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README.md | ||
shrink_formatter_errors.py |
Ruff Formatter
The Ruff formatter is an extremely fast Python code formatter that ships as part of the ruff
CLI.
Goals
The formatter is designed to be a drop-in replacement for Black, but with an excessive focus on performance and direct integration with Ruff.
Specifically, the formatter is intended to emit near-identical output when run over Black-formatted code. When run over extensive Black-formatted projects like Django and Zulip, > 99.9% of lines are formatted identically. When migrating an existing project from Black to Ruff, you should expect to see a few differences on the margins, but the vast majority of your code should be unchanged.
If you identify deviations in your project, spot-check them against the intentional deviations enumerated below, as well as the unintentional deviations filed in the issue tracker. If you've identified a new deviation, please file an issue.
When run over non-Black-formatted code, the formatter makes some different decisions than Black, and so more deviations should be expected, especially around the treatment of end-of-line comments. For details, see Black compatibility.
Getting started
The Ruff formatter is available in Beta as of Ruff v0.1.2.
CLI
The Ruff formatter is available as a standalone subcommand on the ruff
CLI:
❯ ruff format --help
Run the Ruff formatter on the given files or directories
Usage: ruff format [OPTIONS] [FILES]...
Arguments:
[FILES]... List of files or directories to format
Options:
--check
Avoid writing any formatted files back; instead, exit with a non-zero status code if any files would have been modified, and zero otherwise
--diff
Avoid writing any formatted files back; instead, exit with a non-zero status code and the difference between the current file and how the formatted file would look like
--config <CONFIG>
Path to the `pyproject.toml` or `ruff.toml` file to use for configuration
--target-version <TARGET_VERSION>
The minimum Python version that should be supported [possible values: py37, py38, py39, py310, py311, py312]
--preview
Enable preview mode; enables unstable formatting. Use `--no-preview` to disable
-h, --help
Print help
Miscellaneous:
-n, --no-cache Disable cache reads
--cache-dir <CACHE_DIR> Path to the cache directory [env: RUFF_CACHE_DIR=]
--isolated Ignore all configuration files
--stdin-filename <STDIN_FILENAME> The name of the file when passing it through stdin
File selection:
--respect-gitignore Respect file exclusions via `.gitignore` and other standard ignore files. Use `--no-respect-gitignore` to disable
--exclude <FILE_PATTERN> List of paths, used to omit files and/or directories from analysis
--force-exclude Enforce exclusions, even for paths passed to Ruff directly on the command-line. Use `--no-force-exclude` to disable
Log levels:
-v, --verbose Enable verbose logging
-q, --quiet Print diagnostics, but nothing else
-s, --silent Disable all logging (but still exit with status code "1" upon detecting diagnostics)
Similar to Black, running ruff format /path/to/file.py
will format the given file or directory
in-place, while ruff format --check /path/to/file.py
will avoid writing any formatted files back,
instead exiting with a non-zero status code if any files are not already formatted.
VS Code
As of v2023.44.0
, the Ruff VS Code extension
ships with full support for the Ruff formatter. To enable formatting capabilities, mark the Ruff
extension as your default Python formatter:
{
"[python]": {
"editor.defaultFormatter": "charliermarsh.ruff"
}
}
From there, you can format a file by running the Format Document
command, or enable formatting
on-save by adding "editor.formatOnSave": true
to your settings.json
:
{
"[python]": {
"editor.defaultFormatter": "charliermarsh.ruff",
"editor.formatOnSave": true
}
}
Configuration
The Ruff formatter allows configuration of indent style,
line ending, quote style,
and magic trailing comma behavior.
Like the linter, the Ruff formatter reads configuration via pyproject.toml
or ruff.toml
files,
as in:
[tool.ruff.format]
# Use tabs instead of 4 space indentation.
indent-style = "tab"
# Prefer single quotes over double quotes.
quote-style = "single"
The Ruff formatter also respects Ruff's line-length
setting, which also can be provided via a pyproject.toml
or ruff.toml
file, or on the CLI, as
in:
ruff format --line-length 100 /path/to/file.py
Excluding code from formatting
Ruff supports Black's # fmt: off
, # fmt: on
, and # fmt: skip
pragmas, with a few caveats.
See Ruff's suppression comment proposal for details.
Black compatibility
The formatter is designed to be a drop-in replacement for Black.
Specifically, the formatter is intended to emit near-identical output when run over Black-formatted code. When migrating an existing project from Black to Ruff, you should expect to see a few differences on the margins, but the vast majority of your code should be formatted identically. Note, however, that the formatter does not yet implement or support Black's preview style.
When run over non-Black-formatted code, the formatter makes some different decisions than Black, and so more deviations should be expected.
Intentional deviations
This section enumerates the known, intentional deviations between the Ruff formatter and Black's stable style. (Unintentional deviations are tracked in the issue tracker.)
Trailing end-of-line comments
Black's priority is to fit an entire statement on a line, even if it contains end-of-line comments. In such cases, Black collapses the statement, and moves the comment to the end of the collapsed statement:
# Input
while (
cond1 # almost always true
and cond2 # almost never true
):
print("Do something")
# Black
while cond1 and cond2: # almost always true # almost never true
print("Do something")
Ruff, like Prettier, expands any statement that contains trailing
end-of-line comments. For example, Ruff would avoid collapsing the while
test in the snippet
above. This ensures that the comments remain close to their original position and retain their
original intent, at the cost of retaining additional vertical space.
This deviation only impacts unformatted code, in that Ruff's output should not deviate for code that has already been formatted by Black.
Pragma comments are ignored when computing line width
Pragma comments (# type
, # noqa
, # pyright
, # pylint
, etc.) are ignored when computing the width of a line.
This prevents Ruff from moving pragma comments around, thereby modifying their meaning and behavior:
See Ruff's pragma comment handling proposal for details.
This is similar to Pyink but a deviation from Black. Black avoids
splitting any lines that contain a # type
comment (#997),
but otherwise avoids special-casing pragma comments.
As Ruff expands trailing end-of-line comments, Ruff will also avoid moving pragma comments in cases
like the following, where moving the # noqa
to the end of the line causes it to suppress errors
on both first()
and second()
:
# Input
[
first(), # noqa
second()
]
# Black
[first(), second()] # noqa
# Ruff
[
first(), # noqa
second(),
]
Line width vs. line length
Ruff uses the Unicode width of a line to determine if a line fits. Black's stable style uses character width, while Black's preview style uses Unicode width for strings (#3445), and character width for all other tokens. Ruff's behavior is closer to Black's preview style than Black's stable style, although Ruff also uses Unicode width for identifiers and comments.
Walruses in slice expressions
Black avoids inserting space around :=
operators within slices. For example, the following adheres
to Black stable style:
# Input
x[y:=1]
# Black
x[y:=1]
Ruff will instead add space around the :=
operator:
# Input
x[y:=1]
# Ruff
x[y := 1]
This will likely be incorporated into Black's preview style (#3823).
global
and nonlocal
names are broken across multiple lines by continuations
If a global
or nonlocal
statement includes multiple names, and exceeds the configured line
width, Ruff will break them across multiple lines using continuations:
# Input
global analyze_featuremap_layer, analyze_featuremapcompression_layer, analyze_latencies_post, analyze_motions_layer, analyze_size_model
# Ruff
global \
analyze_featuremap_layer, \
analyze_featuremapcompression_layer, \
analyze_latencies_post, \
analyze_motions_layer, \
analyze_size_model
Newlines are inserted after all class docstrings
Black typically enforces a single newline after a class docstring. However, it does not apply such formatting if the docstring is single-quoted rather than triple-quoted, while Ruff enforces a single newline in both cases:
# Input
class IntFromGeom(GEOSFuncFactory):
"Argument is a geometry, return type is an integer."
argtypes = [GEOM_PTR]
restype = c_int
errcheck = staticmethod(check_minus_one)
# Black
class IntFromGeom(GEOSFuncFactory):
"Argument is a geometry, return type is an integer."
argtypes = [GEOM_PTR]
restype = c_int
errcheck = staticmethod(check_minus_one)
# Ruff
class IntFromGeom(GEOSFuncFactory):
"Argument is a geometry, return type is an integer."
argtypes = [GEOM_PTR]
restype = c_int
errcheck = staticmethod(check_minus_one)
Trailing own-line comments on imports are not moved to the next line
Black enforces a single empty line between an import and a trailing own-line comment. Ruff leaves such comments in-place:
# Input
import os
# comment
import sys
# Black
import os
# comment
import sys
# Ruff
import os
# comment
import sys
Parentheses around awaited collections are not preserved
Black preserves parentheses around awaited collections:
await ([1, 2, 3])
Ruff will instead remove them:
await [1, 2, 3]
This is more consistent to the formatting of other awaited expressions: Ruff and Black both
remove parentheses around, e.g., await (1)
, only retaining them when syntactically required,
as in, e.g., await (x := 1)
.
Implicit string concatenations in attribute accesses (#7052)
Given the following unformatted code:
print("aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa" "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa".format(bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb + bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb))
Internally, Black's logic will first expand the outermost print
call:
print(
"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa" "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa".format(bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb + bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb)
)
Since the argument is still too long, Black will then split on the operator with the highest split precedence. In this case, Black splits on the implicit string concatenation, to produce the following Black-formatted code:
print(
"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"
"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa".format(bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb + bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb)
)
Ruff gives implicit concatenations a "lower" priority when breaking lines. As a result, Ruff would instead format the above as:
print(
"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa" "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa".format(
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb + bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbb
)
)
In general, Black splits implicit string concatenations over multiple lines more often than Ruff, even if those concatenations can fit on a single line. Ruff instead avoids splitting such concatenations unless doing so is necessary to fit within the configured line width.
Own-line comments on expressions don't cause the expression to expand (#7314)
Given an expression like:
(
# A comment in the middle
some_example_var and some_example_var not in some_example_var
)
Black associates the comment with some_example_var
, thus splitting it over two lines:
(
# A comment in the middle
some_example_var
and some_example_var not in some_example_var
)
Ruff will instead associate the comment with the entire boolean expression, thus preserving the initial formatting:
(
# A comment in the middle
some_example_var and some_example_var not in some_example_var
)
Tuples are parenthesized when expanded (#7317)
Ruff tends towards parenthesizing tuples (with a few exceptions), while Black tends to remove tuple parentheses more often.
In particular, Ruff will always insert parentheses around tuples that expand over multiple lines:
# Input
(a, b), (c, d,)
# Black
(a, b), (
c,
d,
)
# Ruff
(
(a, b),
(
c,
d,
),
)
There's one exception here. In for
loops, both Ruff and Black will avoid inserting unnecessary
parentheses:
# Input
for a, f(b,) in c:
pass
# Black
for a, f(
b,
) in c:
pass
# Ruff
for a, f(
b,
) in c:
pass
Single-element tuples are always parenthesized
Ruff always inserts parentheses around single-element tuples, while Black will omit them in some cases:
# Input
(a, b),
# Black
(a, b),
# Ruff
((a, b),)
Adding parentheses around single-element tuples adds visual distinction and helps avoid "accidental" tuples created by extraneous trailing commas (see, e.g., #17181).
Trailing commas are inserted when expanding a function definition with a single argument (#7323)
When a function definition with a single argument is expanded over multiple lines, Black will add a trailing comma in some cases, depending on whether the argument includes a type annotation and/or a default value.
For example, Black will add a trailing comma to the first and second function definitions below, but not the third:
def func(
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa,
) -> None:
...
def func(
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa=1,
) -> None:
...
def func(
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa: Argument(
"network_messages.pickle",
help="The path of the pickle file that will contain the network messages",
) = 1
) -> None:
...
Ruff will instead insert a trailing comma in all such cases for consistency.
Parentheses around call-chain assignment values are not preserved (#7320)
Given:
def update_emission_strength():
(
get_rgbw_emission_node_tree(self)
.nodes["Emission"]
.inputs["Strength"]
.default_value
) = (self.emission_strength * 2)
Black will preserve the parentheses in (self.emission_strength * 2)
, whereas Ruff will remove
them.
Both Black and Ruff remove such parentheses in simpler assignments, like:
# Input
def update_emission_strength():
value = (self.emission_strength * 2)
# Black
def update_emission_strength():
value = self.emission_strength * 2
# Ruff
def update_emission_strength():
value = self.emission_strength * 2
Call chain calls break differently (#7051)
Black occasionally breaks call chains differently than Ruff; in particular, Black occasionally expands the arguments for the last call in the chain, as in:
# Input
df.drop(
columns=["aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"]
).drop_duplicates().rename(
columns={
"a": "a",
}
).to_csv(path / "aaaaaa.csv", index=False)
# Black
df.drop(
columns=["aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"]
).drop_duplicates().rename(
columns={
"a": "a",
}
).to_csv(
path / "aaaaaa.csv", index=False
)
# Ruff
df.drop(
columns=["aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"]
).drop_duplicates().rename(
columns={
"a": "a",
}
).to_csv(path / "aaaaaa.csv", index=False)
Ruff will only expand the arguments if doing so is necessary to fit within the configured line width.
Note that Black does not apply this last-call argument breaking universally. For example, both Black and Ruff will format the following identically:
# Input
df.drop(
columns=["aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"]
).drop_duplicates(a).rename(
columns={
"a": "a",
}
).to_csv(
path / "aaaaaa.csv", index=False
).other(a)
# Black
df.drop(columns=["aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"]).drop_duplicates(a).rename(
columns={
"a": "a",
}
).to_csv(path / "aaaaaa.csv", index=False).other(a)
# Ruff
df.drop(columns=["aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"]).drop_duplicates(a).rename(
columns={
"a": "a",
}
).to_csv(path / "aaaaaa.csv", index=False).other(a)
Expressions with (non-pragma) trailing comments are split more often (#7823)
Both Ruff and Black will break the following expression over multiple lines, since it then allows the expression to fit within the configured line width:
# Input
some_long_variable_name = "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"
# Black
some_long_variable_name = (
"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"
)
# Ruff
some_long_variable_name = (
"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"
)
However, if the expression ends in a trailing comment, Black will avoid wrapping the expression in some cases, while Ruff will wrap as long as it allows the expanded lines to fit within the line length limit:
# Input
some_long_variable_name = "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa" # a trailing comment
# Black
some_long_variable_name = "aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa" # a trailing comment
# Ruff
some_long_variable_name = (
"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa"
) # a trailing comment
Doing so leads to fewer overlong lines while retaining the comment's intent. As pragma comments
(like # noqa
and # type: ignore
) are ignored when computing line width, this behavior only
applies to non-pragma comments.