If a vim/neovim user wishes to suppress loading the vim plugin by
setting g:load_black in their VIMRC (for me, Arch linux automatically
adds the plugin to Neovim's RTP, even though I'm not using it), the
current location of the test comes after a call to has('python3'). This
adds, in my tests, between 35 and 45 ms to Vim load time (which I know
isn't a lot but it's also unnecessary). Moving the call to
`exists('g:load_black')` to before the call to `has('python3')` removes
this unnecessary test and speeds up loading.
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
- use `Black` directly: the commands an autocommand runs are Ex commands, so no
execute or colon is necessary.
- use an `augroup` (best practice) to prevent duplicate autocommands from
hindering performance.
I did this manually for the last few releases and I think it's going to be
helpful in the future too. Unfortunately this adds a little more work during
the release (sorry @cooperlees).
This change will also improve the merge conflict situation a bit, because
changes to different sections won't merge conflict.
For the last release, the sections were in a kind of random order. In the
template I put highlights and "Style" first because they're most important
to users, and alphabetized the rest.
It was causing stability issues because the first pass
could cause a "magic trailing comma" to appear, meaning
that the second pass might get a different result. It's
not critical.
Some things format differently (with extra parens)
It turns out "simple_stmt" isn't that simple: it can contain multiple
statements separated by semicolons. Invisible parenthesis logic for
arithmetic expressions only looked at the first child of simple_stmt.
This causes instability in the presence of semicolons, since the next
run through the statement following the semicolon will be the first
child of another simple_stmt.
I believe this along with #2572 fix the known stability issues.
Fixes#2651. Fixes#2754. Fixes#2518. Fixes#2321.
This adds a test that lists a number of cases of unstable formatting
that we have seen in the issue tracker. Checking it in will ensure
that we don't regress on these cases.
At the moment, it's just a source of spurious CI failures and busywork
updating the configuration file.
Unlike diff-shades, it is run across many different platforms and
Python versions, but that doesn't seem essential. We already run unit
tests across platforms and versions.
I chose to leave the code around for now in case somebody is using it,
but CI will no longer run it.
Since power operators almost always have the highest binding power in expressions, it's often more readable to hug it with its operands. The main exception to this is when its operands are non-trivial in which case the power operator will not hug, the rule for this is the following:
> For power ops, an operand is considered "simple" if it's only a NAME, numeric CONSTANT, or attribute access (chained attribute access is allowed), with or without a preceding unary operator.
Fixes GH-538.
Closes GH-2095.
diff-shades results: https://gist.github.com/ichard26/ca6c6ad4bd1de5152d95418c8645354b
Co-authored-by: Diego <dpalma@evernote.com>
Co-authored-by: Felix Hildén <felix.hilden@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
Closes#2360: I'd like to make passing SRC or `--code` mandatory and the arguments mutually exclusive. This will change our (partially already broken) promises of CLI behavior, but I'll comment below.