This plugin provides a simple helper for adding GeSHi syntax highlighting to your application.
You can install the plugin with composer. Add the following your composer.json file:
"require": {
"markstory/geshi": "~3.0"
}
After running composer update
you should also remember to load the plugin.
In your application's bootstrap.php file add the following:
Plugin::load('Geshi');
The GeSHi helper offers three different ways to set GeSHi's features, which affects how you will include the helper in your controller.
If you want to use a geshi.php
configuration file, or you want to set the
features from within your view later, make sure to include without
pre-configuration. Otherwise if you want to include the features' settings
in your helper declaration, include with pre-configuration, both explained
next.
To use the helper, include the helper in your View:
public $helpers = ['Geshi.Geshi'];
You will have to include a geshi.php
configuration file or simply set the
features later from your view.
To use the helper and specify specific GeSHi features, use the options form of including helpers:
public $helpers = [
'Geshi.Geshi' => [
'set_header_type' => ['GESHI_FANCY_LINE_NUMBERS', 5]
]
];
Where the passed-in key is a GeSHi function name, and the passed-in values is an array of values for the function. Note that because GeSHi's own constants are out of scope at this point, you must quote named constants as shown above. GeshiHelper will resolve them for you.
highlight($html)
This method will scan HTML for <pre>
blocks with a known lang attribute. This
method is good for highlighting code samples in blog posts or wiki pages.
You can indicate the language of the text in a <pre>
block by setting the lang
attribute. For example:
<pre lang="php">
<?php
echo 'hi'
</pre>
Will be highlighted as php code.
highlightText($text, $language)
This method will highlight $text
in $language
. Use this method to
highlight text in any language GeSHI supports.
highlightText($text, $language, $withStylesheet)
This is the same method as above, but if you specify true for the optional, third parameter then the helper will include the GeSHi-generated inline style sheet.
As mentioned earlier there are three ways to set GeSHI's feature options.
Above "Include with pre-configuration" details how to do this. If you pre-configure in your controller, it's still possible to override these initial settings by configuring in your views.
You can configure GeSHI's features from within your views
by accessing the $features
variable so: $this->Geshi->features = array(...)
, for example:
$this->Geshi->setConfig('features', [
'geshi_function_name' => ['geshi_parameter', list, values]
]);
Note that GeSHI's constants are in scope here, and so quoting parameter values is optional from within views.
Setting the features in your views gives you great flexibility to use GeSHi with (for example) multiple languages served by the same controller.
You can configure the GeSHi instance by creating a geshi.php
file in your
/config
directory. This file should contain the code/method calls to
configure the $geshi
object. An example can be found in
tests/geshi.php
Note that the configuration file will be ignored completely if you have pre-configured
the GeSHi instance in your $helpers
or have set $this->Geshi->features
in your view.
This code is licensed under the MIT License.