| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950 | /*Language: Julia REPLDescription: Julia REPL sessionsAuthor: Morten Piibeleht <morten.piibeleht@gmail.com>Website: https://julialang.orgRequires: julia.jsThe Julia REPL code blocks look something like the following:  julia> function foo(x)             x + 1         end  foo (generic function with 1 method)They start on a new line with "julia>". Usually there should also be a space after this, butwe also allow the code to start right after the > character. The code may run over multiplelines, but the additional lines must start with six spaces (i.e. be indented to match"julia>"). The rest of the code is assumed to be output from the executed code and will beleft un-highlighted.Using simply spaces to identify line continuations may get a false-positive if the outputalso prints out six spaces, but such cases should be rare.*/function juliaRepl(hljs) {  return {    name: 'Julia REPL',    contains: [      {        className: 'meta',        begin: /^julia>/,        relevance: 10,        starts: {          // end the highlighting if we are on a new line and the line does not have at          // least six spaces in the beginning          end: /^(?![ ]{6})/,          subLanguage: 'julia'      },      // jldoctest Markdown blocks are used in the Julia manual and package docs indicate      // code snippets that should be verified when the documentation is built. They can be      // either REPL-like or script-like, but are usually REPL-like and therefore we apply      // julia-repl highlighting to them. More information can be found in Documenter's      // manual: https://juliadocs.github.io/Documenter.jl/latest/man/doctests.html      aliases: ['jldoctest']      }    ]  }}module.exports = juliaRepl;
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