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Chroma

A general purpose syntax highlighter in pure Go

Install / Use

/learn @alecthomas/Chroma
About this skill

Quality Score

0/100

Supported Platforms

Universal

README

Chroma

A general purpose syntax highlighter in pure Go

Go Reference CI Slack chat

Chroma takes source code and other structured text and converts it into syntax highlighted HTML, ANSI-coloured text, etc.

Chroma is based heavily on Pygments, and includes translators for Pygments lexers and styles.

Table of Contents

<!-- TOC -->
  1. Supported languages
  2. Try it
  3. Using the library
    1. Quick start
    2. Identifying the language
    3. Formatting the output
    4. The HTML formatter
  4. More detail
    1. Lexers
    2. Formatters
    3. Styles
  5. Command-line interface
  6. Testing lexers
  7. What's missing compared to Pygments?
<!-- /TOC -->

Supported languages

| Prefix | Language | :----: | -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | A | ABAP, ABNF, ActionScript, ActionScript 3, Ada, Agda, AL, Alloy, AMPL, Angular2, ANTLR, ApacheConf, APL, AppleScript, ArangoDB AQL, Arduino, ArmAsm, ATL, AutoHotkey, AutoIt, Awk | B | Ballerina, Bash, Bash Session, Batchfile, Beef, BibTeX, Bicep, BlitzBasic, BNF, BQN, Brainfuck | C | C, C#, C++, C3, Caddyfile, Caddyfile Directives, Cap'n Proto, Cassandra CQL, Ceylon, CFEngine3, cfstatement, ChaiScript, Chapel, Cheetah, Clojure, CMake, COBOL, CoffeeScript, Common Lisp, Coq, Core, Crystal, CSS, CSV, CUE, Cython | D | D, Dart, Dax, Desktop file, Diff, Django/Jinja, dns, Docker, DTD, Dylan | E | EBNF, Elixir, Elm, EmacsLisp, Erlang | F | Factor, Fennel, Fish, Forth, Fortran, FortranFixed, FSharp | G | GAS, GDScript, GDScript3, Gemtext, Genshi, Genshi HTML, Genshi Text, Gettext, Gherkin, Gleam, GLSL, Gnuplot, Go, Go HTML Template, Go Template, Go Text Template, GraphQL, Groff, Groovy | H | Handlebars, Hare, Haskell, Haxe, HCL, Hexdump, HLB, HLSL, HolyC, HTML, HTTP, Hy | I | Idris, Igor, INI, Io, ISCdhcpd | J | J, Janet, Java, JavaScript, JSON, JSONata, Jsonnet, Julia, Jungle | K | Kakoune, Kotlin | L | Lean4, Lighttpd configuration file, LLVM, lox, Lua, Luau | M | Makefile, Mako, markdown, Markless, Mason, Materialize SQL dialect, Mathematica, Matlab, MCFunction, Meson, Metal, MiniZinc, MLIR, Modelica, Modula-2, Mojo, MonkeyC, MoonScript, MorrowindScript, Myghty, MySQL | N | NASM, Natural, NDISASM, Newspeak, Nginx configuration file, Nim, Nix, NSIS, Nu | O | Objective-C, ObjectPascal, OCaml, Octave, Odin, OnesEnterprise, OpenEdge ABL, OpenSCAD, Org Mode | P | PacmanConf, Perl, PHP, PHTML, Pig, PkgConfig, PL/pgSQL, plaintext, Plutus Core, Pony, PostgreSQL SQL dialect, PostScript, POVRay, PowerQuery, PowerShell, Prolog, Promela, PromQL, properties, Protocol Buffer, Protocol Buffer Text Format, PRQL, PSL, Puppet, Python, Python 2 | Q | QBasic, QML | R | R, Racket, Ragel, Raku, react, ReasonML, reg, Rego, reStructuredText, Rexx, RGBDS Assembly, Ring, RPGLE, RPMSpec, Ruby, Rust | S | SAS, Sass, Scala, Scheme, Scilab, SCSS, Sed, Sieve, Smali, Smalltalk, Smarty, SNBT, Snobol, Solidity, SourcePawn, Spade, SPARQL, SQL, SquidConf, Standard ML, stas, Stylus, Svelte, Swift, SYSTEMD, systemverilog | T | TableGen, Tal, TASM, Tcl, Tcsh, Termcap, Terminfo, Terraform, TeX, Thrift, TOML, TradingView, Transact-SQL, Turing, Turtle, Twig, TypeScript, TypoScript, TypoScriptCssData, TypoScriptHtmlData, Typst | U | ucode | V | V, V shell, Vala, VB.net, verilog, VHDL, VHS, VimL, vue | W | WDTE, WebAssembly Text Format, WebGPU Shading Language, WebVTT, Whiley | X | XML, Xorg | Y | YAML, YANG | Z | Z80 Assembly, Zed, Zig

I will attempt to keep this section up to date, but an authoritative list can be displayed with chroma --list.

Try it

Try out various languages and styles on the Chroma Playground.

Using the library

This is version 2 of Chroma, use the import path:

import "github.com/alecthomas/chroma/v2"

Chroma, like Pygments, has the concepts of lexers, formatters and styles.

Lexers convert source text into a stream of tokens, styles specify how token types are mapped to colours, and formatters convert tokens and styles into formatted output.

A package exists for each of these, containing a global Registry variable with all of the registered implementations. There are also helper functions for using the registry in each package, such as looking up lexers by name or matching filenames, etc.

In all cases, if a lexer, formatter or style can not be determined, nil will be returned. In this situation you may want to default to the Fallback value in each respective package, which provides sane defaults.

Quick start

A convenience function exists that can be used to simply format some source text, without any effort:

err := quick.Highlight(os.Stdout, someSourceCode, "go", "html", "monokai")

Identifying the language

To highlight code, you'll first have to identify what language the code is written in. There are three primary ways to do that:

  1. Detect the language from its filename.

    lexer := lexers.Match("foo.go")
    
  2. Explicitly specify the language by its Chroma syntax ID (a full list is available from lexers.Names()).

    lexer := lexers.Get("go")
    
  3. Detect the language from its content.

    lexer := lexers.Analyse("package main\n\nfunc main()\n{\n}\n")
    

In all cases, nil will be returned if the language can not be identified.

if lexer == nil {
  lexer = lexers.Fallback
}

At this point, it should be noted that some lexers can be extremely chatty. To mitigate this, you can use the coalescing lexer to coalesce runs of identical token types into a single token:

lexer = chroma.Coalesce(lexer)

Formatting the output

Once a language is identified you will need to pick a formatter and a style (theme).

style := styles.Get("swapoff")
if style == nil {
  style = styles.Fallback
}
formatter := formatters.Get("html")
if formatter == nil {
  formatter = formatters.Fallback
}

Then obtain an iterator over the tokens:

contents, err := ioutil.ReadAll(r)
iterator, err := lexer.Tokenise(nil, string(contents))

And finally, format the tokens from the iterator:

err := formatter.Format(w, style, iterator)

The HTML formatter

By default the html registered formatter generates standalone HTML with embedded CSS. More flexibility is available through the formatters/html package.

Firstly, the output generated by the formatter can be customised with the following constructor options:

  • Standalone() - generate standalone HTML with embedded CSS.
  • WithClasses() - use classes rather than inlined style attributes.
  • ClassPrefix(prefix) - prefix each generated CSS class.
  • TabWidth(width) - Set the rendered tab width, in characters.
  • WithLineNumbers() - Render line numbers (style with LineNumbers).
  • WithLinkableLineNumbers() - Make the line numbers linkable and be a link to themselves.
  • HighlightLines(ranges) - Highlight lines in these ranges (style with LineHighlight).
  • LineNumbersInTable() - Use a table for formatting line numbers and code, rather than spans.

If WithClasses() is used, the corresponding CSS can be obtained from the formatter with:

formatter := html.New(html.WithClasses(true))
err := formatter.WriteCSS(w, style)

More detail

Lexers

See the Pygments documentation for details on implementing lexers. Most concepts apply directly to Chroma, but see existing lexer implementations for real examples.

In many cases lexers can be automatically converted directly from Pygments by using the included Python 3 script pygments2chroma_xml.py. I use something like the following:

uv run --script _tools/pygments2chroma_xml.py \
  pygments.lexers.jvm.KotlinLexer \
  > lexers/embedded/kotlin.xml

A list of all lexers available in Pygments can be found in pygments-lexers.txt.

Formatters

Chroma supports HTML output, as well as terminal output in 8 colour, 256 colour, and true-colour.

A noop formatter is included that outputs the token text only, and a tokens formatter outputs raw tokens. The latter is useful for debugging lexers.

Styles

Chroma styles are defined in XML. The style entries use the same syntax as Pygments. All Pygments styles have been converted to Chroma using the _tools/style.py script.

Style names are case-insensitive. For example, monokai and Monokai are treated as the same style.

When you work with one of Chroma's styles, know that the Background token type provides the default style for tokens. It does so by defining a foreground color and background

View on GitHub
GitHub Stars4.9k
CategoryDevelopment
Updated1h ago
Forks469

Languages

Go

Security Score

85/100

Audited on Mar 29, 2026

No findings