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159 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Micha Reiser
3f032cf09d
Format binary expressions (#4862)
* Format Binary Expressions

* Extract NeedsParentheses trait
2023-06-06 08:34:53 +00:00
Micha Reiser
c65f47d7c4
Format while Statement (#4810) 2023-06-05 08:24:00 +00:00
Calum Young
f0f4bf2929
Move typos to pre-commit config (#4148) 2023-04-29 12:13:35 -04:00
Charlie Marsh
6eaacf96be
Introduce a new CST element for slice segments (#3195) 2023-02-24 00:49:41 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
d8e4902516
Un-modify tupleassign and function2 tests (#3158)
I manually changed these in #3080 and #3083 to get the tests passing (with notes around the deviations) -- but that's no longer necessary, now that we have proper testing that takes deviations into account.
2023-02-23 02:37:25 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
5fd827545b
Add a trailing newline to all .py.expect files (#3156)
This just re-formats all the `.py.expect` files with Black, both to add a trailing newline and be doubly-certain that they're correctly formatted.

I also ensured that we add a hard line break after each statement, and that we avoid including an extra newline in the generated Markdown (since the code should contain the exact expected newlines).
2023-02-23 02:29:27 +00:00
Micha Reiser
ed33b75bad
test(ruff_python_formatter): Run all Black tests (#2993)
This PR changes the testing infrastructure to run all black tests and:

* Pass if Ruff and Black generate the same formatting
* Fail and write a markdown snapshot that shows the input code, the differences between Black and Ruff, Ruffs output, and Blacks output

This is achieved by introducing a new `fixture` macro (open to better name suggestions) that "duplicates" the attributed test for every file that matches the specified glob pattern. Creating a new test for each file over having a test that iterates over all files has the advantage that you can run a single test, and that test failures indicate which case is failing. 

The `fixture` macro also makes it straightforward to e.g. setup our own spec tests that test very specific formatting by creating a new folder and use insta to assert the formatted output.
2023-02-22 09:25:06 -05:00
Charlie Marsh
1c01ec21cb
Regenerate expected Black snapshots (#2968) 2023-02-16 19:39:17 +00:00
Charlie Marsh
ca49b00e55
Add initial formatter implementation (#2883)
# Summary

This PR contains the code for the autoformatter proof-of-concept.

## Crate structure

The primary formatting hook is the `fmt` function in `crates/ruff_python_formatter/src/lib.rs`.

The current formatter approach is outlined in `crates/ruff_python_formatter/src/lib.rs`, and is structured as follows:

- Tokenize the code using the RustPython lexer.
- In `crates/ruff_python_formatter/src/trivia.rs`, extract a variety of trivia tokens from the token stream. These include comments, trailing commas, and empty lines.
- Generate the AST via the RustPython parser.
- In `crates/ruff_python_formatter/src/cst.rs`, convert the AST to a CST structure. As of now, the CST is nearly identical to the AST, except that every node gets a `trivia` vector. But we might want to modify it further.
- In `crates/ruff_python_formatter/src/attachment.rs`, attach each trivia token to the corresponding CST node. The logic for this is mostly in `decorate_trivia` and is ported almost directly from Prettier (given each token, find its preceding, following, and enclosing nodes, then attach the token to the appropriate node in a second pass).
- In `crates/ruff_python_formatter/src/newlines.rs`, normalize newlines to match Black’s preferences. This involves traversing the CST and inserting or removing `TriviaToken` values as we go.
- Call `format!` on the CST, which delegates to type-specific formatter implementations (e.g., `crates/ruff_python_formatter/src/format/stmt.rs` for `Stmt` nodes, and similar for `Expr` nodes; the others are trivial). Those type-specific implementations delegate to kind-specific functions (e.g., `format_func_def`).

## Testing and iteration

The formatter is being developed against the Black test suite, which was copied over in-full to `crates/ruff_python_formatter/resources/test/fixtures/black`.

The Black fixtures had to be modified to create `[insta](https://github.com/mitsuhiko/insta)`-compatible snapshots, which now exist in the repo.

My approach thus far has been to try and improve coverage by tackling fixtures one-by-one.

## What works, and what doesn’t

- *Most* nodes are supported at a basic level (though there are a few stragglers at time of writing, like `StmtKind::Try`).
- Newlines are properly preserved in most cases.
- Magic trailing commas are properly preserved in some (but not all) cases.
- Trivial leading and trailing standalone comments mostly work (although maybe not at the end of a file).
- Inline comments, and comments within expressions, often don’t work -- they work in a few cases, but it’s one-off right now. (We’re probably associating them with the “right” nodes more often than we are actually rendering them in the right place.)
- We don’t properly normalize string quotes. (At present, we just repeat any constants verbatim.)
- We’re mishandling a bunch of wrapping cases (if we treat Black as the reference implementation). Here are a few examples (demonstrating Black's stable behavior):

```py
# In some cases, if the end expression is "self-closing" (functions,
# lists, dictionaries, sets, subscript accesses, and any length-two
# boolean operations that end in these elments), Black
# will wrap like this...
if some_expression and f(
    b,
    c,
    d,
):
    pass

# ...whereas we do this:
if (
    some_expression
    and f(
        b,
        c,
        d,
    )
):
    pass

# If function arguments can fit on a single line, then Black will
# format them like this, rather than exploding them vertically.
if f(
    a, b, c, d, e, f, g, ...
):
    pass
```

- We don’t properly preserve parentheses in all cases. Black preserves parentheses in some but not all cases.
2023-02-15 04:06:35 +00:00