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bug#13686: hi-yellow vs. hi-lock-1
From: |
Stefan Monnier |
Subject: |
bug#13686: hi-yellow vs. hi-lock-1 |
Date: |
Fri, 08 Mar 2013 20:33:15 -0500 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/24.3.50 (gnu/linux) |
>> hi-lock-N
>> highlight-N
>> font-lock-user-N
>> font-lock-highlight-N
>> font-lock-extra-face-N
The "font-lock-<foo>" names are due to history. There's no point using
this scheme for new faces, especially for faces not directly linked to
font-lock.
> As for the convention of not naming or otherwise linking a face with
> particular attributes (as some may interpret it), either it doesn't
> apply here, or if it does, it's a good place to ignore it. I've argued
> before that it does not apply because as most agree faces should be
> defined for a particular purpose rather than for appearance, such as
> for highlighting variable names. The face hi-yellow has a purpose:
> highlight something with a background of yellow. It is named
> appropriately and its attributes are so set. If there is a rule
> somewhere which clearly states that this is not allowed, then that
> rule should be broken in this case.
How 'bout designing a concise "face description" format, so that instead
of choosing "hi-yellow", the user can choose (say) "b:yellow",
"f:blue", or "s:bold". This would give access to "any color", and in
order not to overwhelm the user, the completion would default to only
completing among a predefined set (corresponding to the current
predefined faces)?
Stefan
bug#13686: hi-yellow vs. hi-lock-1, Jambunathan K, 2013/03/06