Place your code on the page and surround it with tag. Set name attribute to code and class attribute to one of the language aliases you wish to use.
<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 is to use tag. There are no problems with character in that case. The main problem is that it doesn't look as good as tag if for some reason JavaScript didn't work (in RSS feed for example).
<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"> <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