Yes, the version of vim that came with (I believe) Red Hat 6.0 has the definitions in its syntax file for proper "#if 0" highlighting. As common a practice as this has become, any syntax-highlighting editor with some degree of maturity that did *not* have this in its default rulesets for C/C++ would surprise me.
What language-independent, syntax-highlighting text editor are you using?
-- Jeff S
From: Fabian Cenedese Cenedese@indel.ch
/* note about reason for commenting block */ #if 0 code code /* comments */ code #endif
Whereas this is the solution with the least work it's also hard to
spot. If
using a text editor with syntax coloring it all looks the same. But if a code
isn't
effective I'd like to see that.
Actually it could be considered as an editor fault if it changes color for commented out code but doesn't recognize the #if 0/#endif construct.
I wouldn't say so. A comment is easily recognized by the chars /* */ or //. But to get a #if 0 or #if _ANYTHING you really need a language dependant preprocessor which goes beyond a normal text editor, even one with syntax coloring. Do you have such a text editor that finds #if's?
bye Fabi
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