The quotes of multiline docstrings are now only normalized when string
normalization is off, instead of the string normalization setting being
ignored and the quotes being *always* normalized.
I had to make a new test case and data file since the current pair for
docstrings only worked when there is no formatting difference between the
formatting results with string normalization on and off. I needed to add
tests for when there *are* differences between the two. So I split
test_docstring's test code when string normalization is disabled into a
new test case along with a new data file.
On a second pass of Black on the same file, inserted trailing commas are now
pre-existing. Doesn't make sense to differentiate between the passes then.
Reformatted projects I have acceess to:
- aioexabgp
- bandersnatch
- flake8-bugbear
```
-- primer results 📊 --
13 / 16 succeeded (81.25%) ✅
0 / 16 FAILED (0.0%) 💩
- 3 projects disabled by config
- 0 projects skipped due to Python version
- 0 skipped due to long checkout
```
* Also re-enable pytest
```
-- primer results 📊 --
14 / 16 succeeded (87.5%) ✅
0 / 16 FAILED (0.0%) 💩
- 2 projects disabled by config
- 0 projects skipped due to Python version
- 0 skipped due to long checkout
real 2m26.207s
user 17m55.404s
sys 0m43.061s
```
This addresses a few crashers, namely:
* producing non-equivalent code due to mangling escaped newlines,
* invalid hugging quote characters in the docstring body to the docstring outer
triple quotes (causing a quadruple quote which is a syntax error),
* lack of handling for docstrings that start on the same line as the `def`, and
* invalid stripping of outer triple quotes when the docstring contained
a string prefix.
As a bonus, tests now also run when string normalization is disabled.
This required some hackery. Long story short, we need to reuse the ability to
omit rightmost bracket pairs (which glues them together and splits on something
else instead), for use with pre-existing trailing commas.
This form of user-controlled formatting is brittle so we have to be careful not
to cause a scenario where Black first formats code without trailing commas in
one way, and then looks at the same file with pre-existing trailing commas
(that it itself put on the previous run) and decides to format the code again.
One particular ugly edge case here is handling of optional parentheses. In
particular, the long-standing `line_length=1` hack got in the way of
pre-existing trailing commas and had to be removed. Instead, a more
intelligent but costly solution was put in place: a "second opinion" if the
formatting that omits optional parentheses ended up causing lines to be too
long. Again, for efficiency purposes, Black reuses Leaf objects from blib2to3
and modifies them in place, which was invalid for having two separate
formattings. Line cloning was used to mitigate this.
Fixes#1619
- when a trailing comma is specified in any bracket pair, that signals to Black
that this bracket pair needs to be always exploded, e.g. presented as "one
item per line";
- this causes some changes to previously formatted code that erroneously left
trailing commas embedded into single-line expressions;
- internally, Black needs to be able to identify trailing commas that it put
itself compared to pre-existing trailing commas. We do this by using/abusing
lib2to3's `was_checked` attribute. It's True for internally generated
trailing commas and False for pre-existing ones (in fact, for all
pre-existing leaves and nodes).
Fixes#1288
* Upgrade docs to Sphinx 3+
* Fix all the warnings...
- Fixed bad docstrings
- Fixed bad fenced code blocks in documentation
- Blocklisted some sections from being generated from the README
- Added missing documentation to index.rst
- Fixed an invalid autofunction directive in reference/reference_functions.rst
- Pin another documentation dependency
* Add documentation build test
* put experimental string stuff behind a flag
* update tests
* don't need an output section if it's the same as the input
* Primer: Expect no formatting changes in attrs, hypothesis and poetry with --experimental-string-processing off
Co-authored-by: Hugo van Kemenade <hugovk@users.noreply.github.com>
Ever since --force-exclude was added, --exclude started to touch files
that were given to Black through the CLI too. This is not documented
behaviour and neither expected as --exclude and --force-exclude now
behave the same!
Before this commit, get_sources() when encountering a file that was passed
explicitly through the CLI would pass a single Path object list to
gen_python_files(). This causes bad behaviour since that function
doesn't treat the exclude and force_exclude regexes differently. Which
is fine for recursively found files, but *not* for files given through
the CLI.
Now when get_sources() iterates through srcs and encounters
a file, it checks if the force_exclude regex matches, if not, then the
file will be added to the computed sources set.
A new function had to be created since before you can do regex matching,
the path must be normalized. The full process of normalizing the path is
somewhat long as there is special error handling. I didn't want to
duplicate this logic in get_sources() and gen_python_files() so that's
why there is a new helper function.
Partial fix for #1581
This assertion produces behavior quadratic in the number of leaves in a line, which is making Black extremely slow on files with very long expressions. On my benchmark file this change makes Black 10x faster.
Isort 5 introduced profiles and ensure_newline_before_comments options. Either needs to be added to work correctly with black.
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
Stable tag wasn't available and crashed when attempting to set initial
pre-commit. Also the python version needs to be installed so it would
be better to use the generic "python3" command.