3

Am I doing this wrong, or is the syntax coloring support for macros subpar? They look to be treated as comments when the argument is only a single word, but multi-word arguments are highlighted differently.

Can this be fixed by, e.g., updating the version of prettify?

// plain code block
int foo() {
#if this_looks_like_a_comment
    return 1;
#elif "but this does not"
    return 2;
#endif
}
// preceded by <!-- language: lang-c -->
int foo() {
#if this_looks_like_a_comment
    return 1;
#elif "but this does not"
    return 2;
#endif
}
// preceded by <!-- language: lang-objc -->
int foo() {
#if this_looks_like_a_comment
    return 1;
#elif "but this does not"
    return 2;
#endif
}
1
  • 1
    This also occurs with the shebang (#!) in shell script questions.
    – Majora320
    Apr 6, 2016 at 23:01

1 Answer 1

2

This has nothing to do with single vs. multiple words; highlighting is broken for the #if directive:

#define this_works
#if this_doesnt

Updating the version of prettify won't work because the code is still broken:

/* elif, endif, ifdef, ifndef, but no if! */
/^#(?:(?:define|e(?:l|nd)if|else|error|ifn?def|include|line|pragma|undef|warning)\b|[^\r\n]*)/

code-prettify no longer appears to be dead, so you can submit a ticket/patch/PR, but who knows if Stack Overflow will actually update to a newer version. The last request to update sank into oblivion.

1
  • I'm not really sure what to do about this. Treating these as comments seems like a bad approach, but it looks to be very ingrained in how prettify works — there's no other class defined that would really match the case of these directives. But I'm guessing the chance of switching to any other highlighting system is near-zero...
    – jtbandes
    Apr 7, 2016 at 18:10

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