A pure Ruby code highlighter that is compatible with Pygments
Rouge is a pure Ruby syntax highlighter. It can highlight
over 200 different languages, and output HTML
or ANSI 256-color text. Its HTML output is compatible with
stylesheets designed for Pygments.
In your Gemfile, add:
gem 'rouge'
or
gem install rouge
Rouge’s most common uses are as a Ruby library, as part of Jekyll and as a
command line tool.
Here’s a quick example of using Rouge as you would any other regular Ruby
library:
require 'rouge'
# make some nice lexed html
source = File.read('/etc/bashrc')
formatter = Rouge::Formatters::HTML.new
lexer = Rouge::Lexers::Shell.new
formatter.format(lexer.lex(source))
# Get some CSS
Rouge::Themes::Base16.mode(:light).render(scope: '.highlight')
# Or use Theme#find with string input
Rouge::Theme.find('base16.light').render(scope: '.highlight')
Rouge is Jekyll’s default syntax highlighter. Out of the box, Rouge will be
used to highlight text wrapped in the {% highlight %}
template tags. The
{% highlight %}
tag provides minimal options: you can specify the language to
use and whether to enable line numbers or not. More information is available in
the Jekyll docs.
Rouge ships with a rougify
command which allows you to easily highlight files
in your terminal:
rougify foo.rb
rougify style monokai.sublime > syntax.css
Rouge comes with a number of formatters built-in but as of Rouge 2.0, you are
encouraged to write your own formatter if you need something custom.
The built-in formatters are:
Rouge::Formatters::HTML.new
will render your code with standard class names
for tokens, with no div-wrapping or other bells or whistles.
Rouge::Formatters::HTMLInline.new(theme)
will render your code with no class
names, but instead inline the styling options into the style=
attribute.
This is good for emails and other systems where CSS support is minimal.
Rouge::Formatters::HTMLLinewise.new(formatter, class: 'line-%i')
will split
your code into lines, each contained in its own div. The class
option will
be used to add a class name to the div, given the line number.
Rouge::Formatters::HTMLLineHighlighter.new(formatter, highlight_lines: [3, 5])
will split your code into lines and wrap the lines specified by the
highlight_lines
option in a span with a class name specified by the
highlight_line_class
option (default: hll
).
Rouge::Formatters::HTMLLineTable.new(formatter, opts={})
will output an HTML
table containing numbered lines, each contained in its own table-row. Options
are:
start_line: 1
- the number of the first rowline_id: 'line-%i'
- a sprintf
template for id
attribute withline_class: 'lineno'
- a CSS class for each table-rowtable_class: 'rouge-line-table'
- a CSS class for the tablegutter_class: 'rouge-gutter'
- a CSS class for the line-number cellcode_class: 'rouge-code'
- a CSS class for the code cellRouge::Formatters::HTMLPygments.new(formatter, css_class='codehilite')
wraps
the given formatter with div wrappers generally expected by stylesheets
designed for Pygments.
Rouge::Formatters::HTMLTable.new(formatter, opts={})
will output an HTML
table containing numbered lines similar to Rouge::Formatters::HTMLLineTable
,
except that the table from this formatter has just a single table-row.
Therefore, while the table is more DOM-friendly for JavaScript scripting, long
code lines will mess with the column alignment. Options are:
start_line: 1
- the number of the first lineline_format: '%i'
- a sprintf
template for the line number itselftable_class: 'rouge-table'
- a CSS class for the tablegutter_class: 'rouge-gutter'
- a CSS class for the guttercode_class: 'rouge-code'
- a CSS class for the code columnRouge::Formatters::HTMLLegacy.new(opts={})
is a backwards-compatibility
class intended for users of Rouge 1.x, with options that were supported then.
Options are:
inline_theme: nil
- use an HTMLInline formatter with the given themeline_numbers: false
- use an HTMLTable formatterwrap: true
- use an HTMLPygments wrappercss_class: 'codehilite'
- a CSS class to use for the Pygments wrapperRouge::Formatters::Terminal256.new(theme)
is a formatter for generating
highlighted text for use in the terminal. theme
must be an instance of
Rouge::Theme
, or a Hash
structure with :theme
entry.
If the above formatters are not sufficient, and you wish to customize the layout
of the HTML document, we suggest writing your own HTML formatter. This can be
accomplished by subclassing Rouge::Formatters::HTML
and overriding specific
methods:
class MyFormatter < Rouge::Formatters::HTML
# this is the main entry method. override this to customize the behavior of
# the HTML blob as a whole. it should receive an Enumerable of (token, value)
# pairs and yield out fragments of the resulting html string. see the docs
# for the methods available on Token.
def stream(tokens, &block)
yield "<div class='my-outer-div'>"
tokens.each do |token, value|
# for every token in the output, we render a span
yield span(token, value)
end
yield "</div>"
end
# or, if you need linewise processing, try:
def stream(tokens, &block)
token_lines(tokens).each do |line_tokens|
yield "<div class='my-cool-line'>"
line_tokens.each do |token, value|
yield span(token, value)
end
yield "</div>"
end
end
# Override this method to control how individual spans are rendered.
# The value `safe_value` will already be HTML-escaped.
def safe_span(token, safe_value)
# in this case, "text" tokens don't get surrounded by a span
if token == Token::Tokens::Text
safe_value
else
"<span class=\"#{token.shortname}\">#{safe_value}</span>"
end
end
end
debug: false
will print a trace of the lex on stdout.
parent: ''
allows you to specify which language the template is inside.
scope: '.highlight'
sets the CSS selector to which styles are applied,
e.g.:
Rouge::Themes::MonokaiSublime.render(scope: 'code')
Rouge’s documentation is available at rouge-ruby.github.io/docs/.
Rouge is compatible with all versions of Ruby from 2.0.0 onwards. It has no
external dependencies.
Rouge only supports UTF-8 strings. If you’d like to highlight a string with a
different encoding, please convert it to UTF-8 first.
We’re always excited to welcome new contributors to Rouge. By it’s nature, a
syntax highlighter relies for its success on submissions from users of the
languages being highlighted. You can help Rouge by filing bug reports or
developing new lexers.
Everyone interacting in Rouge and its sub-projects’ code bases is expected to
follow the Rouge Code of Conduct.
Rouge uses GitHub’s Issues to report bugs. You can choose from
one of our templates or create a custom issue. Issues that have not been active
for a year are automatically closed by GitHub’s Probot.
NOTE: Please don’t submit lexers that are copy-pasted from other files.
These submission will be rejected and we don’t want you to waste your time.
We want to make it as easy as we can for anyone to contribute a lexer to Rouge.
To help get you started, we have a shiny new guide on lexer
development in the documentation. The best place is to start there.
If you get stuck and need help, submit a pull request with what you have and
make it clear in your submission that the lexer isn’t finished yet. We’ll do our
best to answer any questions you have and sometimes the best way to do that is
with actual code.
Once you’ve cloned the repository from GitHub, you can test the core of Rouge
simply by running rake
(no bundle exec
required). You can also run a single
test file by setting the TEST
environment variable to the path of the desired
test. For example, to test just the ruby
lexer (located at path
spec/lexers/ruby_spec.rb
) simply run the following:
TEST=spec/lexers/ruby_spec.rb rake
To test a lexer visually, run rackup
from the top-level working directory and
you should have a web server running and ready to go. Visit
http://localhost:9292 to see the full list of Rouge’s lexers.
Once you’ve selected a particular lexer, you can add ?debug=1
to your URL
string to see a lot of helpful debugging info printed on stdout.
Rouge uses Semantic Versioning 2.0.0.
Rouge is largely the result of the hard work of unpaid volunteers. It was
originally developed by Jeanine Adkisson (@jneen) and is currently maintained by
Jeanine Adkisson, Drew Blessing (@dblessing), Goro Fuji (@gfx) and Tan Le
(@tancnle).
Rouge is released under the MIT license. Please see the LICENSE file for more
information.