Place your code on the page and surround it with </tt> tag. Set <tt>name</tt> attribute to <tt>code</tt> and <tt>class</tt> attribute to one of the <a href="http://code.google.com/p/syntaxhighlighter/wiki/Languages">language aliases</a> you wish to use. </p><div class="code" style="position:relative; padding:0px; margin:0px;"><pre class='brush:php;toolbar:false;'><pre name="code" class="c-sharp">
... some code here ...
NOTE: One important thing to watch out for is opening triangular bracket <. It must be replaced with an HTML equivalent of < in all cases. Failure to do won't break the page, but might break the source code displayed.
An alternative to </TT> is to use <TT><textarea></TT> tag. There are no problems with <TT><</TT> character in that case. The main problem is that it doesn't look as good as <TT><pre class="brush:php;toolbar:false"></TT> tag if for some reason JavaScript didn't work (in RSS feed for example). </P><div class="code" style="position:relative; padding:0px; margin:0px;"><pre class='brush:php;toolbar:false;'><textarea name="code" class="c#" cols="60" rows="10">
... some code here ...
</textarea>
There's a way to pass a few configuration options to the code block. It's done via colon separated arguments.
<pre name="code" class="html:collapse"> ... some code here ...
Finally, to get the whole thing to render properly on the page, you have to add JavaScript to the page.
<link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="css/SyntaxHighlighter.css"></link> <script language="javascript" src="js/shCore.js"></script> <script language="javascript" src="js/shBrushCSharp.js"></script> <script language="javascript" src="js/shBrushXml.js"></script> <script language="javascript"> dp.SyntaxHighlighter.ClipboardSwf = '/flash/clipboard.swf'; dp.SyntaxHighlighter.HighlightAll('code'); </script>
For optimal result, place this code at the very end of your page. Check HighlightAll for more details about the function.
下载地址:SyntaxHighlighter_1.5.0.zip