Original project: http://code.google.com/p/qlcolorcode/
This is a Quick Look plugin that renders source code with syntax highlighting, using the Highlight library.
To install Highlight, download the library manually, or use homebrew brew install highlight
, or MacPorts sudo port install highlight
To install the plugin, just drag it to ~/Library/QuickLook
.
You may need to create that folder if it doesn't already exist.
If you want to configure QLColorCode
, there are several defaults
commands that could be useful:
Setting the text encoding (default is UTF-8
). Two settings are required. The first sets Highlight's encoding, the second sets Webkit's:
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode textEncoding UTF-16
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode webkitTextEncoding UTF-16
Setting the font (default is Menlo
):
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode font Monaco
Setting the font size (default is 10
):
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode fontSizePoints 9
Setting the color style (defaults are bright
for light and andes
for dark, see all available themes):
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode hlThemeLight ide-xcode
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode hlThemeDark ide-xcode
Setting the thumbnail color style (default is edit-xcode
):
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode hlThumbTheme ide-xcode
Setting the maximum size (in bytes, deactivated by default) for previewed files:
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode maxFileSize 1000000
Setting any extra command-line flags for Highlight (see below):
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode extraHLFlags '-l -W'
Here are some useful 'highlight' command-line flags (from the man page):
-F, --reformat=<style>
reformat output in given style. <style>=[ansi, gnu, kr,
java, linux]
-J, --line-length=<num>
line length before wrapping (see -W, -V)
-j, --line-number-length=<num>
line number length incl. left padding
-l, --line-numbers
print line numbers in output file
-t --replace-tabs=<num>
replace tabs by num spaces
-V, --wrap-simple
wrap long lines without indenting function parameters and
statements
-W, --wrap
wrap long lines
-z, --zeroes
fill leading space of line numbers with zeroes
--kw-case=<upper|lower|capitalize>
control case of case insensitive keywords
Warning: my fork uses an external Highlight
. It will attempt to find highlight
on your PATH
(so it should work out of the box for Homebrew and MacPorts), but if it can't find it, it'll use /opt/local/bin/highlight
(MacPorts default). This can be changed:
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode pathHL /path/to/your/highlight
It is also possible to have the HTML preview converted to RTF. Using RTF allows the contents of the file to be displayed instead of an icon -- similar to QLStephen.
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode rtfRender true
QLColorCode decompiles some formats:
- Compiled AppleScript. It requires
osadecompile
installed at/usr/bin/osadecompile
. - Binary PLIST. It requires
plutil
installed at/usr/bin/plutil
.
QLColorCode enables some Highlight plugins :
- In all languages:
outhtml_modern_fonts
andouthtml_codefold
. - Java (sources and classes):
java_library
. - C/C++:
cpp_syslog
,cpp_ref_cplusplus_com
andcpp_ref_local_includes
. - Perl:
perl_ref_perl_org
. - Python:
python_ref_python_org
. - Shell:
bash_functions
. - Scala:
scala_ref_scala_lang_org
.
Highlight can handle lots and lots of languages, but this plugin will only be invoked for file types that the OS knows are type "source-code". Since the OS only knows about a limited number of languages, I've added Universal Type Identifier (UTI) declarations for several "interesting" languages. If I've missed your favorite language, take a look at the Info.plist file inside the plugin bundle and look for the UTImportedTypeDeclarations section. I haven't added all the languages that Highlight can handle because it's rumored that having two conflicting UTI declarations for the same file extension can cause problems. Note that if you do edit the Info.plist file you need to nudge the system to tell it something has changed. Moving the plugin to the desktop then back to its installed location should do the trick.
As an aside, by changing colorize.sh you can use this plugin to render any file type that you can convert to HTML. Have fun, and let me know if you do anything cool!
If QLColorCode doesn't display PHP and JavaScript code properly, their types may need to be added to Info.plist. Finding the right type string to use is the tricky part. Getting the type strings and getting Info.plist edits to take effect is easy by following the steps below, which explain how to add support for PHP:
- In Terminal.app (or any shell prompt), enter the command:
mdls -name kMDItemContentType /full/path/to/file.php
Use the path to any PHP file. The response will be:
kMDItemContentType = "public.php-script"
The string public.php-script
is the type string needed in a later step.
- Again at a shell prompt, enter the command:
open ~/Library/QuickLook/QLColorCode.qlgenerator/Contents/Info.plist
This will open Info.plist in Xcode.app.
- In Xcode.app's edit window for Info.plist, go to:
Document types > Item 0 > Document Content Type UTIs
(If the editor is showing raw keys, that's: CFBundleDocumentTypes > Item 0 > LSItemContentTypes)
-
Add an item for
public.php-script
, the type string found in the first step. -
Save the updated Info.plist file.
-
Try it in Finder. (It's usually unnecessary to move/return the QLColorCode extension, restart QuickLook, or restart the Finder, but it wouldn't be surprising that some users might need to do so.)
The Info.plist included with this version of QLColorCode already contains types for PHP and JavaScript code, but these steps show how easy it is to add other types. (Maybe somebody will develop a Preference Pane for QLColorCode to make this even easier.)