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Font Lock mode is a buffer-local minor mode that automatically
attaches face properties to certain parts of the buffer based on
their syntactic role. How it parses the buffer depends on the major
mode; most major modes define syntactic criteria for which faces to use
in which contexts. This section explains how to customize Font Lock for
a particular major mode.
Font Lock mode finds text to highlight in two ways: through syntactic parsing based on the syntax table, and through searching (usually for regular expressions). Syntactic fontification happens first; it finds comments and string constants and highlights them. Search-based fontification happens second.
| • Font Lock Basics: | Overview of customizing Font Lock. | |
| • Search-based Fontification: | Fontification based on regexps. | |
| • Customizing Keywords: | Customizing search-based fontification. | |
| • Other Font Lock Variables: | Additional customization facilities. | |
| • Levels of Font Lock: | Each mode can define alternative levels so that the user can select more or less. | |
| • Precalculated Fontification: | How Lisp programs that produce the buffer contents can also specify how to fontify it. | |
| • Faces for Font Lock: | Special faces specifically for Font Lock. | |
| • Syntactic Font Lock: | Fontification based on syntax tables. | |
| • Multiline Font Lock: | How to coerce Font Lock into properly highlighting multiline constructs. |
Next: Auto-Indentation, Previous: Imenu, Up: Modes [Contents][Index]