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.
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>
* 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>
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>
The implementation of the new backtracking logic depends heavily on deepcopying the current state of the parser before seeing one of the new keywords, which by default is an very expensive operations. On my system, formatting these 3 files takes 1.3 seconds.
```
$ touch tests/data/pattern_matching_*; time python -m black -tpy310 tests/data/pattern_matching_* 19ms
All done! ✨🍰✨
3 files left unchanged.
python -m black -tpy310 tests/data/pattern_matching_* 2,09s user 0,04s system 157% cpu 1,357 total
```
which can be optimized 3X if we integrate the existing copying logic (`clone`) to the deepcopy system;
```
$ touch tests/data/pattern_matching_*; time python -m black -tpy310 tests/data/pattern_matching_* 1ms
All done! ✨🍰✨
3 files left unchanged.
python -m black -tpy310 tests/data/pattern_matching_* 0,66s user 0,02s system 147% cpu 0,464 total
```
This still might have some potential, but that would be way trickier than this initial patch.
* 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>
* 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
Existing test was actually running a full black-primer
run which could be slow. This goes from 8 seconds to
0.4 seconds on my machine.
Needed to move to top level scope to leverage the caplog
feature of pytest in order to test that the command line
was parsing the bogus arguments and dumping to stderr.
* fix: allow tests to be run from the tests/ directory
* fix: try fixing windows build with MarcoGorelli's suggestion
* Windows hotfix + better respect test's spirit
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
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.
It currently prints both ASTs - this also
adds the line diff, making it much easier to visualize
the changes as well. Not too verbose since it's only a diff.
The main goals of this commit include:
* improving consistency on how strict the test suite is -- Jelle has
seen cases where a test did not fail to an incomplete test setup
even though it should've
* simplifying tests for both ease of creation and reading via
parametrization and helpers
* reorganizing the test suite by grouping more tests
* dropping test suite dependencies that aren't strictly necessary
The test suite could definitely do with more refactoring, but this is a
good first pass. Anyway it would've gotten too big to review effectively
if I did continue on this PR.
Commit history before squash merge:
* Drop parameterized dep and refactor format tests
Since the test suite is already using pytest-only features we can drop
the parameterized test dependency in favour of pytest's own offering.
I also added an utility function called assert_format that makes it
even easier to verify Black formats some code correctly. We already
have great tooling if the case is very simple in test_format.py but
any sort of complication makes it hard to use. Also if you're writing
a non-standard test case, you have to be careful to include all of
the steps so issues don't go undetected. assert_format aims to
1) improve consistency, 2) avoid wasted CPU cycles, and 3) avoid
logical errors that hide issues.
Finally, quite a few tests were either moved and/or simplified with
the new setup.
* Move file collection tests
* Add assert_collected_sources helper function
Testing source collection involves a lot of repetitive boilerplate,
something that black.files.get_sources's signature does not help with.
So to cut down on boilerplate like `report=black.Report()` I added
a convenience function to tests/test_black.py which wraps
black.get_sources. Its signature is designed to be much more lax to
make it much easier to use. Somehow this leads to cutting 100 lines!
Also IMO the test cases are much easier to read since it's more
declarative than really procedural now.
* Run isort on some test files
* Move cache tests
* Use pytest-style asserts & add parametrization
* Drop now unnecessary test dependencies
*pytest-cases might be interesting for further refactoring but I
haven't been able to wrap my head around it for the time being. We
can always revisit anyway.
* 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>