You can apply syntax highlighting to your code. This theme uses pygments and applies color coding based on the lexer you specify.
About syntax highlighting
For syntax highlighting, use fenced code blocks optionally followed by the language syntax you want:
```java import java.util.Scanner; public class ScannerAndKeyboard { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner s = new Scanner(System.in); System.out.print( "Enter your name: " ); String name = s.nextLine(); System.out.println( "Hello " + name + "!" ); } } ```
This looks as follows:
import java.util.Scanner;
public class ScannerAndKeyboard
{
public static void main(String[] args)
{ Scanner s = new Scanner(System.in);
System.out.print( "Enter your name: " );
String name = s.nextLine();
System.out.println( "Hello " + name + "!" );
}
}
Fenced code blocks require a blank line before and after.
If you’re using an HTML file, you can also use the highlight
command with Liquid markup.
{% highlight java %} import java.util.Scanner; public class ScannerAndKeyboard { public static void main(String[] args) { Scanner s = new Scanner(System.in); System.out.print( "Enter your name: " ); String name = s.nextLine(); System.out.println( "Hello " + name + "!" ); } } {% endhighlight %}
Result:
The theme has syntax highlighting specified in the configuration file as follows:
highlighter: rouge
The syntax highlighting is done via the css/syntax.css file.
Available lexers
The keywords you must add to specify the highlighting (in the previous example, ruby
) are called “lexers.” You can search for “lexers.” Here are some common ones I use:
- js
- html
- yaml
- css
- json
- php
- java
- cpp
- dotnet
- xml
- http