A syntax highligher automatically highlights parts of the text in a TQTextEdit. Syntax highlighters are often used when the user is entering text in a specific format (for example, source code) and help the user to read the text and identify syntax errors.
When you create an instance of your TQSyntaxHighlighter subclass, pass it the TQTextEdit that you want the syntax highlighting to be applied to. After this your highlightParagraph() function will be called automatically whenever necessary. Use your highlightParagraph() function to apply formatting (e.g. setting the font and color) to the text that is passed to it.
In your reimplementation you should parse the paragraph's \fItext\fR and call setFormat() as often as necessary to apply any font and color changes that you require. Your function must return a value which indicates the paragraph's end state: see below.
Some syntaxes can have constructs that span paragraphs. For example, a C++ syntax highlighter should be able to cope with \fC/\fR\fC*...*\fR\fC/\fR comments that span paragraphs. To deal with these cases it is necessary to know the end state of the previous paragraph (e.g. "in comment").
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If your syntax does not have paragraph spanning constructs, simply ignore the \fIendStateOfLastPara\fR parameter and always return 0.
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Whenever highlightParagraph() is called it is passed a value for \fIendStateOfLastPara\fR. For the very first paragraph this value is always -2. For any other paragraph the value is the value returned by the most recent highlightParagraph() call that applied to the preceding paragraph.
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The value you return is up to you. We recommend only returning 0 (to signify that this paragraph's syntax highlighting does not affect the following paragraph), or a positive integer (to signify that this paragraph has ended in the middle of a paragraph spanning construct).
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To find out which paragraph is highlighted, call currentParagraph().
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For example, if you're writing a simple C++ syntax highlighter, you might designate 1 to signify "in comment". For a paragraph that ended in the middle of a comment you'd return 1, and for other paragraphs you'd return 0. In your parsing code if \fIendStateOfLastPara\fR was 1, you would highlight the text as a C++ comment until you reached the closing \fC*\fR\fC/\fR.
This function is applied to the syntax highlighter's current paragraph (the text of which is passed to the highlightParagraph() function).
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The specified \fIfont\fR and \fIcolor\fR are applied to the text from position \fIstart\fR for \fIcount\fR characters. (If \fIcount\fR is 0, nothing is done.)