12

I'd like to have vim highlight entire lines that match certain patterns. I can get all the text in a line to highlight (by doing syn match MyMatch "^.*text-to-match.*$"), but it always stops at the end of the text. I'd like to to continue to the end of the term, like highlighting CursorLine.

I've tried replacing $ with a \n^, hoping that would wrap it around. No change. (I didn't actually expect this would work, but there's no harm in trying.) I also tried adjusting the syn-pattern-offset (which I read about here: http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/syntax.html#:syn-pattern). Long story short, adding he=he-5 will highlight 5 fewer characters, but he=he+5 doesn't show any extra characters because there aren't characters to highlight.

This is my first attempt at making a vim syntax and I'm relatively new to vim. Please be gentle and include explanations.

Thanks!

(edit: Forgot to include, this is a multiline highlight. That probably increases the complexity a bit.)

jamessan
  • 41,569
  • 8
  • 85
  • 85
valadil
  • 1,648
  • 1
  • 14
  • 30
  • Is your pattern supposed to read `^.*text-to-match.*$`? – Cascabel Jan 27 '10 at 21:07
  • Jefromi, it is. SO apparently uses wrapped asterisks to do italics. It's fixed now. – valadil Jan 27 '10 at 21:21
  • No other syntaxes, but it's entirely possible the rest of my syntax is bludgeoning itself. Maybe I should start from the lines I want to fully highlight and then write the rest once that's working? – valadil Jan 27 '10 at 21:29
  • 1
    Oh, I totally read "whole line" as "whole line of text". I suspect there's in fact no way to do this. – Cascabel Jan 27 '10 at 21:49
  • was looking for the same thing, and actually it works for me by leaving out the ^ and $ – Rhubarb Jul 07 '14 at 13:50

3 Answers3

15

It's not very adaptive as the filename (buffer) and line to full row highlight needs to be explicitly identified, but apparently the sign command can be used:

It is possible to highlight an entire line using the :sign mechanism.
An example can be found at :help sign-commands
In a nutshell:

:sign define wholeline linehl=ErrorMsg
:sign place 1 name=wholeline line=123 file=thisfile.txt

Obviously, you should pick a higlight group that changes the color of the background for the linehl argument.

source: Erik Falor, vim mailing list

matt wilkie
  • 17,268
  • 24
  • 80
  • 115
10

From the documentation on syn-pattern:

The highlighted area will never be outside of the matched text.

I'd count myself surprised if you got this to work, but then again, Vim is always full of surprises.

Jay
  • 56,361
  • 10
  • 99
  • 123
  • Yes, but the pattern is matching the entire line. It should highlight the entire line. – Cascabel Jan 27 '10 at 21:37
  • 2
    If the window is 80 characters, and the text is 4 characters, only the 4 characters are matched and only the 4 characters are highlighted. The OP wants all 80 columns highlighted. – Jay Jan 27 '10 at 21:42
  • 2
    Jay's correct. There's no way to mimic the behavior of the `cursorline` option with standard syntax highlighting. Syntax highlighting is simply meant to highlight existing text. – jamessan Jan 27 '10 at 21:48
  • That's unfortunate, but also explains why I wasn't able to figure it out :-P – valadil Jan 27 '10 at 22:22
0

could also try :set cursorline :set cursorcolumn change colors like this: :hi cursorline :hi cursorcolumn using the usual term=, ctermfg=, ctermbg= etc see this answer VIM Highlight the whole current line

jmarina
  • 333
  • 1
  • 2
  • 8