lite-xl/data/core/style.lua

43 lines
1.8 KiB
Lua

local common = require "core.common"
local style = {}
style.padding = { x = common.round(14 * SCALE), y = common.round(7 * SCALE) }
style.divider_size = common.round(1 * SCALE)
style.scrollbar_size = common.round(4 * SCALE)
style.expanded_scrollbar_size = common.round(12 * SCALE)
style.caret_width = common.round(2 * SCALE)
style.tab_width = common.round(170 * SCALE)
-- The function renderer.font.load can accept an option table as a second optional argument.
-- It shoud be like the following:
--
-- {antialiasing= "grayscale", hinting = "full"}
--
-- The possible values for each option are:
-- - for antialiasing: grayscale, subpixel
-- - for hinting: none, slight, full
--
-- The defaults values are antialiasing subpixel and hinting slight for optimal visualization
-- on ordinary LCD monitor with RGB patterns.
--
-- On High DPI monitor or non RGB monitor you may consider using antialiasing grayscale instead.
-- The antialiasing grayscale with full hinting is interesting for crisp font rendering.
style.font = renderer.font.load(DATADIR .. "/fonts/FiraSans-Regular.ttf", 15 * SCALE)
style.big_font = style.font:copy(46 * SCALE)
style.icon_font = renderer.font.load(DATADIR .. "/fonts/icons.ttf", 16 * SCALE, {antialiasing="grayscale", hinting="full"})
style.icon_big_font = style.icon_font:copy(23 * SCALE)
style.code_font = renderer.font.load(DATADIR .. "/fonts/JetBrainsMono-Regular.ttf", 15 * SCALE)
style.syntax = {}
-- This can be used to override fonts per syntax group.
-- The syntax highlighter will take existing values from this table and
-- override style.code_font on a per-token basis, so you can choose to eg.
-- render comments in an italic font if you want to.
style.syntax_fonts = {}
-- style.syntax_fonts["comment"] = renderer.font.load(path_to_font, size_of_font, rendering_options)
style.log = {}
return style