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Home/ Questions/Q 517963
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T07:53:18+00:00 2026-05-13T07:53:18+00:00

I need to highlight source code in LaTeX. The package listings seems to be

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I need to highlight source code in LaTeX. The package listings seems to be the best choice for most use-cases and for me it was, until now.

However, now I need more flexibility. Generally, what I’m looking for is a real lexer. In particular, I need (for an own language definition) to define (and highlight!) own number styles. listings does not allow highlighting numbers in code. However, I need to produce something like this:

Required result

listings also cannot cope with arbitrary delimiters for strings. Consider the following valid Ruby code:

s = %q!this is a string.!

Here, ! can be replaced by almost any delimiter.

(That listings cannot handle Unicode is also quite vexing, but that’s another issue.)

Ideally, I am looking for an extension of listings that allows me to provide more complex lexing rules. But barring that, I am also searching for viable alternatives.

Other threads have suggested using Pygments which can produce LaTeX output. There’s even a package – texments – to ease the transition.

However, this sorely lacks features. In particular, I am interested in listings-style line numbering, source code line references, and the possibility of embedding LaTeX in source code (options texcl and mathescape in listings).

As an example, here’s a source code typeset with listings which shows some of the things that a replacement should also provide:

LaTeX listings example: Sideways addition
[“Sideways addition” modified from Bit Twiddling Hacks]

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T07:53:19+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 7:53 am

    Taking Norman’s advice to heart, I’ve hacked together a solution that used (a patched) Pygments for highlighting and pushed in as many features as possible without bursting 😉

    I’ve also created a LateX package, once my Pygments patch was released in version 1.2 …

    Presenting minted

    minted is a package that uses Pygments to provide top-notch syntax highlighting in LaTeX. For example, it allows the following output.

    fancy LaTeX example

    Here’s a minimal file to reproduce the above code (notice that including Unicode characters might require XeTeX)!

    \documentclass[a4paper]{article}
    \usepackage{fontspec}
    \usepackage{minted}
    
    \setsansfont{Calibri}
    \setmonofont{Consolas}
    
    \begin{document}
    \renewcommand{\theFancyVerbLine}{
      \sffamily\textcolor[rgb]{0.5,0.5,0.5}{\scriptsize\arabic{FancyVerbLine}}}
    
    \begin{minted}[mathescape,
                   linenos,
                   numbersep=5pt,
                   gobble=2,
                   frame=lines,
                   framesep=2mm]{csharp}
      string title = "This is a Unicode π in the sky"
      /*
      Defined as $\pi=\lim_{n\to\infty}\frac{P_n}{d}$ where $P$ is the perimeter
      of an $n$-sided regular polygon circumscribing a
      circle of diameter $d$.
      */
      const double pi = 3.1415926535
    \end{minted}
    \end{document}
    

    This can be typeset using the following command:

    xelatex -shell-escape test.tex
    

    (But minted also works with latex and pdflatex …)

    minted.sty works similar to texments.sty but allows additional features.

    How to get it

    • minted is listed on CTAN (package info)

    • documentation is of course included.

    • minted is now maintained by Geoffrey Poore. The development version, including the latest .sty file, is available at github.com/gpoore/minted, and can be cloned from there.

    Once again, thanks to Norman for motivating me to produce this package.

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