX, Thrift, TOML, TradingView, Transact-SQL, Turing, Turtle, Twig, TypeScript, TypoScript, TypoScriptCssData, TypoScriptHtmlData |
V | V, V shell, Vala, VB.net, verilog, VHDL, VHS, VimL, vue |
W | WDTE, WebGPU Shading Language, Whiley |
X | XML, Xorg |
Y | YAML, YANG |
Z | Z80 Assembly, Zed, Zig |
I will attempt to keep this section up to date, but an authoritative list can be
displayed with chroma --list
.
Try it
Try out various languages and styles on the Chroma Playground.
Using the library
This is version 2 of Chroma, use the import path:
import "github.com/alecthomas/chroma/v2"
Chroma, like Pygments, has the concepts of lexers, formatters and styles.
Lexers convert source text into a stream of tokens, styles specify how token types are mapped to colours, and formatters convert tokens and styles into formatted output.
A package exists for each of these, containing a global Registry
variable
with all of the registered implementations. There are also helper functions
for using the registry in each package, such as looking up lexers by name or
matching filenames, etc.
In all cases, if a lexer, formatter or style can not be determined, nil
will
be returned. In this situation you may want to default to the Fallback
value in each respective package, which provides sane defaults.
Quick start
A convenience function exists that can be used to simply format some source text, without any effort:
err := quick.Highlight(os.Stdout, someSourceCode, "go", "html", "monokai")
Identifying the language
To highlight code, you'll first have to identify what language the code is written in. There are three primary ways to do that:
-
Detect the language from its filename.
lexer := lexers.Match("foo.go")
-
Explicitly specify the language by its Chroma syntax ID (a full list is available from
lexers.Names()
).lexer := lexers.Get("go")
-
Detect the language from its content.
lexer := lexers.Analyse("package main\n\nfunc main()\n{\n}\n")
In all cases, nil
will be returned if the language can not be identified.
if lexer == nil {
lexer = lexers.Fallback
}
At this point, it should be noted that some lexers can be extremely chatty. To mitigate this, you can use the coalescing lexer to coalesce runs of identical token types into a single token:
lexer = chroma.Coalesce(lexer)
Formatting the output
Once a language is identified you will need to pick a formatter and a style (theme).
style := styles.Get("swapoff")
if style == nil {
style = styles.Fallback
}
formatter := formatters.Get("html")
if formatter == nil {
formatter = formatters.Fallback
}
Then obtain an iterator over the tokens:
contents, err := ioutil.ReadAll(r)
iterator, err := lexer.Tokenise(nil, string(contents))
And finally, format the tokens from the iterator:
err := formatter.Format(w, style, iterator)
The HTML formatter
By default the html
registered formatter generates standalone HTML with
embedded CSS. More flexibility is available through the formatters/html
package.
Firstly, the output generated by the formatter can be customised with the following constructor options:
Standalone()
- generate standalone HTML with embedded CSS.WithClasses()
- use classes rather than inlined style attributes.ClassPrefix(prefix)
- prefix each generated CSS class.TabWidth(width)
- Set the rendered tab width, in characters.WithLineNumbers()
- Render line numbers (style withLineNumbers
).WithLinkableLineNumbers()
- Make the line numbers linkable and be a link to themselves.HighlightLines(ranges)
- Highlight lines in these ranges (style withLineHighlight
).LineNumbersInTable()
- Use a table for formatting line numbers and code, rather than spans.
If WithClasses()
is used, the corresponding CSS can be obtained from the formatter with:
formatter := html.New(html.WithClasses(true))
err := formatter.WriteCSS(w, style)
More detail
Lexers
See the Pygments documentation for details on implementing lexers. Most concepts apply directly to Chroma, but see existing lexer implementations for real examples.
In many cases lexers can be automatically converted directly from Pygments by
using the included Python 3 script pygments2chroma_xml.py
. I use something like
the following:
python3 _tools/pygments2chroma_xml.py \
pygments.lexers.jvm.KotlinLexer \
> lexers/embedded/kotlin.xml
See notes in pygments-lexers.txt for a list of lexers, and notes on some of the issues importing them.
Formatters
Chroma supports HTML output, as well as terminal output in 8 colour, 256 colour, and true-colour.
A noop
formatter is included that outputs the token text only, and a tokens
formatter outputs raw tokens. The latter is useful for debugging lexers.
Styles
Chroma styles are defined in XML. The style entries use the same syntax as Pygments.
All Pygments styles have been converted to Chroma using the _tools/style.py
script.
When you work with one of Chroma's styles,
know that the Background
token type provides the default style for tokens. It does so
by defining a foreground color and background color.
For example, this gives each token name not defined in the style a default color
of #f8f8f8
and uses #000000
for the highlighted code block's background:
<entry type="Background" style="#f8f8f2 bg:#000000"/>
Also, token types in a style file are hierarchical. For instance, when CommentSpecial
is not defined, Chroma uses the token style from Comment
. So when several comment tokens use the same color, you'll only need to define Comment
and override the one that has a different color.
For a quick overview of the available styles and how they look, check out the Chroma Style Gallery.
Command-line interface
A command-line interface to Chroma is included.
Binaries are available to install from the releases page.
The CLI can be used as a preprocessor to colorise output of less(1)
,
see documentation for the LESSOPEN
environment variable.
The --fail
flag can be used to suppress output and return with exit status
1 to facilitate falling back to some other preprocessor in case chroma
does not resolve a specific lexer to use for the given file. For example:
export LESSOPEN='| p() { chroma --fail "$1" || cat "$1"; }; p "%s"'
Replace cat
with your favourite fallback preprocessor.
When invoked as .lessfilter
, the --fail
flag is automatically turned
on under the hood for easy integration with lesspipe shipping with
Debian and derivatives;
for that setup the chroma
executable can be just symlinked to ~/.lessfilter
.
Testing lexers
If you edit some lexers and want to try it, open a shell in cmd/chromad
and run:
go run . --csrf-key=securekey
A Link will be printed. Open it in your Browser. Now you can test on the Playground with your local changes.
If you want to run the tests and the lexers, open a shell in the root directory and run:
go test ./lexers
When updating or adding a lexer, please add tests. See lexers/README.md for more.
What's missing compared to Pygments?
- Quite a few lexers, for various reasons (pull-requests welcome):
- Pygments lexers for complex languages often include custom code to handle certain aspects, such as Raku's ability to nest code inside regular expressions. These require time and effort to convert.
- I mostly only converted languages I had heard of, to reduce the porting cost.
- Some more esoteric features of Pygments are omitted for simplicity.
- Though the Chroma API supports content detection, very few languages support them. I have plans to implement a statistical analyser at some point, but not enough time.