As a few people have already mentioned, I use SyntaxHighlighter on my blog. The only issue I had with it is that my markup wouldn't be valid if I followed their the instructions from the SyntaxHighlighter usage wiki. To fix this problem I added some simple jQuery code before SyntaxHighlighter scans my document:
$(document).ready(function() {
$('pre.code').attr('name', 'code').removeClass('code');
dp.SyntaxHighlighter.ClipboardSwf = 'clipboard.swf URL';
dp.SyntaxHighlighter.HighlightAll('code');
});
Instead of adding the name="code" attribute to my <pre/> tags, I add a code 'code' class to my pre tags before I add my language attribute so my class attribute looks like this:
<pre class="code css">
</pre>
And my javascript code adds the 'name' attribute and removes the 'code' class dynamically so that my markup validates and works flawlessly with SyntaxHighlighter.
