YAPF is a Python formatter based off of clang-format
(developed by Daniel Jasper). In essence, the algorithm takes the code and
calculates the best formatting that conforms to the configured style. It takes
away a lot of the drudgery of maintaining your code.
The ultimate goal is that the code YAPF produces is as good as the code that a programmer would write if they were following the style guide.
Note YAPF is not an official Google product (experimental or otherwise), it is just code that happens to be owned by Google.
To install YAPF from PyPI:
$ pip install yapf
YAPF is still considered in "beta" stage, and the released version may change often; therefore, the best way to keep up-to-date with the latest development is to clone this repository.
Note that if you intend to use YAPF as a command-line tool rather than as a
library, installation is not necessary. YAPF supports being run as a directory
by the Python interpreter. If you cloned/unzipped YAPF into DIR
, it's
possible to run:
$ PYTHONPATH=DIR python DIR/yapf [options] ...
YAPF is supported by multiple editors via community extensions or plugins. See Editor Support for more info.
YAPF supports Python 3.7+.
Note YAPF requires the code it formats to be valid Python for the version YAPF itself runs under.
usage: yapf [-h] [-v] [-d | -i | -q] [-r | -l START-END] [-e PATTERN]
[--style STYLE] [--style-help] [--no-local-style] [-p] [-m] [-vv]
[files ...]
Formatter for Python code.
positional arguments:
files reads from stdin when no files are specified.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-v, --version show program's version number and exit
-d, --diff print the diff for the fixed source
-i, --in-place make changes to files in place
-q, --quiet output nothing and set return value
-r, --recursive run recursively over directories
-l START-END, --lines START-END
range of lines to reformat, one-based
-e PATTERN, --exclude PATTERN
patterns for files to exclude from formatting
--style STYLE specify formatting style: either a style name (for
example "pep8" or "google"), or the name of a file
with style settings. The default is pep8 unless a
.style.yapf or setup.cfg or pyproject.toml file
located in the same directory as the source or one of
its parent directories (for stdin, the current
directory is used).
--style-help show style settings and exit; this output can be saved
to .style.yapf to make your settings permanent
--no-local-style don't search for local style definition
-p, --parallel run YAPF in parallel when formatting multiple files.
-m, --print-modified print out file names of modified files
-vv, --verbose print out file names while processing
Normally YAPF returns zero on successful program termination and non-zero otherwise.
If --diff
is supplied, YAPF returns zero when no changes were necessary,
non-zero otherwise (including program error). You can use this in a CI workflow
to test that code has been YAPF-formatted.
In addition to exclude patterns provided on commandline, YAPF looks for
additional patterns specified in a file named .yapfignore
or pyproject.toml
located in the working directory from which YAPF is invoked.
.yapfignore
's syntax is similar to UNIX's filename pattern matching:
* matches everything
? matches any single character
[seq] matches any character in seq
[!seq] matches any character not in seq
Note that no entry should begin with ./
.
If you use pyproject.toml
, exclude patterns are specified by ignore_patterns
key
in [tool.yapfignore]
section. For example:
[tool.yapfignore]
ignore_patterns = [
"temp/**/*.py",
"temp2/*.py"
]
The formatting style used by YAPF is configurable and there are many "knobs"
that can be used to tune how YAPF does formatting. See the style.py
module
for the full list.
To control the style, run YAPF with the --style
argument. It accepts one of
the predefined styles (e.g., pep8
or google
), a path to a configuration
file that specifies the desired style, or a dictionary of key/value pairs.
The config file is a simple listing of (case-insensitive) key = value
pairs
with a [style]
heading. For example:
[style]
based_on_style = pep8
spaces_before_comment = 4
split_before_logical_operator = true
The based_on_style
setting determines which of the predefined styles this
custom style is based on (think of it like subclassing). Four
styles are predefined:
pep8
(default)google
(based off of the Google Python Style Guide)yapf
(for use with Google open source projects)facebook
See _STYLE_NAME_TO_FACTORY
in style.py
for details.
It's also possible to do the same on the command line with a dictionary. For example:
--style='{based_on_style: pep8, indent_width: 2}'
This will take the pep8
base style and modify it to have two space
indentations.
YAPF will search for the formatting style in the following manner:
- Specified on the command line
- In the
[style]
section of a.style.yapf
file in either the current directory or one of its parent directories. - In the
[yapf]
section of asetup.cfg
file in either the current directory or one of its parent directories. - In the
[tool.yapf]
section of apyproject.toml
file in either the current directory or one of its parent directories. - In the
[style]
section of a~/.config/yapf/style
file in your home directory.
If none of those files are found, the default style PEP8 is used.
An example of the type of formatting that YAPF can do, it will take this ugly code:
x = { 'a':37,'b':42,
'c':927}
y = 'hello ''world'
z = 'hello '+'world'
a = 'hello {}'.format('world')
class foo ( object ):
def f (self ):
return 37*-+2
def g(self, x,y=42):
return y
def f ( a ) :
return 37+-+a[42-x : y**3]
and reformat it into:
x = {'a': 37, 'b': 42, 'c': 927}
y = 'hello ' 'world'
z = 'hello ' + 'world'
a = 'hello {}'.format('world')
class foo(object):
def f(self):
return 37 * -+2
def g(self, x, y=42):
return y
def f(a):
return 37 + -+a[42 - x:y**3]
The two main APIs for calling YAPF are FormatCode
and FormatFile
, these
share several arguments which are described below:
>>> from yapf.yapflib.yapf_api import FormatCode # reformat a string of code
>>> formatted_code, changed = FormatCode("f ( a = 1, b = 2 )")
>>> formatted_code
'f(a=1, b=2)\n'
>>> changed
True
A style_config
argument: Either a style name or a path to a file that
contains formatting style settings. If None is specified, use the default style
as set in style.DEFAULT_STYLE_FACTORY
.
>>> FormatCode("def g():\n return True", style_config='pep8')[0]
'def g():\n return True\n'
A lines
argument: A list of tuples of lines (ints), [start, end], that we
want to format. The lines are 1-based indexed. It can be used by third-party
code (e.g., IDEs) when reformatting a snippet of code rather than a whole file.
>>> FormatCode("def g( ):\n a=1\n b = 2\n return a==b", lines=[(1, 1), (2, 3)])[0]
'def g():\n a = 1\n b = 2\n return a==b\n'
A print_diff
(bool): Instead of returning the reformatted source, return a
diff that turns the formatted source into reformatted source.
>>> print(FormatCode("a==b", filename="foo.py", print_diff=True)[0])
--- foo.py (original)
+++ foo.py (reformatted)
@@ -1 +1 @@
-a==b
+a == b
Note: the filename
argument for FormatCode
is what is inserted into the
diff, the default is <unknown>
.
FormatFile
returns reformatted code from the passed file along with its encoding:
>>> from yapf.yapflib.yapf_api import FormatFile # reformat a file
>>> print(open("foo.py").read()) # contents of file
a==b
>>> reformatted_code, encoding, changed = FormatFile("foo.py")
>>> formatted_code
'a == b\n'
>>> encoding
'utf-8'
>>> changed
True
The in_place
argument saves the reformatted code back to the file:
>>> FormatFile("foo.py", in_place=True)[:2]
(None, 'utf-8')
>>> print(open("foo.py").read()) # contents of file (now fixed)
a == b
Options:
usage: yapf-diff [-h] [-i] [-p NUM] [--regex PATTERN] [--iregex PATTERN][-v]
[--style STYLE] [--binary BINARY]
This script reads input from a unified diff and reformats all the changed
lines. This is useful to reformat all the lines touched by a specific patch.
Example usage for git/svn users:
git diff -U0 --no-color --relative HEAD^ | yapf-diff -i
svn diff --diff-cmd=diff -x-U0 | yapf-diff -p0 -i
It should be noted that the filename contained in the diff is used
unmodified to determine the source file to update. Users calling this script
directly should be careful to ensure that the path in the diff is correct
relative to the current working directory.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-i, --in-place apply edits to files instead of displaying a diff
-p NUM, --prefix NUM strip the smallest prefix containing P slashes
--regex PATTERN custom pattern selecting file paths to reformat
(case sensitive, overrides -iregex)
--iregex PATTERN custom pattern selecting file paths to reformat
(case insensitive, overridden by -regex)
-v, --verbose be more verbose, ineffective without -i
--style STYLE specify formatting style: either a style name (for
example "pep8" or "google"), or the name of a file
with style settings. The default is pep8 unless a
.style.yapf or setup.cfg or pyproject.toml file
located in the same directory as the source or one of
its parent directories (for stdin, the current
directory is used).
--binary BINARY location of binary to use for YAPF
Align closing bracket with visual indentation.
Allow lambdas to be formatted on more than one line.
Allow dictionary keys to exist on multiple lines. For example:
x = {
('this is the first element of a tuple',
'this is the second element of a tuple'):
value,
}
Allow splitting before a default / named assignment in an argument list.
Allow splits before the dictionary value.
Let spacing indicate operator precedence. For example:
a = 1 * 2 + 3 / 4
b = 1 / 2 - 3 * 4
c = (1 + 2) * (3 - 4)
d = (1 - 2) / (3 + 4)
e = 1 * 2 - 3
f = 1 + 2 + 3 + 4
will be formatted as follows to indicate precedence:
a = 1*2 + 3/4
b = 1/2 - 3*4
c = (1+2) * (3-4)
d = (1-2) / (3+4)
e = 1*2 - 3
f = 1 + 2 + 3 + 4
Sets the number of desired blank lines surrounding top-level function and class definitions. For example:
class Foo:
pass
# <------ having two blank lines here
# <------ is the default setting
class Bar:
pass
Insert a blank line before a class-level docstring.
Insert a blank line before a module docstring.
Insert a blank line before a
def
orclass
immediately nested within anotherdef
orclass
. For example:
class Foo:
# <------ this blank line
def method():
pass
Sets the number of desired blank lines between top-level imports and variable definitions. Useful for compatibility with tools like isort.
Do not split consecutive brackets. Only relevant when
DEDENT_CLOSING_BRACKETS
orINDENT_CLOSING_BRACKETS
is set. For example:
call_func_that_takes_a_dict(
{
'key1': 'value1',
'key2': 'value2',
}
)
would reformat to:
call_func_that_takes_a_dict({
'key1': 'value1',
'key2': 'value2',
})
The column limit (or max line-length)
The style for continuation alignment. Possible values are:
SPACE
: Use spaces for continuation alignment. This is default behavior.FIXED
: Use fixed number (CONTINUATION_INDENT_WIDTH
) of columns (i.e.CONTINUATION_INDENT_WIDTH
/INDENT_WIDTH
tabs orCONTINUATION_INDENT_WIDTH
spaces) for continuation alignment.VALIGN-RIGHT
: Vertically align continuation lines to multiple ofINDENT_WIDTH
columns. Slightly right (one tab or a few spaces) if cannot vertically align continuation lines with indent characters.
Indent width used for line continuations.
Put closing brackets on a separate line, dedented, if the bracketed expression can't fit in a single line. Applies to all kinds of brackets, including function definitions and calls. For example:
config = {
'key1': 'value1',
'key2': 'value2',
} # <--- this bracket is dedented and on a separate line
time_series = self.remote_client.query_entity_counters(
entity='dev3246.region1',
key='dns.query_latency_tcp',
transform=Transformation.AVERAGE(window=timedelta(seconds=60)),
start_ts=now()-timedelta(days=3),
end_ts=now(),
) # <--- this bracket is dedented and on a separate line
Disable the heuristic which places each list element on a separate line if the list is comma-terminated.
Place each dictionary entry onto its own line.
Respect
EACH_DICT_ENTRY_ON_SEPARATE_LINE
even if the line is shorter thanCOLUMN_LIMIT
.
The regex for an internationalization comment. The presence of this comment stops reformatting of that line, because the comments are required to be next to the string they translate.
The internationalization function call names. The presence of this function stops reformatting on that line, because the string it has cannot be moved away from the i18n comment.
Set to
True
to prefer indented blank lines rather than empty
Put closing brackets on a separate line, indented, if the bracketed expression can't fit in a single line. Applies to all kinds of brackets, including function definitions and calls. For example:
config = {
'key1': 'value1',
'key2': 'value2',
} # <--- this bracket is indented and on a separate line
time_series = self.remote_client.query_entity_counters(
entity='dev3246.region1',
key='dns.query_latency_tcp',
transform=Transformation.AVERAGE(window=timedelta(seconds=60)),
start_ts=now()-timedelta(days=3),
end_ts=now(),
) # <--- this bracket is indented and on a separate line
Indent the dictionary value if it cannot fit on the same line as the dictionary key. For example:
config = {
'key1':
'value1',
'key2': value1 +
value2,
}
The number of columns to use for indentation.
Join short lines into one line. E.g., single line
if
statements.
Do not include spaces around selected binary operators. For example:
1 + 2 * 3 - 4 / 5
will be formatted as follows when configured with
*
,/
:
1 + 2*3 - 4/5
Insert a space between the ending comma and closing bracket of a list, etc.
Use spaces inside brackets, braces, and parentheses. For example:
method_call( 1 )
my_dict[ 3 ][ 1 ][ get_index( *args, **kwargs ) ]
my_set = { 1, 2, 3 }
Set to
True
to prefer spaces around the assignment operator for default or keyword arguments.
Adds a space after the opening '{' and before the ending '}' dict delimiters.
{1: 2}
will be formatted as:
{ 1: 2 }
Adds a space after the opening '[' and before the ending ']' list delimiters.
[1, 2]
will be formatted as:
[ 1, 2 ]
Set to
True
to prefer using spaces around**
.
Use spaces around the subscript / slice operator. For example:
my_list[1 : 10 : 2]
Adds a space after the opening '(' and before the ending ')' tuple delimiters.
(1, 2, 3)
will be formatted as:
( 1, 2, 3 )
The number of spaces required before a trailing comment. This can be a single value (representing the number of spaces before each trailing comment) or list of values (representing alignment column values; trailing comments within a block will be aligned to the first column value that is greater than the maximum line length within the block).
Note: Lists of values may need to be quoted in some contexts (eg. shells or editor config files).
For example, with
spaces_before_comment=5
:
1 + 1 # Adding values
will be formatted as:
1 + 1 # Adding values <-- 5 spaces between the end of the statement and comment
with
spaces_before_comment="15, 20"
:
1 + 1 # Adding values
two + two # More adding
longer_statement # This is a longer statement
short # This is a shorter statement
a_very_long_statement_that_extends_beyond_the_final_column # Comment
short # This is a shorter statement
will be formatted as:
1 + 1 # Adding values <-- end of line comments in block aligned to col 15
two + two # More adding
longer_statement # This is a longer statement <-- end of line comments in block aligned to col 20
short # This is a shorter statement
a_very_long_statement_that_extends_beyond_the_final_column # Comment <-- the end of line comments are aligned based on the line length
short # This is a shorter statement
If a comma separated list (
dict
,list
,tuple
, or functiondef
) is on a line that is too long, split such that each element is on a separate line.
Variation on
SPLIT_ALL_COMMA_SEPARATED_VALUES
in which, if a subexpression with a comma fits in its starting line, then the subexpression is not split. This avoids splits like the one forb
in this code:
abcdef(
aReallyLongThing: int,
b: [Int,
Int])
with the new knob this is split as:
abcdef(
aReallyLongThing: int,
b: [Int, Int])
Split before arguments if the argument list is terminated by a comma.
Set to
True
to prefer splitting before+
,-
,*
,/
,//
, or@
rather than after.
Set to
True
to prefer splitting before&
,|
or^
rather than after.
Split before the closing bracket if a
list
ordict
literal doesn't fit on a single line.
Split before a dictionary or set generator (
comp_for
). For example, note the split before thefor
:
foo = {
variable: 'Hello world, have a nice day!'
for variable in bar if variable != 42
}
Split before the
.
if we need to split a longer expression:
foo = ('This is a really long string: {}, {}, {}, {}'.format(a, b, c, d))
would reformat to something like:
foo = ('This is a really long string: {}, {}, {}, {}'
.format(a, b, c, d))
Split after the opening paren which surrounds an expression if it doesn't fit on a single line.
If an argument / parameter list is going to be split, then split before the first argument.
Set to
True
to prefer splitting beforeand
oror
rather than after.
Split named assignments onto individual lines.
For list comprehensions and generator expressions with multiple clauses (e.g multiple
for
calls,if
filter expressions) and which need to be reflowed, split each clause onto its own line. For example:
result = [
a_var + b_var for a_var in xrange(1000) for b_var in xrange(1000)
if a_var % b_var]
would reformat to something like:
result = [
a_var + b_var
for a_var in xrange(1000)
for b_var in xrange(1000)
if a_var % b_var]
The penalty for splitting right after the opening bracket.
The penalty for splitting the line after a unary operator.
The penalty of splitting the line around the
+
,-
,*
,/
,//
,%
, and@
operators.
The penalty for splitting right before an
if
expression.
The penalty of splitting the line around the
&
,|
, and^
operators.
The penalty for splitting a list comprehension or generator expression.
The penalty for characters over the column limit.
The penalty incurred by adding a line split to the logical line. The more line splits added the higher the penalty.
The penalty of splitting a list of
import as
names. For example:
from a_very_long_or_indented_module_name_yada_yad import (long_argument_1,
long_argument_2,
long_argument_3)
would reformat to something like:
from a_very_long_or_indented_module_name_yada_yad import (
long_argument_1, long_argument_2, long_argument_3)
The penalty of splitting the line around the
and
andor
operators.
Use the Tab character for indentation.
YAPF tries very hard to get the formatting correct. But for some code, it won't be as good as hand-formatting. In particular, large data literals may become horribly disfigured under YAPF.
The reasons for this are manyfold. In short, YAPF is simply a tool to help with development. It will format things to coincide with the style guide, but that may not equate with readability.
What can be done to alleviate this situation is to indicate regions YAPF should ignore when reformatting something:
# yapf: disable
FOO = {
# ... some very large, complex data literal.
}
BAR = [
# ... another large data literal.
]
# yapf: enable
You can also disable formatting for a single literal like this:
BAZ = {
(1, 2, 3, 4),
(5, 6, 7, 8),
(9, 10, 11, 12),
} # yapf: disable
To preserve the nice dedented closing brackets, use the
dedent_closing_brackets
in your style. Note that in this case all
brackets, including function definitions and calls, are going to use
that style. This provides consistency across the formatted codebase.
We wanted to use clang-format's reformatting algorithm. It's very powerful and designed to come up with the best formatting possible. Existing tools were created with different goals in mind, and would require extensive modifications to convert to using clang-format's algorithm.
Please do! YAPF was designed to be used as a library as well as a command line tool. This means that a tool or IDE plugin is free to use YAPF.
YAPF tries very hard to be fully PEP 8 compliant. However, it is paramount to not risk altering the semantics of your code. Thus, YAPF tries to be as safe as possible and does not change the token stream (e.g., by adding parentheses). All these cases however, can be easily fixed manually. For instance,
from my_package import my_function_1, my_function_2, my_function_3, my_function_4, my_function_5
FOO = my_variable_1 + my_variable_2 + my_variable_3 + my_variable_4 + my_variable_5 + my_variable_6 + my_variable_7 + my_variable_8
won't be split, but you can easily get it right by just adding parentheses:
from my_package import (my_function_1, my_function_2, my_function_3,
my_function_4, my_function_5)
FOO = (my_variable_1 + my_variable_2 + my_variable_3 + my_variable_4 +
my_variable_5 + my_variable_6 + my_variable_7 + my_variable_8)
The main data structure in YAPF is the LogicalLine
object. It holds a list
of FormatToken
\s, that we would want to place on a single line if there
were no column limit. An exception being a comment in the middle of an
expression statement will force the line to be formatted on more than one line.
The formatter works on one LogicalLine
object at a time.
An LogicalLine
typically won't affect the formatting of lines before or
after it. There is a part of the algorithm that may join two or more
LogicalLine
\s into one line. For instance, an if-then statement with a
short body can be placed on a single line:
if a == 42: continue
YAPF's formatting algorithm creates a weighted tree that acts as the solution space for the algorithm. Each node in the tree represents the result of a formatting decision --- i.e., whether to split or not to split before a token. Each formatting decision has a cost associated with it. Therefore, the cost is realized on the edge between two nodes. (In reality, the weighted tree doesn't have separate edge objects, so the cost resides on the nodes themselves.)
For example, take the following Python code snippet. For the sake of this example, assume that line (1) violates the column limit restriction and needs to be reformatted.
def xxxxxxxxxxx(aaaaaaaaaaaa, bbbbbbbbb, cccccccc, dddddddd, eeeeee): # 1
pass # 2
For line (1), the algorithm will build a tree where each node (a
FormattingDecisionState
object) is the state of the line at that token given
the decision to split before the token or not. Note: the FormatDecisionState
objects are copied by value so each node in the graph is unique and a change in
one doesn't affect other nodes.
Heuristics are used to determine the costs of splitting or not splitting. Because a node holds the state of the tree up to a token's insertion, it can easily determine if a splitting decision will violate one of the style requirements. For instance, the heuristic is able to apply an extra penalty to the edge when not splitting between the previous token and the one being added.
There are some instances where we will never want to split the line, because
doing so will always be detrimental (i.e., it will require a backslash-newline,
which is very rarely desirable). For line (1), we will never want to split the
first three tokens: def
, xxxxxxxxxxx
, and (
. Nor will we want to
split between the )
and the :
at the end. These regions are said to be
"unbreakable." This is reflected in the tree by there not being a "split"
decision (left hand branch) within the unbreakable region.
Now that we have the tree, we determine what the "best" formatting is by finding the path through the tree with the lowest cost.
And that's it!