shellcheck-repl
isort
shellcheck-repl | isort | |
---|---|---|
4 | 41 | |
15 | 6,325 | |
- | 0.6% | |
3.5 | 7.4 | |
14 days ago | 2 days ago | |
Shell | Python | |
ISC License | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
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.
shellcheck-repl
-
Shell Script Best Practices, from a decade of scripting things
> "Use shellcheck."
(Disclaimer: I'm one of the authors)
After falling in love with ShellCheck several years ago, with the help of another person, I made the ShellCheck REPL tool for Bash:
https://github.com/HenrikBengtsson/shellcheck-repl>
-
Bash Pitfalls
Thank you, and thanks for the suggestion. Yes, it should be possible to keep the SC2154 check. I probably just disabled it as a quick fix when first started out. I'm tracking this in https://github.com/HenrikBengtsson/shellcheck-repl/issues/15.
> You'd also want to take into account special variables like $RANDOM and $HOSTNAME, but that's pretty trivial.
It seems like ShellCheck is already aware of these special Bash variable, e.g. 'echo $RANDOM' will not trigger SC2154 (or even SC2086 that otherwise asks you to quote variables).
-
ShellCheck: A static analysis tool for shell scripts
shellcheck-repl: Validation of Shell Commands Before Evaluation
https://github.com/HenrikBengtsson/shellcheck-repl
This tool validates your commands at the Bash prompt using ShellCheck and refuses to evaluate them if there's a mistake. It ignores a set of rules that doesn't play well with oneliners.
(Disclaimer: I'm one of the authors)
isort
-
Enhance Your Project Quality with These Top Python Libraries
isort: This library sorts your imports alphabetically, and automatically separates them into sections and by type. It provides a cleaner and more organised way to manage project imports.
-
A Tale of Two Kitchens - Hypermodernizing Your Python Code Base
isort will sort the imports for you
-
Django Code Formatting and Linting Made Easy: A Step-by-Step Pre-commit Hook Tutorial
isort is a Python utility that helps in sorting and organizing import statements in Python code to create readable and consistent code. It automatically formats import statements in accordance with PEP 8.
-
How to Write Impeccably Clean Code That Will Save Your Sanity
repos: - repo: https://github.com/ambv/black rev: 23.3.0 hooks: - id: black args: [--config=./pyproject.toml] language_version: python3.11 - repo: https://github.com/pycqa/flake8 rev: 6.0.0 hooks: - id: flake8 args: [--config=./tox.ini] language_version: python3.11 - repo: https://github.com/pycqa/isort rev: 5.12.0 hooks: - id: isort args: ["--profile", "black", "--filter-files"] language_version: python3.11 - repo: https://github.com/pre-commit/pre-commit-hooks rev: v4.4.0 hooks: - id: requirements-txt-fixer language_version: python3.11 - id: debug-statements - id: detect-aws-credentials - id: detect-private-key
- Automate Python Linting and Code Style Enforcement with Ruff and GitHub Actions
-
Improve your Django Code with pre-commit
repos: ... pre-commmit stuff ... black stuff - repo: https://github.com/pycqa/isort rev: 5.12.0 hooks: - id: isort name: isort (python)
-
How I start every new Python backend API project
isort
-
nbdev formating and linting
isort , A Python utility / library to sort imports.
-
Curious what is too much on one line... how 'compressed' can our code be?
Install black and isort and just don't worry about it. :-)
-
I wrote a script to periodically change my Desktop background to live satellite images!
Sure. Also, and don't take this the wrong way, but there are some code smells in your project that could be partially mitigated with some basic linting/formatting. I suggest black as a code formatter, flake8 for basic linting, and isort for sorting imports (for example, you have local imports mixed in with standard library and third party imports). You can install these via pip and most editors (like VS Code) can autoformat on save and show you linting problems as you edit. And you can integrate these into your workflow by using pre-commit.
What are some alternatives?
shellharden - The corrective bash syntax highlighter
black - The uncompromising Python code formatter
bats-core - Bash Automated Testing System
yapf - A formatter for Python files
pure-bash-bible - 📖 A collection of pure bash alternatives to external processes.
autoflake - Removes unused imports and unused variables as reported by pyflakes
ShellCheck - ShellCheck, a static analysis tool for shell scripts
Pylint - It's not just a linter that annoys you!
dmenu-scripts - Serious fun with dmenu
autopep8 - A tool that automatically formats Python code to conform to the PEP 8 style guide.
static-analysis - ⚙️ A curated list of static analysis (SAST) tools and linters for all programming languages, config files, build tools, and more. The focus is on tools which improve code quality.
pyright - Static Type Checker for Python