[OS X TeX] TexShop not syntax coloring some .tex files

Herbert Schulz herbs at wideopenwest.com
Fri Mar 6 15:00:40 CET 2015


> On Mar 6, 2015, at 7:39 AM, Berend Hasselman <bhh at xs4all.nl> wrote:
> 
> 
> On 06-03-2015, at 13:55, Herbert Schulz <herbs at wideopenwest.com> wrote:
> 
>>> 
>>> On Mar 6, 2015, at 5:37 AM, Berend Hasselman <bhh at xs4all.nl> wrote:
>>> 
>>> 
>>> I have just let TexShop update itself to version 3.50 on OS X Mavericks.
>>> Some .tex files are not syntax coloured.
>>> The file is the root of a project.
>>> 
>>> When I switch syntax coloring off and then back on in Preferences all is ok.
>>> When I turn off line numbering and then back on again via the menu the file also be syntax colored.
>>> 
>>> I want the file to be syntax coloured.
>>> 
>>> How can I fix this?
>>> 
>>> Berend
>> 
>> Howdy,
>> 
>> Unfortunately I no longer have Mavericks on any of my systems so I can't test your exact situation. Could you let us have a small set of files set up like your document as well as a description of the order you are doing things to see the behavior. Does this happen if you open the root file directly? What are your `Project Root File' settings (TeXShop->Preferences->Misc)? Etc.
>> 
>> For what it's worth I'm not seeing the problem in Yosemite.
>> 
>> Good Luck,
>> 
>> Herb Schulz
> 
> Attached two files that exhibit the problem regardless of which one you open first.
> The root file is newt.tex.
> In folder is the other file: newtmain.tex.
> 
> I don’t know if folders and the content  will be sent by Mail or accepted by the mail server.
> 
> Berend
> 
> <base><newt.tex>

Howdy,

After correcting the name of the included file (the one in base to agree with the name in the \include statement in root) I can open and typeset each file. I also get syntax coloring on both file independent of order of opening them.

By the way, I don't see how TeXShop knows that there are multiple files if you open the root file---it doesn't look for \input or \include statements---so it looks like any other .tex file (i.e., no special `% !TEX' commands). And you say it isn't syntax colored if you open it first?

Good Luck,

Herb Schulz
(herbs at wideopenwest dot com)








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