I\'d like to get Xcode 4 to recognize a custom file extension (e.g. *.lx) as Objective-C for syntax highlighting and indentation purposes. How do I get the tool to automatically
Xcode determines how to represent a file in its user interface based on the file's Uniform Type Identifier. As far as I know it's not possible to add additional file extension tags to an existing UTI, but you can declare a new UTI that conforms to the type you want to map to. The system will then associate the specified file extension(s) with your new UTI and through conformance Xcode and every other UTI-aware application will recognize the files as source code of the mapped type.
You may want to give some thought to where to declare to the new UTI. For example, if files of this type are being created by a tool the bundle for that tool would be the most appropriate location. In the absence of a better alternative you can create a stub application bundle and declare the new UTI there:
com.yourdomain.objective-c-source
.public.objective-c-source
. You can find this by browsing the list of system-declared UTIs or those exported in Xcode's Info.plist.Xcode should now use appropriate syntax highlighting for files with the specified extension(s).
If this doesn't work, check the Info.plist of the built application to ensure that all of the expected information is there without any trailing whitespace. You can also check that the UTI has been registered using lsregister
:
/System/Library/Frameworks/CoreServices.framework/Versions/A/Frameworks/LaunchServices.framework/Versions/A/Support/lsregister -dump
Search the output for your UTI's identifier and verify that it is present and active.
In Xcode when your file is active in the editor, you go to the Editor Menu -> Syntax Coloring -> Objective-C
This will apply objective-c syntax coloring to a file. Worked for me with a plain text file regardless of its extension.
This seemed to work for automatic indentation also
Xcode has a "Type" field in the "Attributes Inspector" (leftmost tab in "Utilities" right sidebar) for files in your project:
As you can see above, I set our project's Fastfile
to be recognized as a Ruby Script—which it is, despite lacking the expected .rb
extension. Yielding the expected syntax highlighting (with my custom color scheme):
Note: this only works if the file is added to your project within a group (not inside a folder reference):
This might not be ideal, but Xcode can't persist attributes of files which aren't explicitly tracked in the project file. Folders, by design, don't have entries for their contents in the Xcode project, since it's meant to be dynamic.