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Make beautiful colored code listings in LaTeX with the power of TreeSitter.

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What is this?

This is a CLI tool that consumes TreeSitter's output and transforms it into LaTeX code that will produce syntax-colored code listing.

If you are familiar with LaTeX packages like minted or listings, this could be seen as an alternative.

Example snippets:

also see full example pdf

Note that the colors and styles can be individually customized in configuration file.

Rust example snippet:
rust example

Julia example snippet:
rust example

How to use it?

External requirements:

  1. TreeSitter installed

    On Linux, it is tree-sitter-cli package.
    On Windows, it is tree-sitter.exe.

    You can check if the installation is successfull by running tree-sitter command. It should print help.

  2. Parsers for languages downloaded

    TreeSitter has parsers for many languages, you will need to download the ones you want and put them in a directory that will be specified in TreeSitter's configuration. More on that later.

  3. LaTeX setup

    In your LaTeX preamble, you will need to add \usepackage{listings}. The listings package provides captions, labels and referencing as well as other formatting (line numbers, frame, ...).

First run:

If you never ran tree-sitter on your machine before, it will want you to initialize it. That is done simply by running tree-sitter init-config and it will create a configuration file and tell you where to find it.

Actual usage of chromacode

You can download pre-build binary chromacode[.exe] from here or you can clone this repo and build it yourself by running cargo build --release (assuming you have Rust and Cargo installed and set up).

Once you have the initial setup done, you can just call chromacode and follow the instructions. Or, if you prefer classic CLI, you can call chromacode -h, read the help page and use it in non-interactive mode (or even in hybrid mode).

The general idea is that you will feed it a file with some source code and it will spit out a .tex file that is ready to be used in your LaTeX code (by \input{} command). Note that the package listings will be required in LaTeX since it provides labels, line numbering, frame and other goodness.

Configuration

For more detailed information, please refer to the official TreeSitter documentation

After running tree-sitter init-config, TreeSitter will create a configuration file config.json.

Paths and parsers

In the config.json file, there is an option parser-directories that determines where will TreeSitter look for the language parsers. When you download some language parser, the directory tree-sitter-[language] should be located in those paths.

Theme (colors and styles)

Second option in the config.json file is theme. TreeSitter will use those values for highlighting.

There will be probably some default values, but I recommend using the example I provided here as an template to build upon. It contains more capture groups and has unified format.

Highlight queries

Highlighting queries are patterns that tell TreeSitter what pieces of code have what syntactic meaning. Most of the language parsers provide some highlighting queries located usually in tree-sitter-language/queries/highlights.scm.

Those queries usually work fine out of the box, but aren't as rich as could be.

I use custom highlighting queries that are available in this repo in examples directory (here). They are pretty much taken from nvim-treesitter repository and modified to function properly without the Neovim abstractions. To make the nvim-treesitter's queries work, following modifications were made:

  1. replace unsupported predicates
    The nvim-treesitter uses some predicates that are not supported by the tree-sitter-cli.
    Most common are:

    • #lua-match? - I replaced it with regular #match?, but don't forget to replace the regex as well, Lua has some additional regex special characters such as %u or %s.
    • #any-of? - I expanded this one into many #match? patterns for each individual case, but there may be some better way to deal with it.
  2. Reorganize the scheme captures
    The nvim-treesitter does something smart when multiple captures are applicable at the same time, but the regular tree-sitter does not. From my experimentation, the first match is returned. Therefore, the more specific captures need to be in the file before the more generic ones. This may require some trial and error, but getting the longer ones as first is a good place to start.

Feel free to use my highlights as an inspiration. Also note that the file needs to be named highlights.scm, the files in this repository are intentionally named differently.

How does chromacode differ from minted?

The end goal is the same: to have pretty colored code listings in LaTeX. But the path is slightly different.

Here are the main differences:

  1. It uses TreeSitter to handle the syntax highlighting. The results are in my opinion better-looking, more rich and precise. See the example snippets above or the full example pdf and form your own opinion.

  2. This isn't a LaTeX package, but rather a tool that will generate LaTeX code. That means it will produce .tex file and it is not necessary to run it on every LaTeX compilation. If that is something positive or negative is up to you.

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Make beautiful colored code listings in LaTeX with the power of TreeSitter.

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