Load Custom Languages
See All Builtin Languages first.
You can load custom languages by passing a TextMate grammar object into the langs
array.
ts
import { createHighlighter } from 'shiki'
const myLang = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync('my-lang.json', 'utf8'))
const highlighter = await createHighlighter({
langs: [myLang],
themes: ['vitesse-light']
})
const html = highlighter.codeToHtml(code, {
lang: 'my-lang',
theme: 'vitesse-light'
})
You can also load languages after the highlighter has been created.
ts
import { createHighlighter } from 'shiki'
const myLang = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync('my-lang.json', 'utf8'))
const highlighter = await createHighlighter({
langs: [],
themes: ['vitesse-light'],
})
await highlighter.loadLanguage(myLang) // <--
const html = highlighter.codeToHtml(code, {
lang: 'my-lang',
theme: 'vitesse-light'
})
Migrate from v0.14
Since v1.0, shiki
now is environment agnostic, we don't have access to the file system. That means the path
property shiki@0.14
supports is not available in v1.0, and you must to read the files yourself and pass in the object.
For example, the following would not work:
ts
const highlighter = await createHighlighter({
langs: [
{
name: 'vue-vine',
scopeName: 'source.vue-vine',
// ‼️ This would not work!
path: join(__dirname, './vine-ts.tmLanguage.json'),
embeddedLangs: [
'vue-html',
'css',
'scss',
'sass',
'less',
'stylus',
],
},
],
themes: []
})
Instead, load that file yourself (via fs
, import()
, fetch()
, etc.):
ts
const vineGrammar = JSON.parse(fs.readFileSync(join(__dirname, './vine-ts.tmLanguage.json'), 'utf8'))
const highlighter = await createHighlighter({
langs: [
{
name: 'vue-vine',
scopeName: 'source.vue-vine',
embeddedLangs: [
'vue-html',
'css',
'scss',
'sass',
'less',
'stylus',
],
...vineGrammar
},
],
themes: []
})
Custom Language Aliases
You can register custom language aliases with the langAlias
option. For example:
ts
import { createHighlighter } from 'shiki'
const highlighter = await createHighlighter({
langs: ['javascript'],
langAlias: {
mylang: 'javascript',
},
themes: ['nord']
})
const code = highlighter.codeToHtml('const a = 1', {
lang: 'mylang',
theme: 'nord'
})