Thank you! That worked perfectly. Presumably template literals can't be
addressed that way, but I guess one would probably have to dig deeper for
something like that (e.g. by creating a custom language module).
On Monday, December 18, 2017 at 7:18:55 AM UTC-6, Jim Danner wrote:
>
> One way to do this (which is what I did): in ~/Library/Application
> Support/BBEdit/Custom Keywords (create the directory if it doesn't exist),
> put a new file with file extension .js in which you put any keywords that
> are currently lacking, each on its own line. For example, I have a file
> called JavaScript.js with as its contents
> let
> of
> ObjectId
> Enter code here...
> but you could put in other ES6 keywords.
>
>
> On Sunday, December 17, 2017 at 3:59:32 AM UTC+1, scg wrote:
>>
>> I suspect there's an obvious solution to this, but I haven't been able to
>> find it yet.
>>
>> BBEdit's JavaScript syntax highlighting doesn't seem to pick up newer
>> features ('let', 'for...of', template literals, etc.). I thought there
>> might be a language module available somewhere for this (e.g. an
>> ES6/ECMAScript 2015 module), but I haven't found anything.
>>
>> Is there a way to get BBEdit to include these features in its syntax
>> highlighting? (I'm currently using the free version, although I'm still in
>> the trial period, so I think all features should be available.)
>>
>> Thanks.
>>
>
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