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CC Mode attempts to use the standard faces for programming
languages in accordance with their intended purposes as far as
possible. No extra faces are currently provided, with the
exception of a replacement face c-invalid-face for
emacsen that don’t provide
font-lock-warning-face.
font-lock-comment-face.font-lock-doc-face (Emacs) or
font-lock-doc-string-face (XEmacs) if those faces
exist. If they don’t then
font-lock-comment-face is used.font-lock-string-face.font-lock-keyword-face.font-lock-function-name-face is used for function
names in declarations and definitions, and classes in those
contexts. It’s also used for preprocessor defines with
arguments.font-lock-variable-name-face. It’s also used
for preprocessor defines without arguments.font-lock-constant-face
if it exists, font-lock-reference-face otherwise.
As opposed to the preceding two faces, this is used on the
names in expressions, and it’s not used in declarations,
even if there happen to be a ‘const’
in them somewhere.font-lock-type-face is put on types (both
predefined and user defined) and classes in type contexts.font-lock-constant-face if it
exists, font-lock-reference-face otherwise.font-lock-preprocessor-face if it exists (i.e.,
XEmacs). In Emacs they get font-lock-builtin-face
or font-lock-reference-face, for lack of a closer
equivalent.font-lock-warning-face in Emacs. In older XEmacs
versions there’s no corresponding standard face, so
there a special c-invalid-face is used, which is
defined to stand out sharply by default.
Note that it’s not used for ‘#error’ or ‘#warning’ directives, since those aren’t syntactic errors in themselves.
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