This is a follow up question to my question about Setting the CSS of code if it contains a reserved word.
What I am trying to do: If some code has quotes or double quotes, I want to set the color of the font to red and bold. Ex. System.out.println( "Hello world" ); should set "Hello world" to red.
What's wrong: Despite my best efforts, I can't seem to get my control statements to work properly (at least I think that's the issue). It sets the first double quote and beyond to red, but when I tell it to stop when a word equals anyword" or anyword' it sets the rest of the code in the block to red.
HTML
<html>
<body>
<code id="java">
public static void main(String[] args)<br>
{
<pre> int i = 120; </pre><br>
<pre> // Displays a message in the console </pre>
<pre> // This is a test </pre>
<pre> System.out.println( "Hello Big World!" );</pre>
}
</code>
</body>
</html>
CSS
.quotes
{
font-weight: bold;
color: #E01B1B;
}
jQuery
$(document).ready(function() {
var code = $("#java").html(); // Get the code
var split = code.split(' '); // Split up each element
var chkQ = 0; // Check for quotes
var chkC = 0; // Check until end of comment line
// Set the CSS of reserved words, digits, strings, and comments
for (var j = 0; j < split.length; j++) {
// Check to see if chkQ is set to true
if (chkQ == 1) {
// If the element matches (anyword") or (anyword'), then set
// flag to false and continue checking the rest of the code.
// Else, continue setting the CSS to .quotes
if (split[j].match(/."/) || split[j].match(/.'/)) {
split[j] = '<span class="quotes">' + split[j] + '</span>';
chkQ = 0;
} else {
split[j] = '<span class="quotes">' + split[j] + '</span>';
}
}
...
} else if (chkQ == 0 && chkC == 0) {
...
// If the element matches a ("anyword) or ('anyword)...
} else if (split[j].match(/"./) || split[j].match(/'./)) {
split[j] = '<span class="quotes">' + split[j] + '</span>';
chkQ = 1;
} ...
}
}
// Join all the split up elements back together!
$("#java").html(split.join(' '));
});
Question: Is this just simply an issue with my regex, control blocks or something completely different?
\") and nested quotes ("this string 'contains' nested quotes."). You'd be better off simply looping through the string, and keeping track of the quotes with a boolean or something. – Karl Nicoll Apr 16 '12 at 22:39