Brings syntax highlighting for inkle's Ink, in your editor of choice (as long as it supports TextMate grammars).
If you're just looking for the plist-based grammar, head over to the releases!
- Building the grammar
- Limitations
- Building a custom theme
- Availability through NPM
- Contributing
- License
The grammar is written using the YAML-tmLanguage
format, with a couple of
additions borrowed from TypeScript-TmLanguage.
Building the grammar is easy, you need the latest version of node.js and your favourite npm-compatible package manager.
- clone this repository;
- run
npm install
oryarn install
; - run
npm run build
oryarn run build
; - the
Ink.tmLanguage
file should be available ingrammars/
.
In Ink, { }
can be an alternative, a sequence, a switch, a conditional, etc.
Since TextMate grammars can only match one line at a time, there are some small limitations.
Expressions will not be fully highlighted in conditionals.
Anything contained in the condition (before :
) is named with the same scope.
{ x == 0: Hello }
{ x == 0: Hello | hi }
{ x == 0:
Hello
- else:
Hi
}
{
- x == 0:
Hello
}
{ window_opts < 2 || learnt(fingerprints_on_glass) || GlassState ? steamed:
I looked away from the dreary glass.
}
This is not the case in the following example, where all expression tokens are named with their own scopes.
~ y = (x == 0)
~ myFunction(x == 0)
Additionally, while the following is perfectly valid ink, there's a false positive on both else:
and then:
.
{conditional()}
{conditional()}
{conditional()}
{conditional()}
=== function conditional() ===
{once:
- if condition
- then: do this
- else: do that
- end
}
This limitation can be worked around by escaping the colon:
=== function conditional() ===
{once:
- if condition
- then\: do this
- else\: do that
- end
}
In choice, it's sometimes possible for the content to be expressed on the next line if it's preceded by a condition. In the example below, the text supression of the first choice will not be highlighted, as it won't be matched as part of the choice. The second choice will however be highlighted properly.
VAR x = 0
* (firstChoice) {x == 0}
"Hello John Doe[."], I need to tell you something special"
* (secondChoice) {x != 0} "Hello John Doe[."], I won't say a word"
All the captures support the generic scopes recommended by the Sublime Text documentation, narrowed down to .ink
. This means that the grammar will work out of box with existing themes.
Most of the captures are multi-scoped, with the first scope defined by the theme being used. Some of these multi-scoped captures support ink-specific scopes, which can be implemented by your custom theme. They are described below:
string.label.ink
→(label)
entity.tag.ink
→#tag
entity.todo.ink
→TODO
keyword.glue.ink
→<>
keyword.choice.ink
→*
keyword.choice.sticky.ink
→+
keyword.choice.suppression.ink
→[ ]
keyword.logic.ink
→~
keyword.gather.ink
→-
keyword.divert.ink
→->
or<-
keyword.alternative.type.ink
→&
or~
or!
inside{ }
storage.knot.ink
→ Identifier after / between=
variable.other.knot.ink
→ a knot identifier in a divertvariable.other.stitch.ink
→ a stitch identifier in a divertvariable.other.label.ink
→ a label identifier in a divert
As a convenience, the grammar is also available through the npm registry. If you're building an extension for Atom or VS Code, you may want to depend on this package.
Once installed, the grammar can be found in node_modules/ink-tmlanguage/grammars/Ink.tmLanguage
.
If the grammar is missing something, open an issue or fix it and submit a pull request!
When working on the grammar, you may want to use npm run watch
, which will rebuild the plist grammar on every change.
The grammar is released under the MIT license. See LICENSE for details.
This project borrows some code from TypeScript-TmLanguage, licensed under the MIT license.