flakehell
editorconfig-vim
flakehell | editorconfig-vim | |
---|---|---|
1 | 134 | |
91 | 3,104 | |
- | 0.1% | |
0.0 | 5.1 | |
over 2 years ago | 18 days ago | |
Python | Vim Script | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
flakehell
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Creating A Modern Python Development Environment
For existing projects, you can use the package flakehell with the baseline feature to report new violations since integrating a new linter will likely result in hundreds or even thousands of violations. This guide explains how to integrate flakehell and resolve violations over time.
editorconfig-vim
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Most basic code formatting
These are tools that you need to add. But the most elemental code formatting is not here, it is in the widely supported .editorconfig file.
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Taking the Language Server Protocol one step further
Hello,
Maybe you should check this project:
https://editorconfig.org/
Regards,
- How to config indentation per project?
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How We Started Managing BSA Delivery Processes on GitHub
editorconfigchecker. A linter that checks files for compliance with editorconfig rules. Another linter that helps maintain consistency in the format of all files.
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Ask HN: What work/office purchase transformed your life?
Oh, yeah, we had that issue too and solved it pretty successfully with `.editorconfig` (shareable between VScode and IntelliJ, https://editorconfig.org/) combined with `prettier`.
Each IDE is configured to:
- Not reformat code on its own
- Ignore whitespace
- Run `prettier` as a pre-commit hook
Those settings are saved to `.editorconfig` where possible, or to each IDE's repo-specific folder (e.g. `.idea`).
Then in theory each developer can use whatever IDE they want, whatever whitespace settings they want (tabs vs spaces), and the end code committed to the repo is still the same.
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Rider - Formatting across projects
I am aware of .editorconfig, and one day that may be the correct answer but the specification does not support every element of the styles of both oss and css.
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Is there any reason to keep the editorconfig plugin installed?
Does this mean I can completely get rid of this plugin?: https://github.com/editorconfig/editorconfig-vim
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Is there really no support for editorconfig, yet?
[1] https://editorconfig.org
- How do you handle code formatting in a team?
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Announcing C# Dev Kit for Visual Studio Code
I dunno who downvoted your question, but I believe you can use .editorconfig to set that up for you.
What are some alternatives?
Visual Studio Code - Visual Studio Code
nvim-projectconfig - neovim projectconfig
pyenv-win - pyenv for Windows. pyenv is a simple python version management tool. It lets you easily switch between multiple versions of Python. It's simple, unobtrusive, and follows the UNIX tradition of single-purpose tools that do one thing well.
pycodestyle - Simple Python style checker in one Python file
Flake8 - flake8 is a python tool that glues together pycodestyle, pyflakes, mccabe, and third-party plugins to check the style and quality of some python code.
project-config.nvim - Per project config for Neovim
pyenv - Simple Python version management
tabset.nvim - A Neovim plugin to easily set tabstop, shiftwidth and expandtab settings for file types.
nitpick - Enforce the same settings on multiple projects
prettier - Prettier is an opinionated code formatter.
pre-commit - A framework for managing and maintaining multi-language pre-commit hooks.
emacs-solidity - The official solidity-mode for EMACS