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QLColorCode-extra

To install:

mv QLColorCode.qlgenerator ~/Library/QuickLook/

If you previously had a version of QLColorCode installed you will need to run the following from terminal:

qlmanage -r

Added support for the following filetypes:

  • conf
  • haml
  • install
  • inc
  • make
  • module
  • less
  • profile
  • rake
  • sass
  • scss

QLColorCode

http://code.google.com/p/qlcolorcode/

=============================================================================== IMPORTANT NOTE FOR XCODE 3.2 (SHIPPED WITH SNOW LEOPARD) USERS: If you are running Xcode 3.2 or higher you will probably not see QLColorCode's output unless you disable Xcode's built-in source code qlgenerator. See the end of this file for details.

This is a Quick Look plugin that renders source code with syntax highlighting, using the Highlight library: http://www.andre-simon.de/index.html

To install the plugin, just drag it to /Library/QuickLook or ~/Library/QuickLook. You may need to create that folder if it doesn't already exist.

If you want to configure QLColorCode, there are several "defaults" commands that could be useful:

Setting the text encoding (default is UTF-8). Two settings are required. The first sets Highlight's encoding, the second sets Webkit's:

defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode textEncoding UTF-16
defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode webkitTextEncoding UTF-16

Setting the font:

defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode font Monaco

the font size:

defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode fontSizePoints 9

the color style (see http://www.andre-simon.de/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=theme_examples or try slateGreen to see how I roll):

defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode hlTheme ide-xcode

any extra command-line flags for Highlight (see below):

defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode extraHLFlags '-l -W'

the maximum size (in bytes) for previewed files:

defaults write org.n8gray.QLColorCode maxFileSize 1000000

Here are some useful 'highlight' command-line flags (from the man page):

-F, --reformat=<style>
	reformat output in given style.   <style>=[ansi,  gnu,  kr, java, linux]

-J, --line-length=<num>
	line length before wrapping (see -W, -V)

-j, --line-number-length=<num>
	line number length incl. left padding

-l, --linenumbers
	print line numbers in output file

-t  --replace-tabs=<num>
	replace tabs by num spaces

-V, --wrap-simple
	wrap long lines without indenting function  parameters  and statements

-W, --wrap
	wrap long lines

-z, --zeroes
	fill leading space of line numbers with zeroes

--kw-case=<upper|lower|capitalize>
	control case of case insensitive keywords

Highlight can handle lots and lots of languages, but this plugin will only be invoked for file types that the OS knows are type "source-code". Since the OS only knows about a limited number of languages, I've added Universal Type Identifier (UTI) declarations for several "interesting" languages. If I've missed your favorite language, take a look at the Info.plist file inside the plugin bundle and look for the UTImportedTypeDeclarations section. I haven't added all the languages that Highlight can handle because it's rumored that having two conflicting UTI declarations for the same file extension can cause problems. Note that if you do edit the Info.plist file you need to nudge the system to tell it something has changed. Moving the plugin to the desktop then back to its installed location should do the trick.

To build from source, you need the Highlight library. Download the source and uncompress it somewhere, then make a symbolic link to that location from ./highlight

As an aside, by changing colorize.sh you can use this plugin to render any file type that you can convert to HTML. Have fun, and let me know if you do anything cool!

==================================================================== Important information on using QLColorCode with Xcode v3.2 and later

The most up-to-date copy of this info will be found here: http://code.google.com/p/qlcolorcode/wiki/ImportantNoteForXcodeUsers

Xcode 3.2 (the version shipped with Snow Leopard) includes a Quick Look plugin that highlights source code. It only highlights a few languages, so you probably still want to use QLColorCode. However, the Quick Look server tends to pick the Xcode plugin over QLCC. This means that for any source code file aside from .c, .m, and the other languages that Xcode understands you'll see a plain text preview with no highlighting. To get QLCC to work properly you'll need to disable the Xcode plugin.

Details

The Xcode plugin is installed at:

/Developer/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Library/QuickLook/SourceCode.qlgenerator The simplest way to disable it is to open Terminal.app and run these commands:

f=/Developer/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Library/QuickLook/SourceCode.qlgenerator
sudo mv $f $f.disabled

This will rename the plugin to SourceCode.qlgenerator.disabled, which will prevent it from being loaded by quicklookd.

A Note on Code Signing

The Xcode application is cryptographically signed. Disabling the SourceCode.qlgenerator plugin will NOT invalidate the signature. You can confirm this by using the codesign command after disabling the plugin:

[n8gray@golux]% codesign -vv /Developer/Applications/Xcode.app
/Developer/Applications/Xcode.app: valid on disk
/Developer/Applications/Xcode.app: satisfies its Designated Requirement

Cheers, -n8 n8gray /at/ n8gray \dot\ org

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