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>
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.
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.
Fixes#2506
``XDG_CACHE_HOME`` does not work on Windows. To allow for users to set a custom cache directory on all systems I added a new environment variable ``BLACK_CACHE_DIR`` to set the cache directory. The default remains the same so users will only notice a change if that environment variable is set.
The specific use case I have for this is I need to run black on in different processes at the same time. There is a race condition with the cache pickle file that made this rather difficult. A custom cache directory will remove the race condition.
I created ``get_cache_dir`` function in order to test the logic. This is only used to set the ``CACHE_DIR`` constant.
- Add Furo dependency to docs/requirements.txt
- Drop a fair bit of theme configuration
- Fix the toctree declarations in index.rst
- Move stuff around as Furo isn't 100% compatible with Alabaster
Furo was chosen as it provides excellent mobile support, user
controllable light/dark theming, and is overall easier to read
Fixes#2742.
This PR adds the ability to configure additional python cell magics. This
will allow formatting cells in Jupyter Notebooks that are using custom (python)
magics.
Black would now echo the location that it determined as the root path
for the project if `--verbose` is enabled by the user, according to
which it chooses the SRC paths, i.e. the absolute path of the project
is `{root}/{src}`.
Closes#1880
*blib2to3's support was left untouched because: 1) I don't want to touch
parsing machinery, and 2) it'll allow us to provide a more useful error
message if someone does try to format Python 2 code.
I believe it would be useful to split up the long list of changes a bit more.
Specific changes:
- Removed the entry for new flake8 plugins; this is purely internal and not of interest to users
- Put regex in the packaging section
- New section for Jupyter Notebook
- New section for Python 3.10, mostly match/case stuff
error: cannot format <string>: ('EOF in multi-line statement', (2, 0))
▲ before ▼ after
error: cannot format <string>: Cannot parse: 2:0: EOF in multi-line statement
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
We were no longer using it since GH-2644 and GH-2654. This should hopefully
make using Black easier to use as there's one less compiled dependency.
The core team also doesn't have to deal with the surprisingly frequent fires
the regex packaging setup goes through.
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
* Treat functions/classes in blocks as if they're nested
One curveball is that we still want two preceding newlines before blocks
that are probably logically disconnected. In other words:
if condition:
def foo():
return "hi"
# <- aside: this is the goal of this commit
else:
def foo():
return "cya"
# <- the two newlines spacing here should stay
# since this probably isn't related
with open("db.json", encoding="utf-8") as f:
data = f.read()
Unfortunately that means we have to special case specific clause types
instead of just being able to just for a colon leaf. The hack used here
is to check whether we're adding preceding newlines for a standalone or
dependent clause. "Standalone" being a clause that doesn't need another
clause to be valid (eg. if) and vice versa.
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
This removes all but one usage of the `regex` dependency. Tricky bits included:
- A bug in test_black.py where we were incorrectly using a character range. Fix also submitted separately in #2643.
- `tokenize.py` was the original use case for regex (#1047). The important bit is that we rely on `\w` to match anything valid in an identifier, and `re` fails to match a few characters as part of identifiers. My solution is to instead match all characters *except* those we know to mean something else in Python: whitespace and ASCII punctuation. This will make Black able to parse some invalid Python programs, like those that contain non-ASCII punctuation in the place of an identifier, but that seems fine to me.
- One import of `regex` remains, in `trans.py`. We use a recursive regex to parse f-strings, and only `regex` supports that. I haven't thought of a better fix there (except maybe writing a manual parser), so I'm leaving that for now.
My goal is to remove the `regex` dependency to reduce the risk of breakage due to dependencies and make life easier for users on platforms without wheels.
Fixes https://github.com/psf/black/issues/2627 , a non-Python cell magic such as `%%writeline` can legitimately contain "incorrect" indentation, however this causes `tokenize-rt` to return an error. To avoid this, `validate_cell` should early detect cell magics (just like it detects `TransformerManager` transformations).
Test added too, in the shape of a "badly indented" `%%writefile` within `test_non_python_magics`.
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Marco Edward Gorelli <marcogorelli@protonmail.com>
In Python 3.10 the exception generated by creating a process pool on
a Python build that doesn't support this is now `NotImplementedError`
Commit history before merge:
* Fix process pool fallback on Python 3.10
* Update CHANGES.md
* Update CHANGES.md
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
* Improve Python 2 only syntax detection
First of all this fixes a mistake I made in Python 2 deprecation PR
using token.* to check for print/exec statements. Turns out that
for nodes with a type value higher than 256 its numeric type isn't
guaranteed to be constant. Using syms.* instead fixes this.
Also add support for the following cases:
print "hello, world!"
exec "print('hello, world!')"
def set_position((x, y), value):
pass
try:
pass
except Exception, err:
pass
raise RuntimeError, "I feel like crashing today :p"
`wow_these_really_did_exist`
10L
* Add octal support, more test cases, and fixup long ints
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
* Update CHANGES.md for 21.10b0 release
* Update version in docs/usage_and_configuration/the_basics.md
* Also update docs/integrations/source_version_control.md ...
- Install build-essential to avoid build issues like #2568 when dependencies don't have prebuilt wheels available
- Use multi-stage build instead of trying to purge packages and cache from the image
Copying `/root/.local/` installs only black's built Python dependencies (< 20 MB).
So the image is barely larger than python:3-slim base image
* Prepare for Python 2 depreciation
- Use BlackRunner and .stdout in command line test
So the next commit won't break this test. This is in its own commit so
we can just revert the depreciation commit when dropping Python 2
support completely.
* Deprecate Python 2 formatting support
If the individual failures are verbose, it's useful to have
the summary at the end. Otherwise, it can be really difficult
to figure out which projects have an issue.
Fixes#2394. Eventually fixes#517.
This is essentially @pradyunsg's suggestion from #2394. I suggest that at the
same time we start the formal stability policy, we take a few other disruptive steps
and drop Python 2 and the "b" marker.
Co-authored-by: Pradyun Gedam <pradyunsg@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Łukasz Langa <lukasz@langa.pl>
Commit history before merge:
* Bump required aiohttp version to 3.7.4
This release includes an important security fix
(https://github.com/aio-libs/aiohttp/security/advisories/GHSA-v6wp-4m6f-gcjg) and many
other improvements.
* add changelog entry
* Let's not forget about Pipfile
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
* re-implement simple CORS middleware for blackd
* remove aiohttp-cors from setup.py
* Remove aiohttp-cors from Pipfile.lock
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
Project packaging is using TOML due to pyproject.toml but fails to
mention it, causing installation failures with newer setuptools-scm 6.3.0.
Commit history before merge:
* Fix missing toml extra
Fixed breakage uncovered by setuptools-scm 6.3.0 where installation
would fail for project that missed to mention the toml extra.
* Bump setuptools[-scm] to avoid toml extra
https://github.com/psf/black/pull/2475#issuecomment-912730714
> If you constraint greater than 6.3.0 and setuptools greater than 45
> you can skip the extra,
* Actually for safety reasons, just use the extra
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
Add new platformdirs dependencies as hidden imports when creating
PyInstaller-based binaries.
platformdirs imports the module for each platform dynamically, which
PyInstaller is unable to correctly detect for packing. By adding the
modules as hidden imports, we are telling PyInstaller to include the
modules in the packaged binary.
This issue seems to have been introduce when switching to platformdirs
in #2375. fixes#2464
Commit history before merge:
* Add hidden import to PyInstaller build
Add new platformdirs dependency as a hidden import when creating
PyInstaller based binaries.
* Only include the platformdirs for the relevant os
re. import, the ipynb code was assuming that typing-extensions would
always be available, but that's not the case! There's an environment
marker on the requirement meaning it won't get installed on 3.10 or
higher. The test suite didn't catch this issue since aiohttp pulls in
typing-extensions unconditionally.
Hopefully my first release doesn't end up in flames 🔥
Commit history before merge:
* Prepare CHANGES.md for release 21.8b0
* I need to add a check for this too.
The setuptools-scm dependency in setup.cfg did not have a version
specified, leading to the issues described in #2449 after a faulty release
of setuptools-scm was published. To avoid this issue in the future, the
last version before that faulty update is now pinned.
Commit history before merge:
* Pin setuptools-scm dependency version (#2449)
* Update CHANGES.md
* Let's pin in pyproject.toml too
Mostly since it's non-build-backend specific configuration and more
widely standardized file. Not sure what benefits pinning in setup.cfg
gives us on top of pyproject.toml but I'd rather not find out during
the release that is supposed to happen today 😉
Co-authored-by: FiNs <24248249+FabianNiehaus@users.noreply.github.com>
Implementation stolen from PR davidhalter/parso#162. Thanks parso!
I could add support for these newer syntactical constructs in the
target version detection logic, but until I get diff-shades up
and running I don't feel very comfortable adding the code.
This fixes a bug where a trailing comma would be added to a
parenthesized return annotation changing its type to a tuple.
Here's one case where this bug shows up:
```
def spam() -> (
this_is_a_long_type_annotation_which_should_NOT_get_a_trailing_comma
):
pass
```
The root problem was that the type annotation was treated as if it was
a parameter & import list (is_body=True to linegen::bracket_split_build_line)
where a trailing comma is usually fine. Now there's another check in the
aforementioned function to make sure the body it's operating on isn't
a return annotation before truly adding a trailing comma.
The fix for #1688 in #1761 breaks help("modules") introspection and also leads
to unhappy results when inadvertently importing blackd from Python. Basically
the sys.exit(-1) causes the whole Python REPL to exit -- not great to suffice.
Commit history before merge:
* Change sys.exit to Raise.
* Add #2440 to changelog.
* Fix lint error from prettier
* Remove exception chain for more helpful user message.
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
we don't accidentally add backslashes to them when normalizing quotes
because that's invalid syntax!
The problem this commit fixes is that matches would eat too much
blocking important matches to occur. For example, here's one f-string
body:
{a}{b}{c}
I know there's no risk of introducing backslashes here, but the regex
already goes sideways with this. Throwing this example at regex101
I get:
{a}{b}{c} # The As and Bs are the two matches, and the upper
---- ---- # case letters are the groups with those matches.
aAaa bbBb
... we've missed the middle expression (so if any backslashes in a
more complex example were introduced there we wouldn't bail out
even though we should -- hence the bug). As it stands the regex
needs somesort of extra character (or the start/end of the body)
around the expressions but that isn't always the case as shown
above.
The fix implemented here is to turn the "eat a surrounding non-curly
bracket character" groups ie. `(?:[^{]|^)` and `(?:[^}]|$)` into
negative lookaheads and lookbehinds. This still guarantees the
already specified rules but without problematically eating extra
characters ^^
Fixes#2359.
This commit now makes Black exit with an user-friendly error message if a
.gitignore file couldn't be parsed -- a massive improvement over an opaque
traceback!
* Remove `language_version` for pre-commit
At my company, we set the Python version in `default_language_version`
in each repo's `.pre-commit-config.yaml`,
so that all hooks are running with the same Python version.
However, this currently doesn't work for black,
as the `language_version` specified here
in the upstream `.pre-commit-hooks.yaml` takes precedence.
Currently, this requires us to manually set `language_version`
specifically for black,
duplicating the value from `default_language_version`.
The failure mode otherwise is subtle -
black works most of the time,
but try to add a walrus operator and it suddenly breaks!
Given that black's `setup.py` already has `python_requires>=3.6.2`,
specifying that `python3` must be used here isn't needed
as folks inadvertently using Python 2 will get hook-install-time failures anyways.
Remove the `language_version` from these upstream hook configs
so that users of black are able to use `default_language_version`
and have it apply to all their hooks, black included.
Example `.pre-commit-config.yaml` before:
```
default_language_version:
python: python3.8
repos:
- repo: https://github.com/psf/black
rev: 21.7b0
hooks:
- id: black
language_version: python3.8
```
After:
```
default_language_version:
python: python3.8
repos:
- repo: https://github.com/psf/black
rev: 21.7b0
hooks:
- id: black
```
* Add changelog entry
To summarise, based on what was discussed in that issue:
due to not being able to parse automagics (e.g. pip install black)
without a running IPython kernel, cells with syntax which is parseable
by neither ast.parse nor IPython will be skipped cells with multiline
magics will be skipped trailing semicolons will be preserved, as they
are often put there intentionally in Jupyter Notebooks to suppress
unnecessary output
Commit history before merge (excluding merge commits):
* wip
* fixup tests
* skip tests if no IPython
* install test requirements in ipynb tests
* if --ipynb format all as ipynb
* wip
* add some whole-notebook tests
* docstrings
* skip multiline magics
* add test for nested cell magic
* remove ipynb_test.yml, put ipynb tests in tox.ini
* add changelog entry
* typo
* make token same length as magic it replaces
* only include .ipynb by default if jupyter dependencies are found
* remove logic from const
* fixup
* fixup
* re.compile
* noop
* clear up
* new_src -> dst
* early exit for non-python notebooks
* add non-python test notebook
* add repo with many notebooks to black-primer
* install extra dependencies for black-primer
* fix planetary computer examples url
* dont run on ipynb files by default
* add scikit-lego (Expected to change) to black-primer
* add ipynb-specific diff
* fixup
* run on all (including ipynb) by default
* remove --include .ipynb from scikit-lego black-primer
* use tokenize so as to mirror the exact logic in IPython.core.displayhooks quiet
* fixup
* 🎨
* clarify docstring
* add test for when comment is after trailing semicolon
* enumerate(reversed) instead of [::-1]
* clarify docstrings
* wip
* use jupyter and no_jupyter marks
* use THIS_DIR
* windows fixup
* perform safe check cell-by-cell for ipynb
* only perform safe check in ipynb if not fast
* remove redundant Optional
* 🎨
* use typeguard
* dont process cell containing transformed magic
* require typing extensions before 3.10 so as to have TypeGuard
* use dataclasses
* mention black[jupyter] in docs as well as in README
* add faq
* add message to assertion error
* add test for indented quieted cell
* use tokenize_rt else we cant roundtrip
* fmake fronzet set for tokens to ignore when looking for trailing semicolon
* remove planetary code examples as recent commits result in changes
* use dataclasses which inherit from ast.NodeVisitor
* bump typing-extensions so that TypeGuard is available
* bump typing-extensions in Pipfile
* add test with notebook with empty metadata
* pipenv lock
* deprivative validate_cell
* Update README.md
* Update docs/getting_started.md
* dont cache notebooks if jupyter dependencies arent found
* dont write to cache if jupyter deps are not installed
* add notebook which cant be parsed
* use clirunner
* remove other subprocess calls
* add docstring
* make verbose and quiet keyword only
* 🎨
* run second many test on directory, not on file
* test for warning message when running on directory
* early return from non-python cell magics
* move NothingChanged to report to avoid circular import
* remove circular import
* reinstate --ipynb flag
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
* Update CHANGES.md for 21.7b0 release
* move some changes to the right section
* another one
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
toml unfortunately has a lack of maintainership issue right now. It's
evident by the fact toml only supports TOML v0.5.0. TOML v1.0.0 has
been recently released and right now Black crashes hard on its usage.
tomli is a brand new parse only TOML library. It supports TOML
v1.0.0. Although TBH we're switching to this one mostly because
pip is doing the same.
*The upper bound was included at the library maintainer's request.
Co-authored-by: Łukasz Langa <lukasz@langa.pl>
Co-authored-by: Taneli Hukkinen <3275109+hukkin@users.noreply.github.com>
Commit history before merge:
* Accept empty stdin (close#2337)
* Update tests/test_black.py
* Add changelog
* Assert Black reformats an empty string to an empty string (#2337) (#2346)
* fix
This commit fixes parsing of the skip-string-normalization option in vim
plugin. Originally, the plugin read the string-normalization option,
which does not exist in help (--help) and it's not respected by black
on command line.
Commit history before merge:
* fix string normalization option in vim plugin
* fix string normalization option in vim plugin
* Finish and fix patch (thanks Matt Wozniski!)
FYI: this is totally the work and the comments below of Matt (AKA godlygeek)
This fixes two entirely different problems related to how pyproject.toml
files are handled by the vim plugin.
=== Problem #1 ===
The plugin fails to properly read boolean values from pyproject.toml.
For instance, if you create this pyproject.toml:
```
[tool.black]
quiet = true
```
the Black CLI is happy with it and runs without any messages, but the
:Black command provided by this plugin fails with:
```
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "<string>", line 1, in <module>
File "<string>", line 102, in Black
File "<string>", line 150, in get_configs
File "<string>", line 150, in <dictcomp>
File "/usr/lib/python3.6/distutils/util.py", line 311, in strtobool
val = val.lower()
AttributeError: 'bool' object has no attribute 'lower'
```
That's because the value returned by the toml.load() is already a
bool, but the vim plugin incorrectly tries to convert it from a str to a bool.
The value returned by toml_config.get() was always being passed to
flag.cast(), which is a function that either converts a string to an
int or a string to a bool, depending on the flag. vim.eval()
returns integers and strings all as str, which is why we need the cast,
but that's the wrong thing to do for values that came from toml.load().
We should be applying the cast only to the return from vim.eval()
(since we know it always gives us a string), rather than casting the
value that toml.load() found - which is already the right type.
=== Problem #2 ===
The vim plugin fails to take the value for skip_string_normalization
from pyproject.toml. That's because it looks for a string_normalization
key instead of a skip_string_normalization key, thanks to this line
saying the name of the flag is string_normalization:
black/autoload/black.vim (line 25 in 05b54b8)
```
Flag(name="string_normalization", cast=strtobool),
```
and this dictcomp looking up each flag's name in the config dict:
black/autoload/black.vim (lines 148 to 151 in 05b54b8)
```
return {
flag.var_name: flag.cast(toml_config.get(flag.name, vim.eval(flag.vim_rc_name)))
for flag in FLAGS
}
```
For the second issue, I think I'd do a slightly different patch. I'd
keep the change to invert this flag's meaning and change its name that
this PR proposes, but I'd also change the handling of the
g:black_skip_string_normalization and g:black_string_normalization
variables to make it clear that g:black_skip_string_normalization is
the expected name, and g:black_string_normalization is only checked
when the expected name is unset, for backwards compatibility.
My proposed behavior is to check if g:black_skip_string_normalization
is defined and to define it if not, using the inverse of
g:black_string_normalization if that is set, and otherwise to the
default of 0. The Python code in autoload/black.vim runs later, and
will use the value of g:black_skip_string_normalization (and ignore
g:black_string_normalization; it will only be used to set
g:black_skip_string_normalization if it wasn't already set).
---
Co-authored-by: Matt Wozniski <mwozniski@bloomberg.net>
* Fix plugin/black.vim (need to up my vim game)
Co-authored-by: Matt Wozniski <godlygeek@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Wozniski <mwozniski@bloomberg.net>
Co-authored-by: Matt Wozniski <godlygeek@gmail.com>
Commit history before merge:
* Find pyproject from vim relative to current file
* Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/main' into find-pyproject-vim
* Finish and fix this patch (thanks Matt Wozniski!)
Both the existing code and the proposed code are broken.
The vim.eval() call (whether it's vim.eval("@%") or
vim.eval("fnamemodify(getcwd(), ':t')) returns a string, and it passes
that string to find_pyproject_toml, which expects a sequence of strings,
not a single string, and - since a string is a sequence of single
character strings - it gets turned into a list of ridiculous paths. I
tested with a file called foo.py, and added a print(path_srcs) into
find_project_root, which printed out:
[
PosixPath('/home/matt/f'),
PosixPath('/home/matt/o'),
PosixPath('/home/matt/o'),
PosixPath('/home/matt'),
PosixPath('/home/matt/p'),
PosixPath('/home/matt/y')
]
This does work for an unnamed buffer, too - we wind up calling
black.find_pyproject_toml(("",)), and that winds up prepending the
working directory to any relative paths, so "" just gets turned into
the current working directory.
Note that find_pyproject_toml needs to be passed a 1-tuple, not a
list, because it requires something hashable (thanks to
functools.lru_cache being used)
Co-authored-by: Matt Wozniski <mwozniski@bloomberg.net>
* I forgot the CHANGELOG entry ... again
* I'm really bad at dealing with merge conflicts sometimes
* Be more correct describing search behaviour
Co-authored-by: Austin Glaser <austin.glaser@spacex.com>
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Wozniski <mwozniski@bloomberg.net>
* Add STDIN test to primer
- Check that out STDIN black support stays working
- Add asyncio.subprocess STDIN pip via communicate
- We just check we format python code from primer's `lib.py`
Fixes#2310
`black.strings.get_string_prefix` used to lowercase the extracted
prefix before returning it. This is wrong because 1) it ignores the
fact we should leave R prefixes alone because of MagicPython, and 2)
there is dedicated prefix casing handling code that fixes issue 1.
`.lower` is too naive.
This was originally fixed in 20.8b0, but was reintroduced since 21.4b0.
I also added proper prefix normalization for docstrings by using the
`black.strings.normalize_string_prefix` helper.
Some more test strings were added to make sure strings with capitalized
prefixes aren't treated differently (actually happened with my original
patch, Jelle had to point it out to me).
Not sure the fix is right. Here is what I found: issue is connected
with line
first.prefix = prefix[comment.consumed :]
in `comments.py`. `first.prefix` is a prefix of the line, that ends
with `# fmt: skip`, but `comment.consumed` is the length of the
`" # fmt: skip"` string. If prefix length is greater than 14,
`first.prefix` will grow every time we apply formatting.
Fixes#2254
Closes#1246: This PR adds a new option (and automatically a toml entry, hooray for existing configuration management 🎉) to require a specific version of Black to be running.
For example: `black --required-version 20.8b -c "format = 'this'"`
Execution fails straight away if it doesn't match `__version__`.
Commit history before merge:
* Add black_version to github action
* Merge upstream/main into this branch
* Add version support for the Black action pt.2
Since we're moving to a composite based action, quite a few changes
were made. 1) Support was added for all OSes (Windows was painful).
2) Isolation from the rest of the workflow had to be done manually
with a virtual environment.
Other noteworthy changes:
- Rewrote basically all of the logic and put it in a Python script
for easy testing (not doing it here tho cause I'm lazy and I can't
think of a reasonable way of testing it).
- Renamed `black_version` to `version` to better fit the existing
input naming scheme.
- Added support for log groups, this makes our action's output a
bit more fancy (I may or may have not added some debug output too).
* Add more to and sorta rewrite the Action's docs
Reflect compatability and gotchas.
* Add CHANGELOG entry
* Merge main into this branch
* Remove debug; address typos; clean up action.yml
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
PR #2286 did not fix the edge-cases (e.g. when the string is just long
enough to cause a line to be 89 characters long). This PR corrects that
mistake.
There's some weird interaction between Click and
sphinxcontrib-programoutput on Windows that leads to an encoding error
during the printing of black-primer's help text.
Also symlinks aren't well supported on Windows so let's just use
includes which actually work because we now use MyST :D
* Add optional uvloop import
- If we find `uvloop` in the env for black, blackd or black-primer lets try and use it
- Add a uvloop extra install
Fixes#2257
Test:
- Add ci job to install black[uvloop] and run a primer run with uvloop
- Only with latest python (3.9)
- Will be handy to compare runtimes as a very unoffical benchmark
* Remove tox install
* Add to CHANGES/news
Resolves#2168 by disabling the insertion of a " " when the docstring is entirely empty.
Note that this PR is focussed only on the case of empty docstrings. In particular this does not make any changes to the behaviour that a " " is inserted if a non-empty docstring begins with the quoting character. That is, black still prefers:
""" "something" """
to:
""""something" """
and that:
""""Something""""
is not a legal docstring.
This commit creates a Frequently Asked Questions document for our users
to read. Hopefully they actually read it too. Items included are:
Black's non-API, AST safety, style stability, file discovery, Flake8
disagreements and Python 2 support. Hopefully I've got the answers
down in general.
Commit history before merge:
* Create FAQ
* Address feedback
* Move to single markdown file
* Minor wording improvements
* Add changelog entry
* Solved Problem with non-alphabetical .gitignore files
When .gitignore file in the user's project directory contained non-alphabetical
characters(Japanese, Korean, Chinese, etc), Nothing works and printed this
weird message in the console('cp949' is the encoding for Korean characters
in this case). It even blocks VSCode's formatting from working. This commit
solves the problem.
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\runpy.py", line 193, in _run_module_as_main
"__main__", mod_spec)
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\runpy.py", line 85, in _run_code
exec(code, run_globals)
File "C:\Users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\Scripts\black.exe\__main__.py", line 7, in <module>
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\site-packages\black\__init__.py", line 1056, in patched_main
main()
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\site-packages\click\core.py", line 829, in __call__
return self.main(*args, **kwargs)
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\site-packages\click\core.py", line 782, in main
rv = self.invoke(ctx)
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\site-packages\click\core.py", line 1066, in invoke
return ctx.invoke(self.callback, **ctx.params)
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\site-packages\click\core.py", line 610, in invoke
return callback(*args, **kwargs)
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\site-packages\click\decorators.py", line 21, in new_func
return f(get_current_context(), *args, **kwargs)
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\site-packages\black\__init__.py", line 394, in main
stdin_filename=stdin_filename,
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\site-packages\black\__init__.py", line 445, in get_sources
gitignore = get_gitignore(root)
File "c:\users\username\anaconda3\envs\project-name\lib\site-packages\black\files.py", line 122, in get_gitignore
lines = gf.readlines()
UnicodeDecodeError: 'cp949' codec can't decode byte 0xb0 in position 13: illegal multibyte sequence
* Made .gitignore File Reader Detect Its Encoding
* Revert "Made .gitignore File Reader Detect Its Encoding"
This reverts commit 6c3a7ea42b5b1e441cc0026c8205d1cee68c1bba.
* Revert "Solved Problem with non-alphabetical .gitignore files"
This reverts commit b0100b5d91c2f5db544a60f34aafab120f0aa458.
* Made .gitignore Reader Open the File with Auto Encoding Detecting
https://docs.python.org/3.8/library/tokenize.html#tokenize.open
* Revert "Made .gitignore Reader Open the File with Auto Encoding Detecting"
This reverts commit 50dd80422938649ccc8c7f43aac752f9f6481779.
* Made .gitignore Reader Use UTF-8
* Updated CHANGES.md for #2229
* Updated CHANGES.md for #2229
* Update CHANGES.md
* Update CHANGES.md
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Łukasz Langa <lukasz@langa.pl>
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
Commit history before merge:
Black now respects .gitignore files in all levels, not only root/.gitignore file
(apply .gitignore rules like git does).
* Fix: typo
* Fix: respect .gitignore files in all levels.
* Add: CHANGELOG note.
* Fix: TypeError: unsupported operand type(s) for +: 'NoneType' and 'PathSpec'
* Update docs.
* Fix: no parent .gitignore
* Add a comment since the if expression is a bit hard to understand
* Update tests - conver no parent .gitignore case.
* Use main's Pipfile.lock instead
The original changes in Pipfile.lock are whitespace only. The changes
turned the JSON's file indentation from 4 to 2. Effectively this
happened: `json.dumps(json.loads(old_pipfile_lock), indent=2) + "\n"`.
Just using main's Pipfile.lock instead of undoing the changes because
1) I don't know how to do that easily and quickly, and 2) there's a
merge conflict.
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
* Merge remote-tracking branch 'upstream/main' into i1730 …
conflicts for days ay?