LaTeX lstlisting's style for character literals
As we all know, we can specify the style for string
literals in lstlisting
by using stringstyle=
But in some parts of my code, I have character
literals (i.e. when I .Split()
some string). And those are not interpreted as strings (that's actually good). So I want to color them. Let's say strings are green, so I want to color those character literals in red/orange (kinda like in Visual Studio).
So my question here is: Is there a way to color those character literals in lstlisting, so i.e. this line:
var foo = bar.Split(')');
would get its ')'
part in color?
lstlisting
New contributor
add a comment |
As we all know, we can specify the style for string
literals in lstlisting
by using stringstyle=
But in some parts of my code, I have character
literals (i.e. when I .Split()
some string). And those are not interpreted as strings (that's actually good). So I want to color them. Let's say strings are green, so I want to color those character literals in red/orange (kinda like in Visual Studio).
So my question here is: Is there a way to color those character literals in lstlisting, so i.e. this line:
var foo = bar.Split(')');
would get its ')'
part in color?
lstlisting
New contributor
add a comment |
As we all know, we can specify the style for string
literals in lstlisting
by using stringstyle=
But in some parts of my code, I have character
literals (i.e. when I .Split()
some string). And those are not interpreted as strings (that's actually good). So I want to color them. Let's say strings are green, so I want to color those character literals in red/orange (kinda like in Visual Studio).
So my question here is: Is there a way to color those character literals in lstlisting, so i.e. this line:
var foo = bar.Split(')');
would get its ')'
part in color?
lstlisting
New contributor
As we all know, we can specify the style for string
literals in lstlisting
by using stringstyle=
But in some parts of my code, I have character
literals (i.e. when I .Split()
some string). And those are not interpreted as strings (that's actually good). So I want to color them. Let's say strings are green, so I want to color those character literals in red/orange (kinda like in Visual Studio).
So my question here is: Is there a way to color those character literals in lstlisting, so i.e. this line:
var foo = bar.Split(')');
would get its ')'
part in color?
lstlisting
lstlisting
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked 1 hour ago
dabljuesdabljues
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dabljues is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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dabljues is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.
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