(a2ps.info)Known Style Sheets
7.2 Known Style Sheets
======================
-- Style Sheet: 68000 ('68000.ssh')
Althought designed at the origin for the 68k's assembler, this
style sheet seems to handle rather well other dialects.
-- Style Sheet: a2ps configuration file ('a2psrc.ssh')
Meant to print files such as 'a2ps.cfg', or '.a2ps/a2psrc', etc.
-- Style Sheet: a2ps style sheet ('ssh.ssh')
Second level of highligthing (option '-g')) substitutes the LaTeX
symbols.
-- Style Sheet: Ada ('ada.ssh')
This style sheets cover Ada 95. If you feel the need for Ada 83,
you'll have to design another style sheet.
-- Style Sheet: ASN.1 ('asn1.ssh')
Written by Philippe Coucaud. ASN.1 (Abstract Syntax Notation One)
is used to define the protocol data units (PDUs) of all application
layer protocols to date.
-- Style Sheet: Autoconf ('autoconf.ssh')
Suitable for both 'configure.in' and library 'm4' files.
-- Style Sheet: AWK ('awk.ssh')
Written by Edward Arthur. This style is devoted to the AWK pattern
scanning and processing language. It is supposed to support
classic awk, nawk and gawk.
-- Style Sheet: B ('b.ssh')
Written by Philippe Coucaud. B is a formal specification method
mostly used to describe critical systems. It is based on the
mathematical sets theory.
-- Style Sheet: BC ('bc.ssh')
bc is an arbitrary precision calculator language.
-- Style Sheet: Bourne Shell ('sh.ssh')
Some classical program names, or builtin, are highlighted in the
second level of pretty-printing.
-- Style Sheet: C ('c.ssh')
This style does not highlight the function definitions. Another
style which highlights them, GNUish C, is provided (gnuc.ssh). It
works only if you respect some syntactic conventions.
-- Style Sheet: C Shell ('csh.ssh')
Written by Jim Diamond. Some classical program names, and/or
builtins, are highlighted in the second level of pretty-printing.
-- Style Sheet: C# ('csharp.ssh')
Written by Karen Christenson. This style is for the .NET
object-oriented language C#, and is based on the C# Language
Specification published in 2002 by Microsoft in the MSDN library.
XML comments are mapped to strong comments, and any other comment
is a plain comment. The C style-sheet was not selected as an
ancestor in order to treat a struct the same as a class or an
interface. The CPP style-sheet was not selected as an ancestor
because C# set of preprocessor directives is much smaller.
Keywords, XML comments, preprocessor directives, label statements,
and [] style attributes are high-lighted.
-- Style Sheet: C++ ('cxx.ssh')
Should handle all known variations of C++. Most declarations
(classes etc.) are not highlighted as they should be. Please,
step forward!
-- Style Sheet: CAML ('caml.ssh')
This style is obsolete: use OCaml instead.
-- Style Sheet: ChangeLog ('chlog.ssh')
This style covers the usual ChangeLog files.
-- Style Sheet: Claire ('claire.ssh')
Claire is a high-level functional and object-oriented language with
advanced rule processing capabilities. It is intended to allow the
programmer to express complex algorithms with fewer lines and in an
elegant and readable manner.
To provide a high degree of expressivity, Claire uses:
- A very rich type system including type intervals and
second-order types (with dual static/dynamic typing),
- Parametric classes and methods,
- An object-oriented logic with set extensions,
- Dynamic versioning that supports easy exploration of search
spaces.
To achieve its goal of readability, Claire uses
- set-based programming with an intuitive syntax,
- simple-minded object-oriented programming,
- truly polymorphic and parametric functional programming,
- a powerful-yet-readable extension of DATALOG to express
logical conditions,
- an entity-relation approach with explicit relations, inverses,
unknown values and relational
- operations.
More information on claire can be found on claire home page
(http://www.ens.fr/~laburthe/claire.html).
-- Style Sheet: Common Lisp ('clisp.ssh')
Written by Juliusz Chroboczek. It is not very clear what should be
considered as a 'keyword' in Common Lisp. I like binders, control
structures and declarations to be highlighted, but not assignments.
Names of defstructs are not highlighted because this would not work
with defstruct options.
-- Style Sheet: Coq Vernacular ('coqv.ssh')
This style is devoted to the Coq v 5.10 vernacular language.
-- Style Sheet: CORBA IDL ('cidl.ssh')
Written by Bob Phillips. A first attempt at a style sheet for OMG
CORBA IDL. I believe I captured all the keywords for CORBA 2.2 IDL.
I also stole code from gnuc.ssh to print the method names in bold
face. I'm not sure I quite like my own choices for Keyword_strong
and Keyword, so I'm looking for feedback. Note that, as with
gnuc.ssh, for a method name to be noted as such, the left
parenthesis associated with the argument list for the method must
appear on the same line as the method name.
-- Style Sheet: CPP ('cpp.ssh')
C traditional preprocessor handling, mostly meant to be inherited.
-- Style Sheet: dc_shell ('dc_shell.ssh')
Written by Philippe Le Van. Synopsys Design Compiler is a
synthesis tool used by electronic companies for the design of their
chips. This sheet is very incomplete, we have a lot of keywords to
add, eventually options to highlight... The Label_strong style is
used for commands which change the design.
-- Style Sheet: Eiffel ('eiffel.ssh')
Eiffel is an object oriented language that also includes a
comprehensive approach to software construction: a method.
The language itself is not just a programming language but also
covers analysis, design and implementation.
Heavy highlight uses symbols to represent common math operators.
-- Style Sheet: Emacs Lisp ('elisp.ssh')
Written by Didier Verna. This style sheet includes support for
some extensions dumped with XEmacs.
-- Style Sheet: Encapsulated PostScript ('eps.ssh')
Illegal PostScript operators are highlighted as Errors.
-- Style Sheet: Extended Tcl ('tclx.ssh')
Written by Phil Hollenback. Extensions to plain Tcl.
-- Style Sheet: Fortran ('fortran.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou, Alexander Mai. There are several Fortran
dialects, depending whether, on the one hand, you use Fortran 77 or
Fortran 90/95, and, on the other hand, Fixed form comments, or Free
form comments.
The style sheets 'for77kwds' and 'for90kwds' implements keywords
only, while the style sheets 'for-fixed' and 'for-free' implements
comments only.
This style sheet tries to support any of the various flavors
(Fortran 77/90/95, fixed or free form). For more specific uses,
you should use either:
- for77-fixed, for Fortran 77 fixed form,
- for77-free, for Fortran 77 free form,
- for90-fixed, for Fortran 90/95 fixed form,
- for90-free, for Fortran 90/95 free form.
-- Style Sheet: Fortran 77 Fixed ('for77-fixed.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou, Alexander Mai. Dedicated to Fortran 77 in
fixed form, i.e., comments are lines starting with c, C, or *, and
only those lines are comments.
-- Style Sheet: Fortran 77 Free ('for77-free.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou, Alexander Mai. Dedicated to Fortran 77 in
free form, i.e., comments are introduced by ! anywhere on the
line, and nothing else is a comment.
-- Style Sheet: Fortran 77 Keywords ('for77kwds.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou, Alexander Mai. This sheet implements only
Fortran 77 keywords, and avoids implementing comments support.
This is to allow for implementation of either fixed or free source
form.
See the documentation of the style sheet 'fortran' for more
details.
-- Style Sheet: Fortran 90 Fixed ('for90-fixed.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou, Alexander Mai. Dedicated to Fortran 90/95
in fixed form, i.e., comments are lines starting with c, C, or *,
and only those lines are comments.
-- Style Sheet: Fortran 90 Free ('for90-free.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou, Alexander Mai. Dedicated to Fortran 90/95
in free form, i.e., comments are introduced by ! anywhere on the
line, and nothing else is a comment.
-- Style Sheet: Fortran 90 Keywords ('for90kwds.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou, Alexander Mai. This sheet implements the
superset which Fortran 90 and Fortran 95 provide over Fortran 77.
See the documentation of the style sheet 'fortran' for more
details.
-- Style Sheet: Fortran Fixed ('for-fixed.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou, Alexander Mai. Implements comments of
Fortran in fixed form, i.e., comments are lines starting with c, C,
or *, and only those lines are comments. No other highlighting is
done.
See the documentation of the style sheet 'fortran' for more
details.
-- Style Sheet: Fortran Free ('for-free.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou, Alexander Mai. Dedicated to Fortran in
free form, i.e., comments are introduced by ! anywhere on the
line, and nothing else is a comment.
-- Style Sheet: GNUish C ('gnuc.ssh')
Declaration of functions are highlighted _only_ if you start the
function name in the first column, and it is followed by an opening
parenthesis. In other words, if you write
int main (void)
it won't work. Write:
int
main (void)
-- Style Sheet: GNUMakefile ('gmake.ssh')
Written by Alexander Mai. Special tokens of GNUmakefiles and non
terminal declarations are highlighted.
-- Style Sheet: Haskell ('haskell.ssh')
Written by Ilya Beylin. Haskell: non-strict functional programming
language http::/www.haskell.org/
-- Style Sheet: HTML ('html.ssh')
Written by Wesley J. Chun. This style is meant to pretty print
HTML source files, not to simulate its interpretation (i.e.,
'<bold>foo</bold>' does not print 'foo' in bold). If you really
meant to print the result of the HTML file _interpreted_, then you
should turn the delegations on, and make sure 'a2ps' has HTML
delegations.
-- Style Sheet: IDL ('idl.ssh')
Written by Robert S. Mallozzi, Manfred Schwarb. Style sheet for
IDL 5.2 (Interactive Data Language). Obsolete routines are not
supported. http://www.rsinc.com.
-- Style Sheet: InstallShield 5 ('is5rul.ssh')
Written by Alex. InstallShield5 _TM_ RUL script.
-- Style Sheet: Java ('java.ssh')
Written by Steve Alexander. Documentation comments are mapped to
strong comments, and any other comment is plain comment.
-- Style Sheet: JavaScript ('js.ssh')
Written by Scott Pakin. Keywords used are everything listed in the
Client-Side JavaScript Reference 1.3, plus "undefined" (why isn't
that listed?) and "prototype". I omitted the semi-standard a2ps
optional operators for equality, because JavaScript's use of both
strict- and non-strict equality might ambiguate the output.
Finally, regular expressions are formatted like strings.
-- Style Sheet: LACE ('lace.ssh')
This is meant for the Eiffel equivalent of the Makefiles.
-- Style Sheet: Lex ('lex.ssh')
In addition to the C constructs, it highlights the declaration of
states, and some special '%' commands.
-- Style Sheet: Lout ('lout.ssh')
Written by Jean-Baptiste Nivoit. This is the style for Lout files.
-- Style Sheet: Mail Folder ('mail.ssh')
To use from elm and others, it is better to specify '-g -Email',
since the file sent to printer is no longer truly a mail folder.
This style also suits to news. '--strip' options are also useful
(they strip "useless" headers).
Whenever the changes of encoding are clear, a2ps sets itself the
encoding for the parts concerned.
Tag 1 is the subject, and Tag 2 the author of the mail/news.
Note: This style sheet is _very_ difficult to write. Please don't
report behavior you don't like. Just send me improvements, or
write a Bison parser for mails.
-- Style Sheet: Makefile ('make.ssh')
Special tokens, and non terminal declarations are highlighted.
-- Style Sheet: Management Information Base ('mib.ssh')
Written by Kelly Wiles. The MIB file is of ASN.1 syntax.
-- Style Sheet: Maple ('maple.ssh')
Written by Richard J Mathar. Some classical program names, and/or
builtins, are highlighted in the second level of pretty-printing.
-- Style Sheet: masm ('nasm.ssh')
Written by Aleksandar Veselinovic. This style highlights MASM ASM
code.
-- Style Sheet: Matlab ('matlab.ssh')
Written by Joakim Lübeck. This style highlights function
definitions and a limited number of keywords, mostly control
constructs, and is therefore usable for many Matlab versions.
Special care have been taken to distinguish string delimiters from
the transpose operator (which is the same symbol) and to recognize
comments.
-- Style Sheet: MATLAB 4 ('matlab4.ssh')
Written by Marco De la Cruz. Note that comments in the code should
have a space after the %.
-- Style Sheet: Modula 2 ('modula2.ssh')
Written by Peter Bartke.
-- Style Sheet: Modula 3 ('modula3.ssh')
Modula-3 is a member of the Pascal family of languages. Designed
in the late 1980s at Digital Equipment Corporation and Olivetti,
Modula-3 corrects many of the deficiencies of Pascal and Modula-2
for practical software engineering. In particular, Modula-3 keeps
the simplicity of type safety of the earlier languages, while
providing new facilities for exception handling, concurrency,
object-oriented programming, and automatic garbage collection.
Modula-3 is both a practical implementation language for large
software projects and an excellent teaching language.
This sheet was designed based on Modula 3 home page
(http://www.research.digital.com/SRC/modula-3/html/home.html).
-- Style Sheet: o2c ('o2c.ssh')
-- Style Sheet: Oberon ('oberon.ssh')
Created by N. Wirth, Oberon is the successor of the Pascal and
Modula-2 family of programming languages. It was specifically
designed for systems programming, and was used to create the Oberon
system in cooperation with J. Gutknecht. A few years later, the
Oberon language was extended with additional object-oriented
features to result in the programming language Oberon-2.
Implementation of the sheet based on The Oberon Reference Site
(http://www.math.tau.ac.il/~laden/Oberon.html).
-- Style Sheet: Objective C ('objc.ssh')
Written by Paul Shum.
-- Style Sheet: OCaml ('ocaml.ssh')
Written by Markus Mott. This style should also suit other versions
of ML (caml light, SML etc.).
-- Style Sheet: OCaml Yacc ('mly.ssh')
Written by Jean-Baptiste Nivoit. Should handle CAML Special Light
parser files.
-- Style Sheet: Octave ('octave.ssh')
Written by C.P. Earls.
-- Style Sheet: Oracle parameter file ('initora.ssh')
Written by Pierre Mareschal. For init.ora parameter files.
-- Style Sheet: Oracle PL/SQL ('plsql.ssh')
Written by Pierre Mareschal. This style is to be checked.
-- Style Sheet: Oracle SQL ('sql.ssh')
Written by Pierre Mareschal. a2ps-sql Pretty Printer Version 1.0.0
beta - 18-MAR-97 For comments, support for - /*..*/ and //. This
style is to be checked.
-- Style Sheet: Oracle SQL-PL/SQL-SQL*Plus ('oracle.ssh')
Written by Pierre Mareschal. 18-MAR-97 For comments, support for -
/*..*/ and //. This style is to be checked.
-- Style Sheet: Pascal ('pascal.ssh')
The standard Pascal is covered by this style. But some extension
have been added too, hence modern Pascal programs should be
correctly handled. Heavy highlighting maps mathematical symbols to
their typographic equivalents.
-- Style Sheet: Perl ('perl.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou. As most interpreted languages, Perl is
very free on its syntax, what leads to significant problems for a
pretty printer. Please, be kind with our try. Any improvement is
most welcome.
-- Style Sheet: PHP ('php.ssh')
Written by Hartmut Holzgraefe. This is a a2ps stylesheet for PHP
syntax highlighting (just the PHP part, HTML is left 'as is').
This is my first try on a2ps stylesheets. It works OK for me. If
it doesn't come up to your expectatios, then please tell me.
-- Style Sheet: pic16f84 ('pic16f84.ssh')
Written by Aleksandar Veselinovic. This style highlights PIC16F84
ASM code.
-- Style Sheet: PostScript ('ps.ssh')
Only some keywords are highlighted, because otherwise listings are
quickly becoming a big bold spot.
-- Style Sheet: PostScript Printer Description ('ppd.ssh')
Support for Adobe's PPD files.
-- Style Sheet: Pov-Ray ('pov.ssh')
Written by Jean-Baptiste Nivoit. Should handle Persistence Of
Vision input files.
-- Style Sheet: PreScript ('pre.ssh')
This style defines commands in the canonic syntax of a2ps. It is
meant to be used either as an input language, and to highlight the
table of contents etc.
It can be a good choice of destination language for people who want
to produce text to print (e.g. pretty-printing, automated
documentation etc.) but who definitely do not want to learn
PostScript, nor to require the use of LaTeX.
-- Style Sheet: PreTeX ('pretex.ssh')
This style sheets provides LaTeX-like commands to format text. It
is an alternative to the PreScript style sheet, in which formating
commands are specified in a more a2ps related syntax.
It provides by the use of LaTeX like commands, a way to describe
the pages that this program should produce.
-- Style Sheet: Prolog ('prolog.ssh')
Help is needed on this sheet.
-- Style Sheet: Promela ('promela.ssh')
There is no way for this program to highlight send and receive
primitives.
-- Style Sheet: Python ('python.ssh')
Python is an easy to learn, powerful programming language. It has
efficient high-level data structures and a simple but effective
approach to object-oriented programming. Python's elegant syntax
and dynamic typing, together with its interpreted nature, make it
an ideal language for scripting and rapid application development
in many areas on most platforms.
The Python interpreter and the extensive standard library are
freely available in source or binary form for all major platforms
from the Python web site (http://www.python.org), and can be freely
distributed.
The same site also contains distributions of and pointers to many
free third party Python modules, programs and tools, and additional
documentation.
The Python interpreter is easily extended with new functions and
data types implemented in C or C++ (or other languages callable
from C). Python is also suitable as an extension language for
customizable applications.
-- Style Sheet: Rd -- Documentation for GNU R ('rd.ssh')
Written by Torsten Hothorn, Kurt Hornik, Dirk Eddelbuettel. R is a
system for statistical computation and graphics. It consists of a
language plus a run-time environment with graphics, a debugger,
access to certain system functions, and the ability to run programs
stored in script files.
R has a home page at 'http://www.r-project.org/'. It is free
software distributed under a GNU-style copyleft, and an official
part of the GNU project ( GNU S ).
-- Style Sheet: Reference Card ('card.ssh')
This style sheet is meant to process help messages generated by
Unix applications. It highlights the options (-short or -long),
and their arguments. Normal use of this style sheet is through the
shell script card (part of the a2ps package), but a typical
hand-driven use is:
program --help | a2ps -Ecard
-- Style Sheet: REXX ('rexx.ssh')
Written by Alexander Mai. This style sheet supports REXX. You can
get information about REXX from the REXX Language Association
(http://www.rexxla.org).
-- Style Sheet: Ruby ('ruby.ssh')
Written by Noritsugu Nakamura.
-- Style Sheet: S language ('s.ssh')
Written by Torsten Hothorn, Kurt Hornik, Dirk Eddelbuettel. Should
handle code for interpreters of S, a language for statistical
computating and graphics, such as R.
R consists of a language plus a run-time environment with graphics,
a debugger, access to certain system functions, and the ability to
run programs stored in script files.
R has a home page at 'http://www.r-project.org/'. It is free
software distributed under a GNU-style copyleft, and an official
part of the GNU project ('GNU S').
-- Style Sheet: S transscript ('st.ssh')
Written by Torsten Hothorn, Kurt Hornik, Dirk Eddelbuettel. Should
handle transscripts from interpreters of S, a language for
statistical computing and graphics, such as R.
R consists of a language plus a run-time environment with graphics,
a debugger, access to certain system functions, and the ability to
run programs stored in script files.
R has a home page at 'http://www.r-project.org/'. It is free
software distributed under a GNU-style copyleft, and an official
part of the GNU project ('GNU S').
-- Style Sheet: Sather ('sather.ssh')
Sather is an object oriented language designed to be simple,
efficient, safe, flexible and non-proprietary. One way of placing
it in the 'space of languages' is to say that it aims to be as
efficient as C, C++, or Fortran, as elegant as and safer than
Eiffel, and support higher-order functions and iteration
abstraction as well as Common Lisp, CLU or Scheme.
Implementation of the sheet based on the Sather home page
(http://www.icsi.berkeley.edu/~sather/index.html).
Heavy highlighting uses symbols for common mathematical operators.
-- Style Sheet: Scheme ('scheme.ssh')
This style sheet is looking for a maintainer and/or comments.
-- Style Sheet: SDL-88 ('sdl88.ssh')
Written by Jean-Philippe Cottin. -strip-level=2 is very useful: it
cancels the graphical information left by graphic editors. Only
the pure specification is then printed.
-- Style Sheet: Sed ('sed.ssh')
Comments and labels are highlighted. Other ideas are welcome! A
lot of work is still needed.
-- Style Sheet: Shell ('shell.ssh')
This style sheet is not meant to be used directly, but rather an as
ancestor for shell style sheets.
-- Style Sheet: Small ('small.ssh')
Written by Christophe Continente. This style does not highlight
the function definitions.
-- Style Sheet: SpecC ('specc.ssh')
Written by Hideaki Yokota. Non-textual operators are not
highlighted. Some logical operators are printed as graphical
symbols in the second level of pretty-printing.
-- Style Sheet: SQL 92 ('sql92.ssh')
Written by Pierre Mareschal. 18-MAR-97 This style is to be
checked.
-- Style Sheet: Standard ML ('sml.ssh')
Written by Franklin Chen, Daniel Wang. This style sheet takes
advantage of the Symbol font to replace many ASCII operators with
their natural graphical representation. This is enabled only at
heavy highlighting.
-- Style Sheet: stratego ('stratego.ssh')
Written by Nicolas Tisserand. Highlights stratego source code
-- Style Sheet: Symbols ('symbols.ssh')
This style sheet should be a precursor for any style sheet which
uses LaTeX like symbols.
-- Style Sheet: TC Shell ('tcsh.ssh')
Written by Jim Diamond. C shell with file name completion and
command line editing.
-- Style Sheet: TeX ('tex.ssh')
Written by Denis Girou. This is the style for (La)TeX files. It's
mainly useful for people who develop (La)TeX packages. With '-g',
common mathematical symbols are represented graphically.
-- Style Sheet: Texinfo ('texinfo.ssh')
Heavy highlighting prints the nodes on separate pages which title
is the name of the node.
-- Style Sheet: TeXScript ('texscript.ssh')
TeXScript is the new name of what used to be called PreScript. New
PreScript has pure a2ps names, PreTeX has pure TeX names, and
TeXScript mixes both.
-- Style Sheet: Tiger ('tiger.ssh')
Tiger is a toy language that serves as example of the book Modern
Compiler Implementation
(http://www.cs.princeton.edu/~appel/modern/) by Andrew W. Appel.
-- Style Sheet: tk ('tk.ssh')
Written by Larry W. Virden. Since everything, or almost, is a
string, what is printed is not always what you would like.
-- Style Sheet: Tool Command Language ('tcl.ssh')
Written by Larry W. Virden. Since everything, or almost, is a
string, what is printed is not always what you would like.
-- Style Sheet: Unified Diff ('udiff.ssh')
This style is meant to be used onto the output unidiffs, that is to
say output from 'diff -u'.
Typical use of this style is:
diff -u old new | a2ps -Eudiff
The prologue 'diff' helps to highlight the differences ('a2ps
-Ewdiff --prologue=diff').
-- Style Sheet: Unity ('unity.ssh')
Written by Jean-Philippe Cottin. The graphic conversion of the
symbols (option '-g') is nice.
-- Style Sheet: VERILOG ('verilog.ssh')
Written by Edward Arthur. This style is devoted to the VERILOG
hardware description language.
-- Style Sheet: VHDL ('vhdl.ssh')
Written by Thomas Parmelan. Non-textual operators are not
highlighted. Some logical operators are printed as graphical
symbols in the second level of pretty-printing.
-- Style Sheet: Visual Basic for Applications ('vba.ssh')
Written by Dirk Eddelbuettel.
-- Style Sheet: Visual Tcl ('vtcl.ssh')
Written by Phil Hollenback. All the Vtcl keywords that aren't in
Tcl or TclX.
-- Style Sheet: VRML ('vrml.ssh')
Written by Nadine Richard. According to Grammar Definition Version
2.0 ISO/IEC CD 14772
(http://vag.vrml.org/VRML2.0/FINAL/spec/part1/grammar.html).
-- Style Sheet: wdiff ('wdiff.ssh')
This style is meant to be used onto the output of Franc,ois
Pinard's program 'wdiff'. 'wdiff' is a utility that underlines the
differences of words between to files. Where 'diff' make only the
difference between lines that have changed, 'wdiff' reports words
that have changed inside the lines.
Typical use of this style is:
wdiff old new | a2ps -Ewdiff
'wdiff' can be found in usual GNU repositories. The prologue
'diff' helps to highlight the differences ('a2ps -Ewdiff
--prologue=diff').
-- Style Sheet: XS ('xs.ssh')
Written by Kestutis Kupciunas. This style covers Perl XS language.
-- Style Sheet: Yacc ('yacc.ssh')
Special tokens, and non terminal declarations are highlighted.
-- Style Sheet: Z Shell ('zsh.ssh')
Zsh is a UNIX command interpreter (shell) usable as an interactive
login shell and as a shell script command processor. Of the
standard shells, zsh most closely resembles ksh but includes many
enhancements. Zsh has comand line editing, builtin spelling
correction, programmable command completion, shell functions (with
autoloading), a history mechanism, and a host of other features.
This style sheet highlights some classical program names and
builtins in the second level of pretty-printing.
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