5/3/2023 0 Comments Purebasic date timeAgain, I've tried to mimick as closely as possible the highlighting behaviour of PureBASIC native IDE - and so far it seems 100% compatible, including edge cases. This update works fine with the previous PureBASIC theme (ASM tokens use same keywords group as constants), so I didn't need to update the theme. In the previous update (v1.1) I have messed up some PureBASIC tokens in the keywords list (just a few) - during RegEx search and replace operations for wrapping the list into multiple lines, some keywords got fused into a single token. Luckily it seems that previous update it didn't yet make it into a new Highlight release, so this update fixes the issue. Easy Using PureBasic is no brainer: you install the program, run the IDE and start developing your application. (v1.1 introduced a new approach to tokens list: I've extracted and merged together all the PureBASIC language tokens from PB 5.00 up to PB 5.60 - not only it contains updated syntax, but it ensures that deprecated and renamed tokens are preserved in the language definition, so it can cover old an new code alike (within the 5.xx range). It uses projectional editing which allows users to overcome the limits of language parsers, and build DSL editors, such as ones with tables and diagrams. Generates small 32-bit or 64-bit executables similar to C/C++ programs without DLL dependencies. Word arguments are typically numbers, but the parser supports full expressions, including parameter values, so in the event that an expression or parameter value is provided, an expression-tree-like object is returned that must be evaluated. ![]() ![]() Portable Available on Windows, Linux and OS X.
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