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LaTeX package for syntax highlighting of code in various languages

I am looking for a LaTeX package that does syntax highlighting on code. For example, right now I use the verbatim block to write code:

\begin{verbatim}
    <html>
       <head>
           <title>Hello</title>
       </head>
       <body>Hello</body>
    </html>
\end{verbatim}

And this works fine to display the code on my document. But, suppose I wanted to highlight the HTML markup the way an IDE would in the output document? Is there a package that could help?

I would like to do the same for various languages such as Java, C#, HTML, CSS and so on.

I'm not satisfied with lstlisting. It does not highlight XML code at all and screws up when using foreign Unicode characters. JavaScript is not supported, too, as it seems. Can LGrind handle such things?

C
ChrisN

You can use the listings package. It supports many different languages and there are lots of options for customising the output.

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{listings}

\begin{document}
\begin{lstlisting}[language=html]
<html>
    <head>
        <title>Hello</title>
    </head>
    <body>Hello</body>
</html>
\end{lstlisting}
\end{document}

Does this do colors by default? I'm not seeing colored output in my test usage, and I'm not sure if that's an error on my part, or simply not a feature.
I found an answer here: tjansson.dk/?p=419. You can simply use the lstset command to set all kinds of styles for different properties.
C
Community

After asking a similar question I’ve created another package which uses Pygments, and offers quite a few more options than texments. It’s called minted and is quite stable and usable.

Just to show it off, here’s a code highlighted with minted:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/BFNXp.png


This is actually quite a good job. Having to install Pygments does pose a bit of a challenge but I'm sure most persons will be willing to do so.
@Vincent: Unfortunately, installing Pygments on Windows is quite a bit more complicated at the moment (the user has to adapt the PATH variable and create a cmd script). I’m hoping to convince the Pygments maintainers to ship pygmentize with an .exe wrapper to make this step easier.
After trying both listings and minted/Pygments I decided minted was much better (more flexible). HOWEVER it will require jumping through a dozen hoops, upgrading to MiKTeX 2.8, installing Python, installing other components and so on. Minted documentation is poor and it doesn't support breaking long lines. But eventually I got it to render Java/XML in Eclipse colours! jevon.org/wiki/Eclipse_Pygments_Style
@soundasleepful: The minted documentation is continually updated. ;-) I actually find it quite extensive (of course I’m biased) but I’m happy to address any complaints. As it stands, the “requirements” section is admittedly awful.
minted is installed and working on both ShareLatex and Overleaf. Save yourselves the headache of installing Pygments ;)
r
reprogrammer

I recommend Pygments. It accepts a piece of code in any language and outputs syntax highlighted LaTeX code. It uses fancyvrb and color packages to produce its output. I personally prefer it to the listing package. I think fancyvrb creates much prettier results.


While I admire the macrology behind listings, I also agree that pygments has the edge: nicer highlighting, easier customisation, some ability to mix syntaxes, and the ability to output to formats other than Latex, such as HTML.
On a beamer type document this is apparently the only functional option. Neither minted nor listings compile correctly with beamer.
Yes, I have used listings with beamer, but you have to specify that frames that include listings are [fragile].
C
Community

I would use the minted package as mentioned from the developer Konrad Rudolph instead of the listing package. Here is why:

listing package

The listing package does not support colors by default. To use colors you would need to include the color package and define color-rules by yourself with the \lstset command as explained for matlab code here.

Also, the listing package doesn't work well with unicode, but you can fix those problems as explained here and here.

The following code

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{listings}

\begin{document}
\begin{lstlisting}[language=html]
<html>
    <head>
        <title>Hello</title>
    </head>
    <body>Hello</body>
</html>
\end{lstlisting}
\end{document}

produces the following image:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/ak3i8.png

minted package

The minted package supports colors, unicode and looks awesome. However, in order to use it, you need to have python 2.6 and pygments. In Ubuntu, you can check your python version in the terminal with

python --version

and you can install pygments with

sudo apt-get install python-pygments

Then, since minted makes calls to pygments, you need to compile it with -shell-escape like this

pdflatex -shell-escape yourfile.tex

If you use a latex editor like TexMaker or something, I would recommend to add a user-command, so that you can still compile it in the editor.

The following code

\documentclass{article}
\usepackage{minted}
\begin{document}

\begin{minted}{html}
    <!DOCTYPE html>
    <html>
       <head>
           <title>Hello</title>
       </head>

       <body>Hello</body>
    </html>
\end{minted}
\end{document}

produces the following image:

https://i.stack.imgur.com/EaYlI.png


S
SimplyKnownAsG

LGrind does this. It's a mature LaTeX package that's been around since adam was a cowboy and has support for many programming languages.


P
Paul Biggar

I mostly use lstlistings in papers, but for coloured output (for slides) I use pygments instead.


o
okm

I would suggest defining your own package based on the following tex code; this gives you complete freedom. http://ubuntuforums.org/archive/index.php/t-331602.html


The link just shows specific settings for syntax highlighting Python code with the 'listings' package...

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