# TARTRAZINE Tartrazine is a library to syntax-highlight code. It is a port of [Pygments](https://pygments.org/) to [Crystal](https://crystal-lang.org/). Kind of. The CLI tool can be used to highlight many things in many styles. # A port of what? Why "kind of"? Pygments is a staple of the Python ecosystem, and it's great. It lets you highlight code in many languages, and it has many themes. Chroma is "Pygments for Go", it's actually a port of Pygments to Go, and it's great too. I wanted that in Crystal, so I started this project. But I did not read much of the Pygments code. Or much of Chroma's. Chroma has taken most of the Pygments lexers and turned them into XML descriptions. What I did was take those XML files from Chroma and a pile of test cases from Pygments, and I slapped them together until the tests passed and my code produced the same output as Chroma. Think of it as *extreme TDD*. Currently the pass rate for tests in the supported languages is `96.8%`, which is *not bad for a couple days hacking*. This only covers the RegexLexers, which are the most common ones, but it means the supported languages are a subset of Chroma's, which is a subset of Pygments'. Currently Tartrazine supports ... 241 languages. It has 331 themes (63 from Chroma, the rest are base16 themes via [Sixteen](https://github.com/ralsina/sixteen) ## Installation From prebuilt binaries: Each release provides statically-linked binaries that should work on any Linux. Get them from the [releases page](https://github.com/ralsina/tartrazine/releases) and put them in your PATH. To build from source: 1. Clone this repo 2. Run `make` to build the `tartrazine` binary 3. Copy the binary somewhere in your PATH. ## Usage as a CLI tool ```shell $ tartrazine whatever.c -l c -t catppuccin-macchiato --line-numbers \ --standalone -o whatever.html ``` ## Usage as a Library This works: ```crystal require "tartrazine" lexer = Tartrazine.lexer("crystal") theme = Tartrazine.theme("catppuccin-macchiato") puts Tartrazine::Html.new.format(File.read(ARGV[0]), lexer, theme) ``` ## Contributing 1. Fork it () 2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`) 3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Add some feature'`) 4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`) 5. Create a new Pull Request ## Contributors - [Roberto Alsina](https://github.com/ralsina) - creator and maintainer