Summary -- This PR fixes #17796 by taking the approach mentioned in https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/17796#issuecomment-2847943862 of simply recursing into the `MatchAs` patterns when checking if we need parentheses. This allows us to reuse the parentheses in the inner pattern before also breaking the `MatchAs` pattern itself: ```diff match class_pattern: case Class(xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) as capture: pass - case ( - Class(xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx) as capture - ): + case Class( + xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx + ) as capture: pass - case ( - Class( - xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx - ) as capture - ): + case Class( + xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx + ) as capture: pass case ( Class( @@ -685,13 +683,11 @@ match sequence_pattern_brackets: case [xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] as capture: pass - case ( - [xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] as capture - ): + case [ + xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx + ] as capture: pass - case ( - [ - xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx - ] as capture - ): + case [ + xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx + ] as capture: pass ``` I haven't really resolved the question of whether or not it's okay always to recurse, but I'm hoping the ecosystem check on this PR might shed some light on that. Test Plan -- New tests based on the issue and then reviewing the ecosystem check here |
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| resources/test/fixtures | ||
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| Cargo.toml | ||
| CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
| generate.py | ||
| orphan_rules_in_the_formatter.svg | ||
| README.md | ||
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 Style Guide.
Getting started
Head to The Ruff Formatter for usage instructions and a comparison to Black.