For this input:
class MyClass {
private string str = "abc";
}
we get the correct result:
Make this string literal multiline:
class MyClass {
private string str = """
abc
""";
}
and nothing is parsed:
Note that language is also null
although java
is explicitly passed.
This codepen shows that the original highlightjs can handle multiline string literals: https://codepen.io/alexey-inkin/pen/abYYVOj
Code
import 'package:highlight/highlight_core.dart';
import 'package:highlight/languages/java.dart';
void main() {
highlight.registerLanguage('java', java);
const text = '''
class MyClass {
private string str = "abc";
}
''';
final result = highlight.parse(text, language: 'java');
print(result.nodes);
const textMultiline = '''
class MyClass {
private string str = """
abc
""";
}
''';
final resultMultiline = highlight.parse(textMultiline, language: 'java');
print(resultMultiline.nodes);
}
Output
[Instance of 'Node', Instance of 'Node', Instance of 'Node', Instance of 'Node', Instance of 'Node', Instance of 'Node', Instance of 'Node']
[Instance of 'Node']