On 15.10.15 07:21, Paul wrote:
> On Thursday, October 15, 2015 at 1:49:24 AM UTC-4, Paul wrote:
> >On Wednesday, October 14, 2015 at 8:12:27 AM UTC-4, Erik Christiansen
> >wrote:
> >> ISTM very intuitive that compounding excessive layers of
> >> highlighting results in no net highlighting, after a point.
> >> Failure of efforts to lay it on thicker seems to confirm that.
> >> (Though a blinking cursor might be a last gasp in that direction.
...
> Actually, the reason you might have cringed at syntax highlighting,
> especially if you just looked at it momentarily, is default colours.
> We all have our unique preferences, and my color scheme looks nothing
> like the (nowadays) default. But if you haven't missed the feature
> til now, more power to you.
Perception varies as much as do our brains. I am visually irritated and
distracted by a highlight on the xterm adjacent to the one I'm working
in. Colouring words just reduces their readability, I find, and see no
obvious reason to use it merely for confirming attributes which a word
already has without. Using it only as an alarm, as in spellchecking,
works well for me.
It may be that coding in assembler for more than a decade (last century)
ingrained an eye for detail, and a mindset which connects disparate dots
with some facility. When you've had to remember what's in which register
right through a long routine, and infer the braces, subsequently keeping
rein on a bit of 'C' is no biggie.
In short, colouring all 'C' keywords, merely because they are keywords,
strikes me as equivalent to this comment in usefulness:
elephants++ ; // Increment elephants.
(Incidentally, the example is not artificial. Such facile comments have
been produced by folk paid to program.)
Folding, which you mentioned upthread, is something else. Through
hierarchical information hiding, it helps impart greater structure to
voluminous text, and I wouldn't be without it. (Even in .vimrc, now. ;)
Erik
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