# Tutorial This tutorial will walk you through the process of integrating Ruff into your project. For a more detailed overview, see [_Configuration_](configuration.md). ## Getting Started Let's assume that our project structure looks like: ```text numbers ├── __init__.py └── numbers.py ``` Where `numbers.py` contains the following code: ```py from typing import Iterable import os def sum_even_numbers(numbers: Iterable[int]) -> int: """Given a sequence of integers, return the sum of all even numbers in the sequence.""" return sum(num for num in numbers if num % 2 == 0) ``` To start, we'll install Ruff through PyPI (or with your [preferred package manager](installation.md)): ```shell > pip install ruff ``` We can then run Ruff over our project via `ruff check`: ```shell ❯ ruff check . numbers/numbers.py:3:8: F401 [*] `os` imported but unused Found 1 error. [*] 1 fixable with the `--fix` option. ``` Ruff identified an unused import, which is a common error in Python code. Ruff considers this a "fixable" error, so we can resolve the issue automatically by running `ruff check --fix`: ```shell ❯ ruff check --fix . Found 1 error (1 fixed, 0 remaining). ``` Running `git diff` shows the following: ```diff --- a/numbers/numbers.py +++ b/numbers/numbers.py @@ -1,7 +1,5 @@ from typing import Iterable -import os - def sum_even_numbers(numbers: Iterable[int]) -> int: """Given a sequence of integers, return the sum of all even numbers in the sequence.""" return sum(num for num in numbers if num % 2 == 0) ``` Thus far, we've been using Ruff's default configuration. Let's take a look at how we can customize Ruff's behavior. ## Configuration To determine the appropriate settings for each Python file, Ruff looks for the first `pyproject.toml`, `ruff.toml`, or `.ruff.toml` file in the file's directory or any parent directory. Let's create a `pyproject.toml` file in our project's root directory: ```toml [tool.ruff] # Add the `line-too-long` rule to the enforced rule set. By default, Ruff omits rules that # overlap with the use of a formatter, like Black, but we can override this behavior by # explicitly adding the rule. extend-select = ["E501"] # Set the maximum line length to 79 characters. line-length = 79 ``` Running Ruff again, we can see that it now enforces a line length of 79 characters: ```shell ❯ ruff check . numbers/numbers.py:5:80: E501 Line too long (90 > 79 characters) Found 1 error. ``` For a full enumeration of the supported settings, see [_Settings_](settings.md). For our project specifically, we'll want to make note of the minimum supported Python version: ```toml [project] # Support Python 3.10+. requires-python = ">=3.10" [tool.ruff] # Add the `line-too-long` rule to the enforced rule set. extend-select = ["E501"] # Set the maximum line length to 79 characters. line-length = 79 ``` ### Rule Selection Ruff supports [over 700 lint rules](rules.md) split across over 50 built-in plugins, but determining the right set of rules will depend on your project's needs: some rules may be too strict, some are framework-specific, and so on. By default, Ruff enables Flake8's `F` rules, along with a subset of the `E` rules, omitting any stylistic rules that overlap with the use of a formatter, like [Black](https://github.com/psf/black). If you're introducing a linter for the first time, **the default rule set is a great place to start**: it's narrow and focused while catching a wide variety of common errors (like unused imports) with zero configuration. If you're migrating to Ruff from another linter, you can enable rules that are equivalent to those enforced in your previous configuration. For example, if we want to enforce the pyupgrade rules, we can set our `pyproject.toml` to the following: ```toml [project] requires-python = ">=3.10" [tool.ruff] extend-select = [ "UP", # pyupgrade ] ``` If we run Ruff again, we'll see that it now enforces the pyupgrade rules. In particular, Ruff flags the use of the deprecated `typing.Iterable` instead of `collections.abc.Iterable`: ```shell ❯ ruff check . numbers/numbers.py:1:1: UP035 [*] Import from `collections.abc` instead: `Iterable` Found 1 error. [*] 1 fixable with the `--fix` option. ``` Over time, we may choose to enforce additional rules. For example, we may want to enforce that all functions have docstrings: ```toml [project] requires-python = ">=3.10" [tool.ruff] extend-select = [ "UP", # pyupgrade "D", # pydocstyle ] [tool.ruff.pydocstyle] convention = "google" ``` If we run Ruff again, we'll see that it now enforces the pydocstyle rules: ```shell ❯ ruff check . numbers/__init__.py:1:1: D104 Missing docstring in public package numbers/numbers.py:1:1: UP035 [*] Import from `collections.abc` instead: `Iterable` numbers/numbers.py:1:1: D100 Missing docstring in public module Found 3 errors. [*] 1 fixable with the `--fix` option. ``` ### Ignoring Errors Any lint rule can be ignored by adding a `# noqa` comment to the line in question. For example, let's ignore the `UP035` rule for the `Iterable` import: ```py from typing import Iterable # noqa: UP035 def sum_even_numbers(numbers: Iterable[int]) -> int: """Given a sequence of integers, return the sum of all even numbers in the sequence.""" return sum(num for num in numbers if num % 2 == 0) ``` Running Ruff again, we'll see that it no longer flags the `Iterable` import: ```shell ❯ ruff check . numbers/__init__.py:1:1: D104 Missing docstring in public package numbers/numbers.py:1:1: D100 Missing docstring in public module Found 3 errors. ``` If we want to ignore a rule for an entire file, we can add a `# ruff: noqa` comment to the top of the file: ```py # ruff: noqa: UP035 from typing import Iterable def sum_even_numbers(numbers: Iterable[int]) -> int: """Given a sequence of integers, return the sum of all even numbers in the sequence.""" return sum(num for num in numbers if num % 2 == 0) ``` For more in-depth instructions on ignoring errors, see [_Configuration_](configuration.md#error-suppression). ### Adding Rules When enabling a new rule on an existing codebase, you may want to ignore all _existing_ violations of that rule and instead focus on enforcing it going forward. Ruff enables this workflow via the `--add-noqa` flag, which will adds a `# noqa` directive to each line based on its existing violations. We can combine `--add-noqa` with the `--select` command-line flag to add `# noqa` directives to all existing `UP035` violations: ```shell ❯ ruff check --select UP035 --add-noqa . Added 1 noqa directive. ``` Running `git diff` shows the following: ```diff diff --git a/tutorial/src/main.py b/tutorial/src/main.py index b9291c5ca..b9f15b8c1 100644 --- a/numbers/numbers.py +++ b/numbers/numbers.py @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -from typing import Iterable +from typing import Iterable # noqa: UP035 def sum_even_numbers(numbers: Iterable[int]) -> int: ``` ## Continuous Integration This tutorial has focused on Ruff's command-line interface, but Ruff can also be used as a [pre-commit](https://pre-commit.com) hook: ```yaml - repo: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-pre-commit # Ruff version. rev: v0.1.0 hooks: - id: ruff ``` See [_Usage_](usage.md) for more. ## Editor Integrations Ruff can also be used as a [VS Code extension](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-vscode) or alongside any other editor through the [Ruff LSP](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff-lsp). See [_Editor Integrations_](editor-integrations.md).