Creating Color Coding for a New Language
To create color coding support for your language, complete the following steps:
1. From the main menu, click
Window
→
Preferences
, expand
SlickEdit
and click
General
in the tree,
then double-click the
Color Coding
setting. The Color Coding Setup dialog box is displayed.
2. Select the
Tokens Tab
, then click
New
. The Enter New Keywords dialog box is displayed.
3. Enter the new lexer name. Usually this is a language name such as C or Java. Click
OK
.
4. On the
Tokens
tab, make sure the new keyword is selected, then correct the
ID start characters
.
These are valid characters which can be the start of an identifier.
5. Correct the
ID follow characters
. These are additional characters which are valid after the start ID
character. For example, digits are usually allowed in identifiers, but not as the first character of an iden-
tifier.
6. Select the
Comments Tab
. This lists the comments currently defined and allows you to define new
multi-line and line comments. For each comment, click
New
to add a line or multi-line comment.
7. Select the
Numbers Tab
to display various numeric style options.
8. Select the
Strings Tab
to display various string literal options.
9. If you have not found all the options you need, click the
Language Tab
. This displays some more ad-
vanced language-specific options.
1
0.
Click
OK
on the Color Coding Setup dialog box.
Color Coding Configuration
The Color Coding Setup dialog provides the capability to specify colors for identifying your code. To con-
figure color coding, from the main menu, click
Window
→
Preferences
, expand
SlickEdit
and click
Gen-
eral
in the tree, then double-click the
Color Coding
setting. The Color Coding Setup box is displayed.
Figure 6.17. Color Coding Setup: Tokens Tab
Color Coding Configuration
140
Summary of Contents for Corev3.3 for Eclipse
Page 1: ...Think Slick Corev3 3 for Eclipse...
Page 2: ......
Page 3: ...SlickEdit Core v3 3 for Eclipse...
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Page 14: ...xii...
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Page 22: ...xx...
Page 23: ...Chapter 1 Introduction 1...
Page 41: ...Chapter 3 User Interface 19...
Page 61: ...Chapter 4 User Preferences 39...
Page 80: ...BODY BODY HTML HTMLEOF Restoring Settings on Startup 58...
Page 82: ...60...
Page 83: ...Chapter 5 Context Tagging 61...
Page 97: ...Chapter 6 Editing Features 75...
Page 124: ...Code Templates 102...
Page 238: ...Figure 6 49 Test Parsing Configuration Example 1 C Refactoring 216...
Page 241: ...Figure 6 51 Test Parsing Configuration Example 3 Reviewing Refactoring Changes 219...
Page 250: ...228...
Page 251: ...Chapter 7 Language Specific Editing 229...
Page 328: ...306...
Page 329: ...Chapter 8 Tools and Utilities 307...
Page 350: ...328...
Page 351: ...Chapter 9 Macros and Macro Programming 329...
Page 360: ...338...
Page 361: ...Chapter 10 SlickEdit Core Dialogs 339...
Page 375: ...Find and Replace View 353...
Page 491: ...Chapter 11 Appendix 469...
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