Note: This is a feature-request and not a request for a workaround - I'm aware of the workarounds and use them already. I mentioned that in the title but I guess that's bad form?
Tagging a script block with powershell
:
```powershell
Write-Output "Hello, $Env:USERNAME"
```
produces no syntax highlighting:
Write-Output "Hello, $Env:USERNAME"
This behavior holds for other common aliases for Powershell - ps
, ps1
, etc.
You can trick it into the default highlighter by using lang-powershell
or the sh highlighter using sh
(as is mentioned in other questions ):
which is better than nothing, but is imperfect; note now the environment variable within the interpolated string is not properly highlighted as a variable. Compare vs. the standard syntax highlighter built into Windows:
So there are really two requests here:
At least offer the default syntax highlighter on the
powershell
andps
names. For example, the block below uses thecs
name, not the verboselang-cs
. I didn't even know about the need for thelang-
prefix until I started researching this feature request, since I'd always been able to discover the short-form by guessing! Thelang-
prefix is non-discoverable and you have to go to documentation to learn about it, I've never seen it in any other Markdown implementation of fenced-code-blocks. It's not even mentioned in the formatting-help sidebar. Usinglang-default
orsh
are non-discoverable workarounds that shouldn't be necessary.Console.WriteLine($"Hello, {Environment.UserName}.");
Ideally, a proper syntax highlighter for Powershell that understands the language fully, including its string-interpolation syntax. Note how the C# snippet above gets proper
$"string interpolation"