I graduated in 1990 in Electrical Engineering and since then I have been in university, doing research in the field of DSP. To me programming is more a tool than a job.
I know that emacs and many other editors (gedit and jedit, for example) have Ada syntax highlighting. I was referring to dev.to visualization engine that shows Ada code in simple black-and-white.
I graduated in 1990 in Electrical Engineering and since then I have been in university, doing research in the field of DSP. To me programming is more a tool than a job.
Emacs supports Ada syntax highlighting (I once made some code changes to the Lisp). I'm not sure if others have...I think Vim has it.
Oh, also VSCode has an Ada syntax highlighter (this is my current editor of choice, actually).
P.S. - Congrats on doing Ada stuff. I was one of the contributors to Ada 95, but I haven't used it since 2000.
I know that emacs and many other editors (gedit and jedit, for example) have Ada syntax highlighting. I was referring to dev.to visualization engine that shows Ada code in simple black-and-white.
I reply to my own reply to say that I discovered that the language name used with the code construct must be lowercase, that is ada and not Ada.
oops! :)