Hi everyone.
I want to correctly highlight enumeration values in a C++ application. I tried several approaches but the only one that worked is a little overkill. So I got here to ask the experts.
Suppose that I have a class named "MyClass". That class declares an enum with several values: "EnumConst1", "EnumConst2", etc. In the syntax file, off course, I added "MyClass" in a keyword group of C++ classes:
syn keyword cppClass MyClass
What I want to do is highlight the enumeration values only when they are typed with the class identifier. Like; "MyClass::EnumConst1". I tried this in the following way:
syn macth cppEnum transparent /\<MyClass::\@<=\i\w*\>/
syn keyword cppEnumValue contained EnumConst1 EnumConst2 containedin=cppEnum
Didn't work. I know that the keyword syntax of "MyClass" have precedence over the match syntax but I thought that using it in a transparent match would not interfere in the highlight of the contained enumeration value, since the operator '\@<=' is only to check the presence of a string before the real match. Writing the match in the following way works:
syn match cppEnumValue /\<MyClass::\@<=\(EnumConst1\|EnumConst2\)\>/
But then the 'MyClass' is not highlighted as cppClass group. Only the numeration values are highlighted. And, for a large list of enumeration values, would be overkill to write matches all over it.
There is a solution to this?
Thanks in advance.
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