I\'d like to change my vim config file to allow highlighting of only my declared variables, not keywords. This article shows and explains what I mean: Alternate syntax highl
As proof of concept, I tried
let vars = ['init', 'editable', 'init_ui']
let colors = ['ff0000', '00ff00', '0000ff']
for var in vars
execute 'syn keyword var_' . var var
execute 'hi default var_' . var 'guifg=#' . remove(colors, 0)
endfor
and it worked as expected. This created syntax items for each variable in the list: var_init
, var_editable
, and var_init_ui
. Then it assigns a highlight color to each syntax item.
In order to get beyond proof of concept, you have to get a list of variable names. You can do this by parsing a tag file (as produced by ctags, for example) or by writing a parser in vim (which would be very portable). You can sort the list and remove duplicates, but I think the use of :hi default
will save you if you skip this step. Come up with a better way of generating colors than my example.
You can do all of that using an autocommand when a buffer is entered, or when the user explicitly calls a function. Then you can start thinking about automatic updating as new variables are defined.
There is such a plugin: https://github.com/jaxbot/semantic-highlight.vim
Where every variable is a different color, an idea popularized by Evan Brooks' blog post.
Benjifisher's answer outlines how such can be implemented, but that's still a major effort, and probably out of reach for a beginner. But, as majkinetor recommended in the comments, my Mark plugin would allow you to quickly set up different coloring for "interesting" variable names by manually (un-)marking them (the default mapping is <Leader>m
, which usually translates to \ followed by M. I use this myself to understand complex parts of the code or when troubleshooting log files.
With the following command in your ~/.vimrc
, you can have up to 77 different colors available:
let g:mwDefaultHighlightingPalette = 'maximum'