This is a comment that is too big to fit into a comment — especially as it needs an image.
I find it weird that in C code, the fprintf()
and fscanf()
functions are highlighted as 'standard functions' but the fgets()
function is not (see How do I print the binary of characters from an input file? for the original answer):

For consistency, those functions should all be the same colour. When a function name gets promoted to 'standard' and gets the colour is subjective, but for C code, it would be reasonable to cover the functions in the latest C standard (with maybe gets()
also included because it was a standard function but isn't any more — unless it gets coloured a virulent red to indicate it should never be used, pun intended).
Or maybe the criterion isn't 'standard function', but I'm not sure what the alternative criterion is.
Another example is at How to read integers from a file without knowing how many integers per line? — it doesn't highlight fgets()
again, nor strtol()
. And, if it survives so that it is visible to users without 10K reputation, the code in Storing two arrays in shared memory using shmat has lots of user-defined functions that are not highlighted, but it also has POSIX C functions that could be regarded as standard but they are not highlighted.
In my opinion, consistency within an image (code segment) is important. I'm not so worried about comparisons with what was present with Prettify compared to highlight.js. (Oh, and if it isn't clear, I'm using dark mode display. I've not checked what happens with light mode display.)
puts
), variables/macros (stdout
,NULL
) and integer constants (-1
). Let alone the same color for types, keywords and preprocessor directives. This is bonkers. I would suggest you to incorporate this in your post, since the real problem here is not that the theme changed, but that the new theme is hideous.