[kde-edu]: Review Request: Syntax Hightlighting in Cantor
Miha Cancula
miha.cancula at gmail.com
Mon Aug 23 20:17:49 CEST 2010
> On 2010-08-22 20:15:22, Alexander Rieder wrote:
> > Hi,
> > i haven't looked at the code yet, but in its current form the patch doesn't compile, as you try to include the non-existent "dbhighlighter.h" in octavehighlighter.h and sagehighlighter.h, and "highlightdatabase.h" in octavebackend.cpp.
I fixed the wrong includes, and I think the correct patch is up now.
- Miha
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On 2010-08-22 21:06:23, Miha Cancula wrote:
>
> -----------------------------------------------------------
> This is an automatically generated e-mail. To reply, visit:
> http://reviewboard.kde.org/r/5079/
> -----------------------------------------------------------
>
> (Updated 2010-08-22 21:06:23)
>
>
> Review request for KDE-Edu and Alexander Rieder.
>
>
> Summary
> -------
>
> As discussed on email, I implemented a different approach to highlighting in Cantor. I'd like some feedback before committing it.
>
> I introduced additional API in DefaultHighlighter and moved most of the logic in it, so the individual backend-specific highlighters only specify conditions (either QString or QRegExp) and matching text formats. The code looks much cleaner this way.
>
> As Alexander and Oleksiy already determined, breaking the text into words and looking for these words is faster than iterating over a huge list of regexes and looking for each of them in the text. That's why functions, variables and keywords are implemented this way. OTOH, thing like comments and strings are easier done using Regexes, so this functionality is still there.
>
> The implementation uses a QHash<QString, QTextCharFormat> and a QHash<QRegExp, QTextCharFormat>. If anyone knows of a way to make it faster, please say so.
>
> I also updated highlighters for Octave, Maxima and Sage to use the word-based API as much as possible. Most of their code was also removed, because it's now in DefaultHighlighter. I left R alone because Oleksiy's work is not yet in trunk.
>
>
> Diffs
> -----
>
> /trunk/KDE/kdeedu/cantor/src/backends/maxima/maximahighlighter.h 1166707
> /trunk/KDE/kdeedu/cantor/src/backends/maxima/maximahighlighter.cpp 1166707
> /trunk/KDE/kdeedu/cantor/src/backends/octave/octavehighlighter.h 1166707
> /trunk/KDE/kdeedu/cantor/src/backends/octave/octavehighlighter.cpp 1166707
> /trunk/KDE/kdeedu/cantor/src/backends/sage/sagehighlighter.h 1166707
> /trunk/KDE/kdeedu/cantor/src/backends/sage/sagehighlighter.cpp 1166707
> /trunk/KDE/kdeedu/cantor/src/lib/defaulthighlighter.h 1166707
> /trunk/KDE/kdeedu/cantor/src/lib/defaulthighlighter.cpp 1166707
>
> Diff: http://reviewboard.kde.org/r/5079/diff
>
>
> Testing
> -------
>
> I tested Maxima and Sage and they seem to be faster than before for large blocks. I used to have problems with non-smooth scrolling in Octave due to the large number of functions, but now it feels normal. I didn't notice any regressions (yet).
>
> It all works both on trunk and 4.4.
>
>
> Thanks,
>
> Miha
>
>
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