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I find that one of the best ways to demonstrate code examples, especially when picking apart something complicated or detailed, is to use diff hunks to illustrate differences.

This is something that still isn't done very often but I definitely see it more in blogs and articles more than in years past.

The reason that this works so well is that especially if the change being shown is a small part of a line, and even if the hunks are up to 6 lines or so in total, the color and the alignment draws the reader into the exact spots where code has changed. This is much better than pasting two larger chunks of code and putting the burden on the reader to pick apart the change.

The issue I am alluding to is that when I put in the <!-- language: lang-diff --> comment above a code block in SO, this is not recognized. I'm just looking for a very light implementation of the diff language, which is probably the world's simplest syntax highlighting routine ever. If a string starts with +, make the text of the rest of the line green, and if a line starts with -, make it red. Otherwise, do not color the line.

In the meantime I just use <!-- language: lang-none --> instead, the familiar diff format still helps because of the alignment and the repetition and the +s and -s. Coloring the lines would be really nice though.

As for those of you out there who never use diffs and can't stand them, well, this question doesn't really apply, and it won't take away any of the existing highlighting functionality that you know and love. In particular I am talking about adding a subtle color highlighting when diff output is used as a code block in a question or an answer. Not anything more custom or complicated than this.

Personally I find the usefulness of diffs to be self-evident. They draw the reader in to the exact thing that changed, it makes it so much easier to visualize the action that a piece of code has gone through. Yeah, if one has photographic memory, perhaps it's just moot... I have the opposite tendency, large walls of text put me to sleep, so anything that helps to pinpoint important information helps.

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  • 4
    So... sacrifice coloring the code based on keywords just to make some lines green and red? It's a syntax highlighter, not a difference highlighter.
    – animuson StaffMod
    Sep 26, 2014 at 2:31
  • 16
    When I look at a diff (which is a special format that begins each line with either a space, a plus or a minus) I really do not want syntax highlighting. Every tool ever already does it this way. They also usually add the green and red. Anyway, this proposal does not take away from regular syntax highlighting at all... I'm just saying can we add a new language specification to support line based coloring.
    – Steven Lu
    Sep 26, 2014 at 2:32
  • Yes, but if you apply it to a code block, none of the code will be highlighted based on syntax. How many people even use diff formatting anyways? I've personally never seen a code block with pluses and minuses in front of lines in all my time on Stack Overflow.
    – animuson StaffMod
    Sep 26, 2014 at 2:35
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    Yeah this isn't a real common style yet, but it works really well for me. Tell me though, how many times have you seen a question asked which contains a 100 line code dump, and then an answer is posted with a 95 line code dump, presumably that has surgically fixed the glaring issues. You could not possibly tell me that if the answerer had posted an actual diff here in diff format that this would be any worse.
    – Steven Lu
    Sep 26, 2014 at 2:45
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    @animuson unified diff for code block changes, Does multi-file unified diff requires Index: lines?, Unified diff: What does @@ mean?, Can't apply unified diff patch on Solaris - just have to know what to look for. They're not incredibly common, and they don't stick just one one other tag so you tend to have to look to find more than one... but they're out there.
    – user289086
    Sep 26, 2014 at 2:52
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    ... they also tend to be well asked questions, and thus receive fewer flags or close votes and thus even lower on the radar of people who would otherwise see them. They get answered and disappear to all but the searchers rather than the browsers of popular or problematic questions. Note that this is what the OP is trying to avoid (the second large code block).
    – user289086
    Sep 26, 2014 at 2:53
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    @BoltClock it doesn't need to (diff already did that for you). You could make it look something like i.stack.imgur.com/WrUIo.png - or an example for a similar request for Redmine: diff code coloring using coderay to see whats being asked. When you have something that is a diff file, syntax highlight lines with '+' as green and '-' as red and '@' with another color.
    – user289086
    Sep 26, 2014 at 3:09
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    @StevenLu the understanding of it depends on if you've seen it and used it. I used to be a redmine admin where we had svn and a large application (and a bit branch phobic). Sometimes for issues where we knew the code was going to change before the issue could be completely fixed, we'd attach diffs to the issue rather than fighting with long lived branches. In early code review days (before we got svn integration working nicely) we'd attach diffs for code review to the issue. If you haven't used them, you wouldn't know what it could look like... and then there's patches from usenet days.
    – user289086
    Sep 26, 2014 at 3:27
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    Well maybe I'm just weird because I didn't really start coding seriously and using version control till the mid 2000's so by this time there were plenty of GUI tools but even still, the only feasible way to actually visualize what happened is through diffs. How does a programmer not use diffs, repeatedly, day in and day out, is simply beyond me. What do people do? Keep code in their head? BAHAHAHA! Personally... i maintain (and use, like, every 10 minutes every day when I do any sort of work) my own branch of google diff-match-patch, a diff program that does a character-wise diff...
    – Steven Lu
    Sep 26, 2014 at 3:33
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    Note that while this isn't as common on Stack Overflow, it does find use on other sites that are more unix related than SO.
    – user289086
    Oct 15, 2014 at 20:19
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    I could have used this here: unix.stackexchange.com/questions/195081/…
    – Kaz
    Aug 4, 2017 at 15:15
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    I could have used this here: vi.stackexchange.com/a/14681/1553
    – x-yuri
    Dec 30, 2017 at 1:03
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    Any updated on this? Using code of the questioner with changes is very hard to see. May 18, 2018 at 19:47
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    This would be useful on SO teams. An answer I'm writing involves looking at diffs and I'm sure my team members would appreciate having colored output to read through
    – codehearts
    May 30, 2018 at 19:23
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    Another comment is that in github markdown, you can just add diff after the three backticks that begin a code block, and it does it nicely.
    – Steven Lu
    Jul 14, 2021 at 18:27

2 Answers 2

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Since Stack Overflow has migrated to highlight.js and there is a diff highlighter (search for "diff" on the website) available for that tool, I wonder why it is still unsupported on SO. It should be easy to activate. So I am suggesting that somebody does that. Presently, neither of

  • diff, lang-diff,
  • patch, lang-patch

yield the desired result.

(OT: The same is true for Groovy and other popular languages.)

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  • 1
    It was there, but it's been turned off. I expect the mentioned "US holiday" is the 4th of July.. + 6-8 units.
    – Scratte
    Jul 14, 2021 at 14:48
  • It's not clear to me whether this is apples and oranges or not. There's a HTML diff that shows the history of edits, but I'm talking about an actual syntax highlighting language in markdown code blocks.
    – Steven Lu
    Jul 14, 2021 at 18:31
  • That is what I am talking about too.
    – kriegaex
    Jul 14, 2021 at 23:41
  • There are many formatting options supported by highlight.js but not on SO. If someone’s motivated, it’d be worth looking how (and even whether) SO actually uses highlight.js, and which version… Aug 14, 2022 at 8:53
  • "Whether" is not the question. Did you follow my link to the corresponding announcement at all?
    – kriegaex
    Aug 14, 2022 at 12:43
  • 1
    As a website for fixing code mistakes, this is absurd - even discord supports diff highlighting.
    – Hao Wu
    Jan 13, 2023 at 1:27
9

I want diff-syntax highlighting too!

Stackoverflow uses uses Google Code Prettify, which currently doesn't have a diff syntax. If a diff syntax is added to Prettify, then it will probably be supported in Stackoverfow sooner or later.

To offer your support, you can:

  1. Upvote and/or comment on these two issues:

  2. Submit a PR with a file for diff syntax.

    In the "For which languages does it work?" section it states:

    If you'd like to add an extension for your favorite language, please look at src/lang-lisp.js and submit a pull request.

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    Since Prettify has been discontinued where does that leave us? 🤔 Aug 13, 2020 at 16:38

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