diff -r 000000000000 -r 1918ee327afb src/gui/text/qsyntaxhighlighter.cpp --- /dev/null Thu Jan 01 00:00:00 1970 +0000 +++ b/src/gui/text/qsyntaxhighlighter.cpp Mon Jan 11 14:00:40 2010 +0000 @@ -0,0 +1,642 @@ +/**************************************************************************** +** +** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). +** All rights reserved. +** Contact: Nokia Corporation (qt-info@nokia.com) +** +** This file is part of the QtGui module of the Qt Toolkit. +** +** $QT_BEGIN_LICENSE:LGPL$ +** No Commercial Usage +** This file contains pre-release code and may not be distributed. +** You may use this file in accordance with the terms and conditions +** contained in the Technology Preview License Agreement accompanying +** this package. +** +** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage +** Alternatively, this file may be used under the terms of the GNU Lesser +** General Public License version 2.1 as published by the Free Software +** Foundation and appearing in the file LICENSE.LGPL included in the +** packaging of this file. Please review the following information to +** ensure the GNU Lesser General Public License version 2.1 requirements +** will be met: http://www.gnu.org/licenses/old-licenses/lgpl-2.1.html. +** +** In addition, as a special exception, Nokia gives you certain additional +** rights. These rights are described in the Nokia Qt LGPL Exception +** version 1.1, included in the file LGPL_EXCEPTION.txt in this package. +** +** If you have questions regarding the use of this file, please contact +** Nokia at qt-info@nokia.com. +** +** +** +** +** +** +** +** +** $QT_END_LICENSE$ +** +****************************************************************************/ + +#include "qsyntaxhighlighter.h" + +#ifndef QT_NO_SYNTAXHIGHLIGHTER +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include + +QT_BEGIN_NAMESPACE + +class QSyntaxHighlighterPrivate : public QObjectPrivate +{ + Q_DECLARE_PUBLIC(QSyntaxHighlighter) +public: + inline QSyntaxHighlighterPrivate() : rehighlightPending(false) {} + + QPointer doc; + + void _q_reformatBlocks(int from, int charsRemoved, int charsAdded); + void reformatBlock(QTextBlock block); + + inline void rehighlight(QTextCursor &cursor, QTextCursor::MoveOperation operation) { + QObject::disconnect(doc, SIGNAL(contentsChange(int,int,int)), + q_func(), SLOT(_q_reformatBlocks(int,int,int))); + cursor.beginEditBlock(); + int from = cursor.position(); + cursor.movePosition(operation); + _q_reformatBlocks(from, 0, cursor.position() - from); + cursor.endEditBlock(); + QObject::connect(doc, SIGNAL(contentsChange(int,int,int)), + q_func(), SLOT(_q_reformatBlocks(int,int,int))); + } + + inline void _q_delayedRehighlight() { + if (!rehighlightPending) + return; + rehighlightPending = false; + q_func()->rehighlight(); + return; + } + + void applyFormatChanges(); + QVector formatChanges; + QTextBlock currentBlock; + bool rehighlightPending; +}; + +void QSyntaxHighlighterPrivate::applyFormatChanges() +{ + QTextLayout *layout = currentBlock.layout(); + + QList ranges = layout->additionalFormats(); + + const int preeditAreaStart = layout->preeditAreaPosition(); + const int preeditAreaLength = layout->preeditAreaText().length(); + + QList::Iterator it = ranges.begin(); + while (it != ranges.end()) { + if (it->start >= preeditAreaStart + && it->start + it->length <= preeditAreaStart + preeditAreaLength) + ++it; + else + it = ranges.erase(it); + } + + QTextCharFormat emptyFormat; + + QTextLayout::FormatRange r; + r.start = r.length = -1; + + int i = 0; + while (i < formatChanges.count()) { + + while (i < formatChanges.count() && formatChanges.at(i) == emptyFormat) + ++i; + + if (i >= formatChanges.count()) + break; + + r.start = i; + r.format = formatChanges.at(i); + + while (i < formatChanges.count() && formatChanges.at(i) == r.format) + ++i; + + if (i >= formatChanges.count()) + break; + + r.length = i - r.start; + + if (r.start >= preeditAreaStart) { + r.start += preeditAreaLength; + } else if (r.start + r.length >= preeditAreaStart) { + r.length += preeditAreaLength; + } + + ranges << r; + r.start = r.length = -1; + } + + if (r.start != -1) { + r.length = formatChanges.count() - r.start; + + if (r.start >= preeditAreaStart) { + r.start += preeditAreaLength; + } else if (r.start + r.length >= preeditAreaStart) { + r.length += preeditAreaLength; + } + + ranges << r; + } + + layout->setAdditionalFormats(ranges); +} + +void QSyntaxHighlighterPrivate::_q_reformatBlocks(int from, int charsRemoved, int charsAdded) +{ + Q_UNUSED(charsRemoved); + rehighlightPending = false; + + QTextBlock block = doc->findBlock(from); + if (!block.isValid()) + return; + + int endPosition; + QTextBlock lastBlock = doc->findBlock(from + charsAdded + (charsRemoved > 0 ? 1 : 0)); + if (lastBlock.isValid()) + endPosition = lastBlock.position() + lastBlock.length(); + else + endPosition = doc->docHandle()->length(); + + bool forceHighlightOfNextBlock = false; + + while (block.isValid() && (block.position() < endPosition || forceHighlightOfNextBlock)) { + const int stateBeforeHighlight = block.userState(); + + reformatBlock(block); + + forceHighlightOfNextBlock = (block.userState() != stateBeforeHighlight); + + block = block.next(); + } + + formatChanges.clear(); +} + +void QSyntaxHighlighterPrivate::reformatBlock(QTextBlock block) +{ + Q_Q(QSyntaxHighlighter); + + Q_ASSERT_X(!currentBlock.isValid(), "QSyntaxHighlighter::reformatBlock()", "reFormatBlock() called recursively"); + + currentBlock = block; + QTextBlock previous = block.previous(); + + formatChanges.fill(QTextCharFormat(), block.length() - 1); + q->highlightBlock(block.text()); + applyFormatChanges(); + + doc->markContentsDirty(block.position(), block.length()); + + currentBlock = QTextBlock(); +} + +/*! + \class QSyntaxHighlighter + \reentrant + + \brief The QSyntaxHighlighter class allows you to define syntax + highlighting rules, and in addition you can use the class to query + a document's current formatting or user data. + + \since 4.1 + + \ingroup richtext-processing + + The QSyntaxHighlighter class is a base class for implementing + QTextEdit syntax highlighters. A syntax highligher automatically + highlights parts of the text in a QTextEdit, or more generally in + a QTextDocument. Syntax highlighters are often used when the user + is entering text in a specific format (for example source code) + and help the user to read the text and identify syntax errors. + + To provide your own syntax highlighting, you must subclass + QSyntaxHighlighter and reimplement highlightBlock(). + + When you create an instance of your QSyntaxHighlighter subclass, + pass it the QTextEdit or QTextDocument that you want the syntax + highlighting to be applied to. For example: + + \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_text_qsyntaxhighlighter.cpp 0 + + After this your highlightBlock() function will be called + automatically whenever necessary. Use your highlightBlock() + function to apply formatting (e.g. setting the font and color) to + the text that is passed to it. QSyntaxHighlighter provides the + setFormat() function which applies a given QTextCharFormat on + the current text block. For example: + + \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_text_qsyntaxhighlighter.cpp 1 + + Some syntaxes can have constructs that span several text + blocks. For example, a C++ syntax highlighter should be able to + cope with \c{/}\c{*...*}\c{/} multiline comments. To deal with + these cases it is necessary to know the end state of the previous + text block (e.g. "in comment"). + + Inside your highlightBlock() implementation you can query the end + state of the previous text block using the previousBlockState() + function. After parsing the block you can save the last state + using setCurrentBlockState(). + + The currentBlockState() and previousBlockState() functions return + an int value. If no state is set, the returned value is -1. You + can designate any other value to identify any given state using + the setCurrentBlockState() function. Once the state is set the + QTextBlock keeps that value until it is set set again or until the + corresponding paragraph of text is deleted. + + For example, if you're writing a simple C++ syntax highlighter, + you might designate 1 to signify "in comment": + + \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_text_qsyntaxhighlighter.cpp 2 + + In the example above, we first set the current block state to + 0. Then, if the previous block ended within a comment, we higlight + from the beginning of the current block (\c {startIndex = + 0}). Otherwise, we search for the given start expression. If the + specified end expression cannot be found in the text block, we + change the current block state by calling setCurrentBlockState(), + and make sure that the rest of the block is higlighted. + + In addition you can query the current formatting and user data + using the format() and currentBlockUserData() functions + respectively. You can also attach user data to the current text + block using the setCurrentBlockUserData() function. + QTextBlockUserData can be used to store custom settings. In the + case of syntax highlighting, it is in particular interesting as + cache storage for information that you may figure out while + parsing the paragraph's text. For an example, see the + setCurrentBlockUserData() documentation. + + \sa QTextEdit, {Syntax Highlighter Example} +*/ + +/*! + Constructs a QSyntaxHighlighter with the given \a parent. +*/ +QSyntaxHighlighter::QSyntaxHighlighter(QObject *parent) + : QObject(*new QSyntaxHighlighterPrivate, parent) +{ +} + +/*! + Constructs a QSyntaxHighlighter and installs it on \a parent. + The specified QTextDocument also becomes the owner of the + QSyntaxHighlighter. +*/ +QSyntaxHighlighter::QSyntaxHighlighter(QTextDocument *parent) + : QObject(*new QSyntaxHighlighterPrivate, parent) +{ + setDocument(parent); +} + +/*! + Constructs a QSyntaxHighlighter and installs it on \a parent 's + QTextDocument. The specified QTextEdit also becomes the owner of + the QSyntaxHighlighter. +*/ +QSyntaxHighlighter::QSyntaxHighlighter(QTextEdit *parent) + : QObject(*new QSyntaxHighlighterPrivate, parent) +{ + setDocument(parent->document()); +} + +/*! + Destructor. Uninstalls this syntax highlighter from the text document. +*/ +QSyntaxHighlighter::~QSyntaxHighlighter() +{ + setDocument(0); +} + +/*! + Installs the syntax highlighter on the given QTextDocument \a doc. + A QSyntaxHighlighter can only be used with one document at a time. +*/ +void QSyntaxHighlighter::setDocument(QTextDocument *doc) +{ + Q_D(QSyntaxHighlighter); + if (d->doc) { + disconnect(d->doc, SIGNAL(contentsChange(int,int,int)), + this, SLOT(_q_reformatBlocks(int,int,int))); + + QTextCursor cursor(d->doc); + cursor.beginEditBlock(); + for (QTextBlock blk = d->doc->begin(); blk.isValid(); blk = blk.next()) + blk.layout()->clearAdditionalFormats(); + cursor.endEditBlock(); + } + d->doc = doc; + if (d->doc) { + connect(d->doc, SIGNAL(contentsChange(int,int,int)), + this, SLOT(_q_reformatBlocks(int,int,int))); + QTimer::singleShot(0, this, SLOT(_q_delayedRehighlight())); + d->rehighlightPending = true; + } +} + +/*! + Returns the QTextDocument on which this syntax highlighter is + installed. +*/ +QTextDocument *QSyntaxHighlighter::document() const +{ + Q_D(const QSyntaxHighlighter); + return d->doc; +} + +/*! + \since 4.2 + + Reapplies the highlighting to the whole document. + + \sa rehighlightBlock() +*/ +void QSyntaxHighlighter::rehighlight() +{ + Q_D(QSyntaxHighlighter); + if (!d->doc) + return; + + QTextCursor cursor(d->doc); + d->rehighlight(cursor, QTextCursor::End); +} + +/*! + \since 4.6 + + Reapplies the highlighting to the given QTextBlock \a block. + + \sa rehighlight() +*/ +void QSyntaxHighlighter::rehighlightBlock(const QTextBlock &block) +{ + Q_D(QSyntaxHighlighter); + if (!d->doc) + return; + + QTextCursor cursor(block); + d->rehighlight(cursor, QTextCursor::EndOfBlock); +} + +/*! + \fn void QSyntaxHighlighter::highlightBlock(const QString &text) + + Highlights the given text block. This function is called when + necessary by the rich text engine, i.e. on text blocks which have + changed. + + To provide your own syntax highlighting, you must subclass + QSyntaxHighlighter and reimplement highlightBlock(). In your + reimplementation you should parse the block's \a text and call + setFormat() as often as necessary to apply any font and color + changes that you require. For example: + + \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_text_qsyntaxhighlighter.cpp 3 + + Some syntaxes can have constructs that span several text + blocks. For example, a C++ syntax highlighter should be able to + cope with \c{/}\c{*...*}\c{/} multiline comments. To deal with + these cases it is necessary to know the end state of the previous + text block (e.g. "in comment"). + + Inside your highlightBlock() implementation you can query the end + state of the previous text block using the previousBlockState() + function. After parsing the block you can save the last state + using setCurrentBlockState(). + + The currentBlockState() and previousBlockState() functions return + an int value. If no state is set, the returned value is -1. You + can designate any other value to identify any given state using + the setCurrentBlockState() function. Once the state is set the + QTextBlock keeps that value until it is set set again or until the + corresponding paragraph of text gets deleted. + + For example, if you're writing a simple C++ syntax highlighter, + you might designate 1 to signify "in comment". For a text block + that ended in the middle of a comment you'd set 1 using + setCurrentBlockState, and for other paragraphs you'd set 0. + In your parsing code if the return value of previousBlockState() + is 1, you would highlight the text as a C++ comment until you + reached the closing \c{*}\c{/}. + + \sa previousBlockState(), setFormat(), setCurrentBlockState() +*/ + +/*! + This function is applied to the syntax highlighter's current text + block (i.e. the text that is passed to the highlightBlock() + function). + + The specified \a format is applied to the text from the \a start + position for a length of \a count characters (if \a count is 0, + nothing is done). The formatting properties set in \a format are + merged at display time with the formatting information stored + directly in the document, for example as previously set with + QTextCursor's functions. Note that the document itself remains + unmodified by the format set through this function. + + \sa format(), highlightBlock() +*/ +void QSyntaxHighlighter::setFormat(int start, int count, const QTextCharFormat &format) +{ + Q_D(QSyntaxHighlighter); + + if (start < 0 || start >= d->formatChanges.count()) + return; + + const int end = qMin(start + count, d->formatChanges.count()); + for (int i = start; i < end; ++i) + d->formatChanges[i] = format; +} + +/*! + \overload + + The specified \a color is applied to the current text block from + the \a start position for a length of \a count characters. + + The other attributes of the current text block, e.g. the font and + background color, are reset to default values. + + \sa format(), highlightBlock() +*/ +void QSyntaxHighlighter::setFormat(int start, int count, const QColor &color) +{ + QTextCharFormat format; + format.setForeground(color); + setFormat(start, count, format); +} + +/*! + \overload + + The specified \a font is applied to the current text block from + the \a start position for a length of \a count characters. + + The other attributes of the current text block, e.g. the font and + background color, are reset to default values. + + \sa format(), highlightBlock() +*/ +void QSyntaxHighlighter::setFormat(int start, int count, const QFont &font) +{ + QTextCharFormat format; + format.setFont(font); + setFormat(start, count, format); +} + +/*! + \fn QTextCharFormat QSyntaxHighlighter::format(int position) const + + Returns the format at \a position inside the syntax highlighter's + current text block. +*/ +QTextCharFormat QSyntaxHighlighter::format(int pos) const +{ + Q_D(const QSyntaxHighlighter); + if (pos < 0 || pos >= d->formatChanges.count()) + return QTextCharFormat(); + return d->formatChanges.at(pos); +} + +/*! + Returns the end state of the text block previous to the + syntax highlighter's current block. If no value was + previously set, the returned value is -1. + + \sa highlightBlock(), setCurrentBlockState() +*/ +int QSyntaxHighlighter::previousBlockState() const +{ + Q_D(const QSyntaxHighlighter); + if (!d->currentBlock.isValid()) + return -1; + + const QTextBlock previous = d->currentBlock.previous(); + if (!previous.isValid()) + return -1; + + return previous.userState(); +} + +/*! + Returns the state of the current text block. If no value is set, + the returned value is -1. +*/ +int QSyntaxHighlighter::currentBlockState() const +{ + Q_D(const QSyntaxHighlighter); + if (!d->currentBlock.isValid()) + return -1; + + return d->currentBlock.userState(); +} + +/*! + Sets the state of the current text block to \a newState. + + \sa highlightBlock() +*/ +void QSyntaxHighlighter::setCurrentBlockState(int newState) +{ + Q_D(QSyntaxHighlighter); + if (!d->currentBlock.isValid()) + return; + + d->currentBlock.setUserState(newState); +} + +/*! + Attaches the given \a data to the current text block. The + ownership is passed to the underlying text document, i.e. the + provided QTextBlockUserData object will be deleted if the + corresponding text block gets deleted. + + QTextBlockUserData can be used to store custom settings. In the + case of syntax highlighting, it is in particular interesting as + cache storage for information that you may figure out while + parsing the paragraph's text. + + For example while parsing the text, you can keep track of + parenthesis characters that you encounter ('{[(' and the like), + and store their relative position and the actual QChar in a simple + class derived from QTextBlockUserData: + + \snippet doc/src/snippets/code/src_gui_text_qsyntaxhighlighter.cpp 4 + + During cursor navigation in the associated editor, you can ask the + current QTextBlock (retrieved using the QTextCursor::block() + function) if it has a user data object set and cast it to your \c + BlockData object. Then you can check if the current cursor + position matches with a previously recorded parenthesis position, + and, depending on the type of parenthesis (opening or closing), + find the next opening or closing parenthesis on the same level. + + In this way you can do a visual parenthesis matching and highlight + from the current cursor position to the matching parenthesis. That + makes it easier to spot a missing parenthesis in your code and to + find where a corresponding opening/closing parenthesis is when + editing parenthesis intensive code. + + \sa QTextBlock::setUserData() +*/ +void QSyntaxHighlighter::setCurrentBlockUserData(QTextBlockUserData *data) +{ + Q_D(QSyntaxHighlighter); + if (!d->currentBlock.isValid()) + return; + + d->currentBlock.setUserData(data); +} + +/*! + Returns the QTextBlockUserData object previously attached to the + current text block. + + \sa QTextBlock::userData(), setCurrentBlockUserData() +*/ +QTextBlockUserData *QSyntaxHighlighter::currentBlockUserData() const +{ + Q_D(const QSyntaxHighlighter); + if (!d->currentBlock.isValid()) + return 0; + + return d->currentBlock.userData(); +} + +/*! + \since 4.4 + + Returns the current text block. + */ +QTextBlock QSyntaxHighlighter::currentBlock() const +{ + Q_D(const QSyntaxHighlighter); + return d->currentBlock; +} + +QT_END_NAMESPACE + +#include "moc_qsyntaxhighlighter.cpp" + +#endif // QT_NO_SYNTAXHIGHLIGHTER