The current syntax highlight is somewhat minimal, because the engine (unlike some others) intentionally doesn’t highlight identifiers at all (unless they have a special meaning1).
In principle that’s fine. However, it often means that no (or almost no) highlighting is applied to a piece of code. The result is uniformly black, and no structural information is given. This defeats the whole point of syntax highlighting. Here’s an (extreme, but not atypical) example using R:
library(dplyr)
library(stringr)
result = df %>% mutate(`Total (%)` = Total / sum_na(Total))
Here’s how this is rendered for me:
… and here’s how it could be rendered:
It’s not a massive difference, but it distinguishes structural tokens and improves readability. highlight.js already generates the required markup (for some languages), Stack Overflow just needs to add suitable CSS.
1 Other users have already remarked that the chosen colours lead to confusion, because function definitions for example are highlighted identically to keywords, builtins, and (non-string) literals. This isn’t inherent in the syntax highlight engine, it’s a design choice.
library
is a regular function, there’s absolutely nothing special to it. The highlight.js language definition does treat primitive functions as special tokens, butlibrary
isn’t primitive. R also has virtually no keywords (< 10!).