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In Emacs, is it possible to mark all variables of different data types with different colors? e.g. if I have the following variables in C/C++ my program

int i,j;
float g,h;
char a,b; 

Then throughout the source code i and j would be marked as red, g and h as green, a and b as blue.

I am not sure how useful this will be in future, but I feel it would help me while reading code, and be a good alternative to the Hungarian notation(not that I use this notation :D).

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    With the normal emacs C mode this would be very nontrivial--you would need to actually parse the file to get this information where you currently just use regular expressions for highlighting. I would check out the "Semantic Bovinator" for parsing C/C++ files and work from there. Dec 13, 2011 at 4:50
  • Maybe you want to take a look at highlight-symbol. It highlights all occurrences of the symbol at point, and you can have several symbols highlighted simultaneously (in different colors). Not exactly what you're asking for, but it helps reading code in a similar fashion.
    – Tarmil
    Dec 15, 2011 at 13:56
  • Another not-exactly comment: Regexp matching is probably not sufficient for this, but it might get you part of the way. An easy and interactive way to tweak regexp matching is to use C-M-s. See also library highlight.el.
    – Drew
    Jan 3, 2012 at 16:09
  • This would seem to do the trick: emacswiki.org/emacs/highlight-chars.el Jan 3, 2013 at 17:09

2 Answers 2

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No. Emacs has no idea about the type of a specific expression; doing this would be tantamount to writing a significant part of a C compiler in ELisp.

However, there is a light at the end of the tunnel.

E.g., if you edit OCaml code using tuareg-mode, you can ask Emacs about the type of any expression because the ocaml compiler provides that information; thus you should be able to ask it to highlight variables by type. This is the path to follow.

Alas, gcc does not provide that information; however, its extensiongccxml does.

Also, other C compilers, e.g., clang, provide that information out of the box, and there is a new file semantic-clang.el which relies on those features (although for completion only, not for syntax highlighting).

So, nothing out of the box for you here, but if you are willing to use clang instead of gcc and contribute to the CEDET development, you might get what you want.

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No, it's not possible to selectively assign a given color to a given variable in emacs (or just for one given program).
However, if it's just syntax highlighting you are looking for, of course, emacs will highlight most languages, and you can even create syntax highlighting for languages emacs would not know about.
Ex. Smali: https://github.com/strazzere/Emacs-Smali

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