The option is `max-line-length` with dashes, not underscores. The config option name is given in the output of `pycodestyle -h`, which can also be checked on https://pep8.readthedocs.io/en/stable/intro.html#example-usage-and-output:
```
Configuration:
The project options are read from the [pycodestyle] section of the
tox.ini file or the setup.cfg file located in any parent folder of the
path(s) being processed. Allowed options are: exclude, filename,
select, ignore, max-line-length, max-doc-length, hang-closing, count,
format, quiet, show-pep8, show-source, statistics, verbose
```
Revert deleted documentation on setting up Black using IntelliJ
external tool or file watcher utilities. These are still worth keeping
because some peole might not want to use a third-party plugin or
install Blackd's extra dependencies.
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <sichard26@gmail.com>
* Organize vim plugin section with headers to separate out Installation, Usage, and Troubleshooting for readability and easy linking
* Add missing plugin configuration options, with current defaults
* Add installation note for Arch Linux, now that the plugin is shipped with the python-black package (ref: https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/73024)
* Fix vim-plug specification to follow stable releases. Moving the same tag is an antipattern that doesn't re-resolve with vim-plug, see this discussion for more detail (https://github.com/junegunn/vim-plug/pull/720\#issuecomment-1105829356). Per vim-plug's maintainer's recommendation, use the 'tag' key instead with a shell wildcard. Wildcard should be '*.*.*' as that follows Black's versioning detailed here (https://black.readthedocs.io/en/latest/contributing/release_process.html\#cutting-a-release) and doesn't include current alpha releases.
Provide a configuration parameter to the Vim plugin which will allow the
plugin to skip setting up a virtualenv. This is useful when there is a
system installation of black (e.g. from a Linux distribution) which the
user prefers to use.
Using a virtualenv remains the default.
- Fixes#3308
* Add option to skip the first line in source file
This commit adds a CLi option to skip the first line in the source
files, just like the Cpython command line allows [1]. By enabling the
flag, using `-x` or `--skip-source-first-line`, the first line is
removed temporarilly while the remaining contents are formatted. The
first line is added back before returning the formatted output.
[1]: https://docs.python.org/dev/using/cmdline.html#cmdoption-x
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
* Add tests for `--skip-source-first-line` option
When the flag is disabled (default), black formats the entire source
file, as in every line. In the other hand, if the flag is enabled, by
using `-x` or `--skip-source-first-line`, the first line is retained
while the rest of the source is formatted and then is added back.
These tests use an empty Python file that contains invalid syntax in
its first line (`invalid_header.py`, at `miscellaneous/`). First,
Black is invoked without enabling the flag which should result in an
exit code different than 0. When the flag is enabled, Black is
expected to return a successful exit code and the header is expected
to be retained (even if its not valid Python syntax).
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
* Support skip source first line option for blackd
The recently added option can be added as an acceptable header for
blackd. The arguments are passed in such a way that using the new
header will activate the skip source first line behaviour as expected
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
* Add skip source first line option to blackd docs
The new option can be passed to blackd as a header. This commit
updates the blackd docs to include the new header.
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
* Update CHANGES.md
Include the new Black option to skip the first line of source code in
the configuration section
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
* Update skip first line test including valid syntax
Including valid Python syntax help us make sure that the file is still
actually valid after skipping the first line of the source file (which
contains invalid Python syntax)
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
* Skip first source line at `format_file_in_place`
Instead of skipping the first source line at `format_file_contents`,
do it before. This allow us to find the correct newline and encoding
on the actual source code (everything that's after the header).
This change is also applied at Blackd: take the header before passing
the source to `format_file_contents` and put the header back once we
get the formatted result.
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
* Test output newlines when skipping first line
When skipping the first line of source code, the reference newline must
be taken from the second line of the file instead of the first one, in
case that the file mixes more than one kind of newline character
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
* Test that Blackd also skips first line correctly
Simliarly to the Black tests, we first compare that Blackd fails when
the first line is invalid Python syntax and then check that the result
is the expected when tha flag is activated
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
* Use the content encoding to decode the header
When decoding the header to put it back at the top of the contents of
the file, use the same encoding used in the content. This should be a
better "guess" that using the default value
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
To run the formatter on Jupyter Notebooks, Black must be installed
with an extra dependency (`black[jupyter]`). This commit adds an
optional argument to install Black with this dependency when using the
official GitHub Action [1]. To enable the formatter on Jupyter
Notebooks, just add `jupyter: true` as an argument. Feature requested
at [2].
[1]: https://black.readthedocs.io/en/stable/integrations/github_actions.html
[2]: https://github.com/psf/black/issues/3280
Signed-off-by: Antonio Ossa Guerra <aaossa@uc.cl>
This implements PEP 621, obviating the need for `setup.py`, `setup.cfg`,
and `MANIFEST.in`. The build backend Hatchling (of which I am a
maintainer in the PyPA) is now used as that is the default in the
official Python packaging tutorial. Hatchling is available on all the
major distribution channels such as Debian, Fedora, and many more.
## Python support
The earliest supported Python 3 version of Hatchling is 3.7, therefore
I've also set that as the minimum here. Python 3.6 is EOL and other
build backends like flit-core and setuptools also dropped support.
Python 3.6 accounted for 3-4% of downloads in the last month.
## Plugins
Configuration is now completely static with the help of 3 plugins:
### Readme
hynek's hatch-fancy-pypi-readme allows for the dynamic construction of
the readme which was previously coded up in `setup.py`. Now it's simply:
```toml
[tool.hatch.metadata.hooks.fancy-pypi-readme]
content-type = "text/markdown"
fragments = [
{ path = "README.md" },
{ path = "CHANGES.md" },
]
```
### Versioning
hatch-vcs is currently just a wrapper around setuptools-scm (which
despite the legacy naming is actually now decoupled from setuptools):
```toml
[tool.hatch.version]
source = "vcs"
[tool.hatch.build.hooks.vcs]
version-file = "src/_black_version.py"
template = '''
version = "{version}"
'''
```
### mypyc
hatch-mypyc offers many benefits over the existing approach:
- No need to manually select files for inclusion
- Avoids the need for the current CI workaround for https://github.com/mypyc/mypyc/issues/946
- Intermediate artifacts (like `build/`) from setuptools and mypyc
itself no longer clutter the project directory
- Runtime dependencies required at build time no longer need to be
manually redeclared as this is a built-in option of Hatchling
Co-authored-by: Richard Si <63936253+ichard26@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
Previously _Black_ produces invalid code because the `# fmt: on` is used on a different block level.
While _Black_ requires `# fmt: off` and `# fmt: on` to be used at the same block level, incorrect usage shouldn't cause crashes.
The formatting behavior this PR introduces is, the code below the initial `# fmt: off` block level will be turned off for formatting, when `# fmt: on` is used on a different level or there is no `# fmt: on`. This also matches the current behavior when `# fmt: off` is used at the top-level without a matching `# fmt: on`, it turns off formatting for everything below `# fmt: off`.
- Fixes#2567
- Fixes#3184
- Fixes#2985
- Fixes#2882
- Fixes#2232
- Fixes#2140
- Fixes#1817
- Fixes#569
These two paragraphs were tucked away at the end of the section, after
the diversion on backslashes. I nearly missed the first paragraph and
opened a nonsense issue, and I think the second belongs higher up with
it too.
- Formalise release cadence guidelines
- Overhaul release steps to be easier to follow and more thorough
- Reorder changelog template to something more sensible
- Update release automation docs to reflect recent improvements (notably
the addition of in-repo mypyc wheel builds)
Co-authored-by: Felix Hildén <felix.hilden@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jelle Zijlstra <jelle.zijlstra@gmail.com>
`black.reformat_many` depends on a lot of slow-to-import modules. When
formatting simply a single file, the time paid to import those modules
is totally wasted. So I moved `black.reformat_many` and its helpers
to `black.concurrency` which is now *only* imported if there's more
than one file to reformat. This way, running Black over a single file
is snappier
Here are the numbers before and after this patch running `python -m
black --version`:
- interpreted: 411 ms +- 9 ms -> 342 ms +- 7 ms: 1.20x faster
- compiled: 365 ms +- 15 ms -> 304 ms +- 7 ms: 1.20x faster
Co-authored-by: Fabio Zadrozny <fabiofz@gmail.com>