On 24 August 2016 at 09:05, Procházka Lukáš Ing. wrote:
Hello Mojca,
thanks for the answer.
I need a COMMAND LINE solution for Windows - my intention is to process many (tens-hundreds) ConTeXt files into HTML - just to make their code better-readable.
Vim *is* command-line, isn't it? (And if you ask me, it is a lot more user-friendly on Windows than it is on Linux/Mac :)
And - as e.g. Ctx wiki has pretty-printing Ctx source - I believe there is such tool...
That must be some php plugin. But you just reminded me that ConTeXt in fact has a lua script build in already that generates a "pretty-printed" HTML that's basically the same as what you see in Scite. I'm sure Hans knows the invocation by heart, but I can look it up as well. This is how the output looks like: http://source2.contextgarden.net/tex/context/sample/sample-tex.html Mojca
On Wed, 24 Aug 2016 08:13:06 +0200, Mojca Miklavec wrote:
On 24 August 2016 at 07:15, Lukáš Procházka wrote:
Hello,
does anybody know about a tool (maybe ConTeXt has something like this built-in) which would convert ConTeXt code into pretty-printed HTML code?
E.g.:
---- t.mkiv \starttext \foo[bar] baz \stoptext ----
to be rewritten into e.g.:
---- t.html <pre class="keyword">\starttext</pre> <pre class="keyword">\foo</pre><pre class="bracet">[</pre>bar<pre class="bracet">]</pre><pre> baz</pre> <pre class="keyword">\stoptext<pre> ----
I used vim and TextMate (text editors) in the past to achieve that.
In theory ConTeXt has XML/HTML output and can parse text either using the vim module or the built-in lua-based lexers, so it's probably doable, but it might be far easier to go through some text editor. I'm sure Scite (with syntax highlighting definitions written by Hans) can do that as well.
Mojca