Releases: JohnSundell/Splash
Releases · JohnSundell/Splash
Splash 0.16.0
This version of Splash includes support for highlighting code written using Swift 5.5's new concurrency features, including async/await and actor types. It also upgrades the Swift version that Slash uses to 5.4.
Syntax highlighting has also been corrected in the following situations:
- When
nilis used within a ternary operation. - When a comment is placed next to an array type or literal.
- When an underscore is used to ignore function parameters.
- When a property wrapper's projected value is used.
This release also includes documentation fixes by @Yaacoub and @haikusw, and an infrastructure improvement by @fjcaetano.
Splash 0.15.0
This release fixes syntax highlighting within the following scenarios:
- When a multi-line-style comment is placed next to, or within, a generic type list.
- References to a generic type's static property or enum case.
- Calls to methods that have names matching a keyword.
- Keywords like
initanddidSetare no longer highlighted as method calls in certain situations.
Splash 0.14.0
- Syntax highlighting for Swift property wrappers has been improved.
- Comments that are proceeded by a comma are now correctly highlighted.
- Splash now installs and runs more predictably on case sensitive file systems (thanks to @hybridcattt)
Splash 0.13.0
- Splash now requires Swift 5.2.
- The
trykeyword is now correctly highlighted when used within a function call. - Comments that appear next to curly brackets are now correctly highlighted.
- Generic parameter types that appear in an initializer declaration are no longer highlighted.
- Generic superclasses are now correctly highlighted within subclass declarations.
Splash 0.12.0
- Enum cases called
someare now correctly highlighted. - You can now pass a custom
Grammarwhen usingMarkdownDecorator(by @marcocapano). - Function calls that are the first statement within a closure that accepts arguments are now correctly highlighted.
- When switching on an expression that includes accessing a property, that property is no longer incorrectly highlighted as a function call.
Splash 0.11.1
This releases makes Splash compatible with the Swift 5.2 compiler that's bundled with the current Xcode 11.4 beta, thanks to @duemunk.
Splash 0.11.0
- Keyword-like function parameters placed on a separate line are no longer highlighted.
- Keyword-like variables used when unwrapping optionals are no longer highlighted.
- Splash now recognizes the
unownedkeyword. - Multiline comments are now correctly highlighted when placed next to punctuation, and when such a comment has no content (like
/**/), by @duemunk. - String literals that end with a newline character are now correctly highlighted.
This release also contains a test improvement by @artrmz.
Splash 0.10.0
- Splash now fully escapes all required HTML entities when outputting HTML and when highlighting Markdown code blocks.
- The
prefixkeyword is now correctly highlighted.
Splash 0.9.0
New features:
- You can now inject a custom CSS class prefix when using
MarkdownDecoratorto highlight all code blocks within a Markdown file.
Fixes:
- Single-expression raw string interpolation is now highlighted correctly.
- Strings appearing within another string's interpolation are now correctly highlighted.
- Types appearing within a generic subscript's declaration are now highlighted correctly.
nilis now properly highlighted when passed to a parameter-less function.- Support has been added for the
#warningand#errorcompiler directives.
Splash 0.8.0
New APIs
Grammarnow has a method calledisDelimiter(mergableWith:), which is optional to adopt, and allows each grammar to tweak whether two delimiters should be merged into a single token when evaluated.
Fixes
- The
conveniencekeyword is now supported. MarkdownDecoratorno longer hard-codes line breaks within the HTML code blocks that it generates (which is also true for thesplashmarkdowncommand line tool, since it uses that same decoration code).- APIs called using dot syntax are now only highlighted as
dotAccesswhen there are no associated values or parameters passed. So.someCasewill be highlighted asdotAccess, while.someCall()won't. This is to make static APIs called using dot access highlighted in a more accurate way. - Highlighting for strings containing interpolation has now been made a lot more robust, especially for strings that contain punctuation and other delimiter-like characters.
- Fixed a bug that could cause a type following a comment ending with a punctuation character to not be highlighted correctly.
- Comments that start with a delimiter are now highlighted correctly.