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    Perl language syntax highlighting troubles (bug or limitation ?)

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    • Gilles MaisonneuveG
      Gilles Maisonneuve @Ekopalypse
      last edited by Gilles Maisonneuve

      @Ekopalypse

      >>> editor.getLexerLanguage()
      'perl'
      

      Would it be (more) convenient for you to connect directly on my machine ? (DWservice) ?

      EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • EkopalypseE
        Ekopalypse @Gilles Maisonneuve
        last edited by

        @Gilles-Maisonneuve

        Could it be that you have two views open, one with a perl document and one with a normal text document?

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Gilles MaisonneuveG
          Gilles Maisonneuve
          last edited by Gilles Maisonneuve

          I have many documents opened in different Windows ([edited]TABS). Is this what you mean by “views” ?

          No double Windows at a time like in “compare” or so.

          EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • EkopalypseE
            Ekopalypse @Gilles Maisonneuve
            last edited by

            @Gilles-Maisonneuve

            No double Windows at a time like in “compare” or so.

            Ok, then it seems we have learned that the id is not always the same.
            Gimme a second to see what needs to be changed to use editor.getLexerLanguage() instead.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
            • Gilles MaisonneuveG
              Gilles Maisonneuve
              last edited by Gilles Maisonneuve

              all right, take your time.
              i’ll be there late tonight.

              about DWservice, it’s GNU, hosted in DE I guess, not smthg like Teamviewer. But perhaps you are right, one should always be paranoiac.

              EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • EkopalypseE
                Ekopalypse @Gilles Maisonneuve
                last edited by

                @Gilles-Maisonneuve

                I’m living in DE but have to admit, that I haven’t heard of DWservice before, shame on me :-)

                Changes
                line 9 to BUILTIN_LEXER = 'perl'
                line 111 self.lexer_name = BUILTIN_LEXER.lower()
                line 219 to self.doc_is_of_interest = True if editor.getLexerLanguage().lower() == self.lexer_name else False

                As python is very picky about whitespaces make sure that you either use
                spaces or tabs for indentation only. Best python practice is to set
                Settings->Preferences->Language->TabSettings->Python
                Tab size = 4 and check replace by space checkbox
                (if this isn’t your default setting, of course)

                Gilles MaisonneuveG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                • Gilles MaisonneuveG
                  Gilles Maisonneuve @Ekopalypse
                  last edited by Gilles Maisonneuve

                  @Ekopalypse

                  Oops, I must have made some mistakes but can’t find where… Here is the console log:

                  Traceback (most recent call last):
                    File "C:\Users\gm\AppData\Roaming\Notepad++\plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\startup.py", line 1, in <module>
                      import EnhancePerlLexer
                    File "C:\Users\gm\AppData\Roaming\Notepad++\plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\EnhancePerlLexer.py", line 283, in <module>
                      EnhanceBuiltinLexer().main()
                    File "C:\Users\gm\AppData\Roaming\Notepad++\plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\EnhancePerlLexer.py", line 280, in main
                      self.on_bufferactivated(None)
                    File "C:\Users\gm\AppData\Roaming\Notepad++\plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\EnhancePerlLexer.py", line 237, in on_bufferactivated
                      self.check_lexer()
                    File "C:\Users\gm\AppData\Roaming\Notepad++\plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\EnhancePerlLexer.py", line 224, in check_lexer
                      self.doc_is_of_interest = True if editor.getLexerLanguage().lower() == self.lexer_name else False
                  AttributeError: 'EnhanceBuiltinLexer' object has no attribute 'lexer_name'
                  Python 2.7.15 (v2.7.15:ca079a3ea3, Apr 30 2018, 16:30:26) [MSC v.1500 64 bit (AMD64)]
                  Initialisation took 343ms
                  Ready.
                  
                  Traceback (most recent call last):
                    File "C:\Users\gm\AppData\Roaming\Notepad++\plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\EnhancePerlLexer.py", line 73, in <module>
                      EnhanceBuiltinLexer().main()
                    File "C:\Users\gm\AppData\Roaming\Notepad++\plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\EnhancePerlLexer.py", line 280, in main
                      self.on_bufferactivated(None)
                    File "C:\Users\gm\AppData\Roaming\Notepad++\plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\EnhancePerlLexer.py", line 237, in on_bufferactivated
                      self.check_lexer()
                    File "C:\Users\gm\AppData\Roaming\Notepad++\plugins\Config\PythonScript\scripts\EnhancePerlLexer.py", line 224, in check_lexer
                      self.doc_is_of_interest = True if editor.getLexerLanguage().lower() == self.lexer_name else False
                  AttributeError: 'EnhanceBuiltinLexer' object has no attribute 'lexer_name'
                  

                  Line numbers don’t match because I already commented out some of your lines but kept them in the file, and duplicated them with my own changes. But I did do the changes at the places you told me to do them.

                  EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                  • EkopalypseE
                    Ekopalypse @Gilles Maisonneuve
                    last edited by

                    @Gilles-Maisonneuve

                    check line 111 - it defines the lexer_name

                    Gilles MaisonneuveG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                    • Gilles MaisonneuveG
                      Gilles Maisonneuve
                      last edited by

                      OOPS, yours :== self.lexer_name, mine :== self_lexer_name, I am really a dumb when dealing with OO programming, can’t realize that ‘self’ is the current object and of course separated by a dot.

                      Colour has changed for q* keywords and there text (black on dark blue, can’t read but now just need to ajust the colors).
                      No change for here docs, but don’t know if I properly set the colors, have to check.

                      Send you a screen copy in a few minutes.

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                      • Gilles MaisonneuveG
                        Gilles Maisonneuve @Ekopalypse
                        last edited by Gilles Maisonneuve

                        @Ekopalypse

                        All right, nearly done: with the following regexp in your python code:

                        regexes[(1, (255,0,128))] = (r'\bq[rwqx]{0,1}\b([^\h]).*?\1|(\bq[rwqx]{0,1}\b\h+(\w).*?\3)', [0])
                        regexes[(2, (255,0,128))] = (r'\bq[rwqx]{0,1}\b\h*(\(.+?\)|\[.+?\]|\{.+?\})', [0])
                        regexes[(3, (0,0,0))] = (r'(?s)((<<)"*(\w+?)"*;.*?\3)', [2])
                        regexes[(4, (0,0,0))] = (r'(?s)((<<)\h+"(\w+?)";.*?\3)', [2,3])
                        

                        I get the following colors:

                        q* colors OK, here docs no

                        Q* colors are good {well I might have an uggly taste in colors but at least they match ;-)) }

                        Would you have any clue about why the here docs= are still not handled properly ? They should be black, I think.

                        EkopalypseE 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • EkopalypseE
                          Ekopalypse @Gilles Maisonneuve
                          last edited by

                          @Gilles-Maisonneuve

                          the regexes assumes double quotes and semicolon directly attached to EOT.
                          Like

                          print << "EOT";
                          
                          --------------------- separation line ------------------
                          
                          EOT
                          

                          Is there a rule how this is specified?

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • Gilles MaisonneuveG
                            Gilles Maisonneuve
                            last edited by Gilles Maisonneuve

                            I think I found why.
                            Your regexp says :
                            r'(?s)((<<)"*(\w+?)"*;.*?\3)'
                            would not it be better if :
                            r'(?s)(\h*(<<)\h*"*(\w+?)"*\h*;.*?\3)'

                            ???

                            To answer your question:

                            Perl allows

                            1. <<TEXT,
                            2. << TEXT
                            3. <<‘TEXT’ / << ‘TEXT’
                            4. <<“TEXT” / << “TEXT”

                            meanings differ in each case…

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                            • EkopalypseE
                              Ekopalypse
                              last edited by

                              To be honest - I’m not a regex expert at all :-D
                              If you, as a perl developer, say so I would absolutely believe it is :-)

                              Gilles MaisonneuveG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • Gilles MaisonneuveG
                                Gilles Maisonneuve @Ekopalypse
                                last edited by

                                @Ekopalypse

                                In your Python regexp, what’s the meaning of:

                                1. “\3”
                                2. “, [2]” and “[2,3]” ?

                                If I can understand what I think I could translate a Perl regex code into python (for this case at least).

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • EkopalypseE
                                  Ekopalypse
                                  last edited by

                                  What about using this
                                  (?s)((<<)\h+(["|'])(\w+?)\3\h*;.*?\4)

                                  Gilles MaisonneuveG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • EkopalypseE
                                    Ekopalypse
                                    last edited by

                                    1. is the boost:regex convention to denote match group 3
                                      and
                                    2. defines which match group actually should be painted

                                    Like if you have:

                                    r'(word1)(word2)(word3)', [2,3]
                                    

                                    would mean that only word2 and word3 would be painted
                                    whereas if you would specify

                                    r'(word1)(word2)(word3)', [0]
                                    

                                    everything would be colored.

                                    Does this makes sense to you?

                                    Gilles MaisonneuveG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • Gilles MaisonneuveG
                                      Gilles Maisonneuve @Ekopalypse
                                      last edited by

                                      @Ekopalypse

                                      I don’t understand your regexp syntax. Perhaps too ‘pythonized’ for me.

                                      (?s) : what does it mean ? is it ‘s///’ ? or really a non capturing group of ‘s’ ???
                                      \3 \4 : are they $3 $4, I don’t think as I can’t see a 4th accumulator

                                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • EkopalypseE
                                        Ekopalypse
                                        last edited by Ekopalypse

                                        (?s) is a modifier telling the engine that the dot matches line endings
                                        and yes, the engine uses \1 and $1

                                        Here the link to the documentation - maybe easier for you.

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • EkopalypseE
                                          Ekopalypse
                                          last edited by

                                          ooppps

                                          (?s)((<<)\h+(["|'])(\w+?)\3\h*;.*?\3)

                                          :-D

                                          Gilles MaisonneuveG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • Gilles MaisonneuveG
                                            Gilles Maisonneuve @Ekopalypse
                                            last edited by

                                            This post is deleted!
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