Previous: Highlight Func Mode, Up: Using Semantic [Contents][Index]
Semantic Tag Decoration mode “decorates” each tag based on certain
arbitrary features of that tag. Decorations are specified using the
variable semantic-decoration-styles.
Toggle Semantic Tag Decoration mode in all Semantic-enabled buffers. With an optional argument arg, enable if arg is positive, and disable otherwise.
The value of this variable is a list of decoration styles for Semantic
Tag Decoration mode. Each element in this list should have the form
(name . flag), where name is a style name (a
symbol) and flag is non-nil if the style is enabled.
The following styles are available:
semantic-tag-boundaryPlace an overline in front of each long tag (excluding prototypes).
semantic-decoration-on-private-membersHighlight class members that are designated as private.
semantic-decoration-on-protected-membersHighlight class members that are designated as protected.
semantic-decoration-on-includesHighlight class members that are includes. Clicking on the highlighted include statements opens a context menu for configuring Semantic includes.
To enable or disable specific decorations, use this function:
Prompt for a decoration style, name, and turn it on or off.
With prefix argument arg, turn on if positive, otherwise off.
Return non-nil if the decoration style is enabled.
Face for long tags in the semantic-tag-boundary decoration
style.
Face for privately-scoped tags in the
semantic-decoration-on-private-members decoration style.
Face for protected tags in the
semantic-decoration-on-protected-members decoration style.
Face for includes that are not in some other state, in the
semantic-decoration-on-includes decoration style.
Face for includes that cannot be found, in the
semantic-decoration-on-includes decoration style.
Face for includes that have not yet been parsed, in the
semantic-decoration-on-includes decoration style.
You can create new types of decorations using the following function:
Define a new decoration style with name.
doc is a documentation string describing the decoration style name.
It is appended to auto-generated doc strings.
An optional list of flags can also be specified. Flags are:
:enabled <value> - specify the default enabled value for name.
This defines two new overload functions respectively called NAME-p
and NAME-highlight, for which you must provide a default
implementation in respectively the functions NAME-p-default and
NAME-highlight-default. Those functions are passed a tag. NAME-p
must return non-nil to indicate that the tag should be decorated by
NAME-highlight.
To put primary decorations on a tag NAME-highlight, use
functions like semantic-set-tag-face,
semantic-set-tag-intangible, etc., found in the
semantic-decorate library.
To add other kind of decorations on a tag, NAME-highlight must use
semantic-decorate-tag, and other functions of the semantic
decoration api found in this library.
Previous: Highlight Func Mode, Up: Using Semantic [Contents][Index]