Syntax highlighter for your blogger website and you can use any kind of website.
Getting Started
The bare minimum for using highlight.js on a web page is linking to the library along with one of the styles and callinginitHighlightingOnLoad:<link rel="stylesheet" href="/path/to/styles/default.css">
<script src="/path/to/highlight.pack.js"></script>
<script>hljs.initHighlightingOnLoad();</script><pre><code> tags; it tries
to detect the language automatically. If automatic detection doesn’t
work for you, you can specify the language in the class attribute:<pre><code class="html">...</code></pre>language- or
lang-.To make arbitrary text look like code, but without highlighting, use the
plaintext class:<pre><code class="plaintext">...</code></pre>nohighlight class:<pre><code class="nohighlight">...</code></pre>Custom Initialization
When you need a bit more control over the initialization of highlight.js, you can use thehighlightBlock and configure
functions. This allows you to control what to highlight and when.Here’s an equivalent way to calling
initHighlightingOnLoad using
vanilla JS:document.addEventListener('DOMContentLoaded', (event) => {
  document.querySelectorAll('pre code').forEach((block) => {
    hljs.highlightBlock(block);
  });
});<pre><code> to mark up your code. If
you don't use a container that preserves line breaks you will need to
configure highlight.js to use the <br> tag:hljs.configure({useBR: true});
document.querySelectorAll('div.code').forEach((block) => {
  hljs.highlightBlock(block);
});configure.Web Workers
You can run highlighting inside a web worker to avoid freezing the browser window while dealing with very big chunks of code.In your main script:
addEventListener('load', () => {
  const code = document.querySelector('#code');
  const worker = new Worker('worker.js');
  worker.onmessage = (event) => { code.innerHTML = event.data; }
  worker.postMessage(code.textContent);
});onmessage = (event) => {
  importScripts('<path>/highlight.pack.js');
  const result = self.hljs.highlightAuto(event.data);
  postMessage(result.value);
};Getting the Library
You can get highlight.js as a hosted, or custom-build, browser script or as a server module. Right out of the box the browser script supports both AMD and CommonJS, so if you wish you can use RequireJS or Browserify without having to build from source. The server module also works perfectly fine with Browserify, but there is the option to use a build specific to browsers rather than something meant for a server. Head over to the download page for all the options.Don't link to GitHub directly. The library is not supposed to work straight from the source, it requires building. If none of the pre-packaged options work for you refer to the building documentation.
The CDN-hosted package doesn't have all the languages. Otherwise it'd be too big. If you don't see the language you need in the "Common" section, it can be added manually:
<script
 charset="UTF-8"
 src="https://cdnjs.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/highlight.js/9.12.0/languages/go.min.js"></script>r.js -o name=hljs paths.hljs=/path/to/highlight out=highlight.jsCommonJS
You can import Highlight.js as a CommonJS-module:npm install highlight.js --saveimport hljs from 'highlight.js';import hljs from 'highlight.js/lib/highlight';
import javascript from 'highlight.js/lib/languages/javascript';
hljs.registerLanguage('javascript', javascript);import hljs from 'highlight.js/lib/highlight';
import 'highlight.js/styles/github.css';License
Highlight.js is released under the BSD License. See LICENSE file for details.Links
The official site for the library is at https://highlightjs.org/.Further in-depth documentation for the API and other topics is at http://highlightjs.readthedocs.io/.
Authors and contributors are listed in the AUTHORS.en.txt file.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
