Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.


Faces for Font Lock

You can make Font Lock mode use any face, but several faces are defined specifically for Font Lock mode. Each of these symbols is both a face name, and a variable whose default value is the symbol itself. Thus, the default value of font-lock-comment-face is font-lock-comment-face. This means you can write font-lock-comment-face in a context such as font-lock-keywords where a face-name-valued expression is used.

font-lock-comment-face
Used (typically) for comments.
font-lock-string-face
Used (typically) for string constants.
font-lock-keyword-face
Used (typically) for keywords--names that have special syntactic significance, like for and if in C.
font-lock-builtin-face
Used (typically) for built-in function names.
font-lock-function-name-face
Used (typically) for the name of a function being defined or declared, in a function definition or declaration.
font-lock-variable-name-face
Used (typically) for the name of a variable being defined or declared, in a variable definition or declaration.
font-lock-type-face
Used (typically) for names of user-defined data types, where they are defined and where they are used.
font-lock-constant-face
Used (typically) for constant names.
font-lock-warning-face
Used (typically) for constructs that are peculiar, or that greatly change the meaning of other text. For example, this is used for `;;;###autoload' cookies in Emacs Lisp, and for #error directives in C.


Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.