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Syntactic fontification uses a syntax table (see Syntax Tables) to find and
highlight syntactically relevant text. If enabled, it runs prior
to search-based fontification. The variable
font-lock-syntactic-face-function, documented below,
determines which syntactic constructs to highlight. There are
several variables that affect syntactic fontification; you should
set them by means of font-lock-defaults (see
Font Lock
Basics).
Whenever Font Lock mode performs syntactic fontification on a
stretch of text, it first calls the function specified by
syntax-propertize-function. Major modes can use this
to apply syntax-table text properties to override
the buffer’s syntax table in special cases. See Syntax
Properties.
If the value of this variable is non-nil,
Font Lock does not do syntactic fontification, only
search-based fontification based on
font-lock-keywords. It is normally set by Font
Lock mode based on the keywords-only element in
font-lock-defaults.
This variable holds the syntax table to use for
fontification of comments and strings. It is normally set by
Font Lock mode based on the syntax-alist element
in font-lock-defaults. If this value is
nil, syntactic fontification uses the
buffer’s syntax table (the value returned by the
function syntax-table; see Syntax
Table Functions).
If this variable is non-nil, it should be a
function to determine which face to use for a given syntactic
element (a string or a comment). The value is normally set
through an other-vars element in
font-lock-defaults.
The function is called with one argument, the parse state
at point returned by parse-partial-sexp, and
should return a face. The default value returns
font-lock-comment-face for comments and
font-lock-string-face for strings (see Faces for Font
Lock).
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