http://source.contextgarden.net does something similar. That is a ruby web
application. If you want it, I could send you the source, but you need to
understand ruby.


Best wishes,
Taco

PS I just updated http://source.contextgarden.net to the newest ‘current’.


> On 24 Aug 2016, at 09:27, Mojca Miklavec <mojca.miklavec.li...@gmail.com> 
> wrote:
> 
> On 24 August 2016 at 09:05, Procházka Lukáš Ing. wrote:
>> Hello Mojca,
>> 
>> thanks for the answer.
>> 
>> I need a COMMAND LINE solution for Windows - my intention is to process many
>> (tens-hundreds) ConTeXt files into HTML - just to make their code
>> better-readable.
> 
> Vim *is* command-line, isn't it?
> (And if you ask me, it is a lot more user-friendly on Windows than it
> is on Linux/Mac :)
> 
>> And - as e.g. Ctx wiki has pretty-printing Ctx source - I believe there is
>> such tool...
> 
> That must be some php plugin.
> 
> But you just reminded me that ConTeXt in fact has a lua script build
> in already that generates a "pretty-printed" HTML that's basically the
> same as what you see in Scite.
> 
> I'm sure Hans knows the invocation by heart, but I can look it up as well.
> This is how the output looks like:
>    http://source2.contextgarden.net/tex/context/sample/sample-tex.html
> 
> Mojca
> 
>> On Wed, 24 Aug 2016 08:13:06 +0200, Mojca Miklavec wrote:
>> 
>>> On 24 August 2016 at 07:15, Lukáš Procházka wrote:
>>>> 
>>>> Hello,
>>>> 
>>>> does anybody know about a tool (maybe ConTeXt has something like this
>>>> built-in) which would convert ConTeXt code into pretty-printed HTML code?
>>>> 
>>>> E.g.:
>>>> 
>>>> ---- t.mkiv
>>>> \starttext
>>>>  \foo[bar] baz
>>>> \stoptext
>>>> ----
>>>> 
>>>> to be rewritten into e.g.:
>>>> 
>>>> ---- t.html
>>>> <pre class="keyword">\starttext</pre>
>>>>  <pre class="keyword">\foo</pre><pre class="bracet">[</pre>bar<pre
>>>> class="bracet">]</pre><pre> baz</pre>
>>>> <pre class="keyword">\stoptext<pre>
>>>> ----
>>> 
>>> 
>>> I used vim and TextMate (text editors) in the past to achieve that.
>>> 
>>> In theory ConTeXt has XML/HTML output and can parse text either using
>>> the vim module or the built-in lua-based lexers, so it's probably
>>> doable, but it might be far easier to go through some text editor. I'm
>>> sure Scite (with syntax highlighting definitions written by Hans) can
>>> do that as well.
>>> 
>>> http://superuser.com/a/565102
>>> 
>>> Mojca
> ___________________________________________________________________________________
> If your question is of interest to others as well, please add an entry to the 
> Wiki!
> 
> maillist : ntg-context@ntg.nl / http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context
> webpage  : http://www.pragma-ade.nl / http://tex.aanhet.net
> archive  : http://foundry.supelec.fr/projects/contextrev/
> wiki     : http://contextgarden.net
> ___________________________________________________________________________________

Taco Hoekwater
Elvenkind BV




___________________________________________________________________________________
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maillist : ntg-context@ntg.nl / http://www.ntg.nl/mailman/listinfo/ntg-context
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archive  : http://foundry.supelec.fr/projects/contextrev/
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