This is a tricky one as await is technically an expression and therefore
in certain situations requires brackets for operator precedence.
However, the vast majority of await usage is just await some_coroutine(...)
and similar in format to return statements. Therefore this PR removes
redundant parens around these await expressions.
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
Allows us to better control placement of return annotations by:
a) removing redundant parens
b) moves very long type annotations onto their own line
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
Now PRs will run two diff-shades jobs, "preview-changes" which formats
all projects with preview=True, and "assert-no-changes" which formats
all projects with preview=False. The latter also fails if any changes
were made.
Pushes to main will only run "preview-changes"
Also the workflow_dispatch feature was dropped since it was
complicating everything for little gain.
It is falsely placed in preview features and always formats the power operators, it was added in #2789 but there is no check for formatting added along with it.
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.
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.
This PR is intended to have no change to semantics.
This is in preparation for #2784 which will likely introduce more logic
that depends on `current_line.depth`.
Inlining the subtraction gets rid of offsetting and makes it much easier
to see what the result will be.
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.
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.