Syntax ====== Rich can syntax highlight various programming languages with line numbers. To syntax highlight code, construct a :class:`~rich.syntax.Syntax` object and print it to the console. Here's an example:: from rich.console import Console from rich.syntax import Syntax console = Console() with open("syntax.py", "rt") as code_file: syntax = Syntax(code_file.read(), "python") console.print(syntax) You may also use the :meth:`~rich.syntax.Syntax.from_path` alternative constructor which will load the code from disk and auto-detect the file type. The example above could be re-written as follows:: from rich.console import Console from rich.syntax import Syntax console = Console() syntax = Syntax.from_path("syntax.py") console.print(syntax) Line numbers ------------ If you set ``line_numbers=True``, Rich will render a column for line numbers:: syntax = Syntax.from_path("syntax.py", line_numbers=True) Theme ----- The Syntax constructor (and :meth:`~rich.syntax.Syntax.from_path`) accept a ``theme`` attribute which should be the name of a `Pygments theme `_. It may also be one of the special case theme names "ansi_dark" or "ansi_light" which will use the color theme configured by the terminal. Background color ---------------- You can override the background color from the theme by supplying a ``background_color`` argument to the constructor. This should be a string in the same format a style definition accepts, .e.g "red", "#ff0000", "rgb(255,0,0)" etc. You may also set the special value "default" which will use the default background color set in the terminal. Syntax CLI ---------- You can use this class from the command line. Here's how you would syntax highlight a file called "syntax.py":: python -m rich.syntax syntax.py For the full list of arguments, run the following:: python -m rich.syntax -h