/emacs-reformatter

Define commands which run reformatters on the current Emacs buffer

Primary LanguageEmacs Lisp

Melpa Status Melpa Stable Status Build Status Support me

Define commands which run reformatters on the current Emacs buffer

This library lets elisp authors easily define an idiomatic command to reformat the current buffer using a command-line program, together with an optional minor mode which can apply this command automatically on save.

By default, reformatter.el expects programs to read from stdin and write to stdout, and you should prefer this mode of operation where possible. If this isn't possible with your particular formatting program, refer to the options for reformatter-define, and see the examples in the package's tests.

In its initial release it supports only reformatters which can read from stdin and write to stdout, but a more versatile interface will be provided as development continues.

As an example, let's define a reformat command that applies the "dhall format" command. We'll assume here that we've already defined a variable dhall-command which holds the string name or path of the dhall executable:

(reformatter-define dhall-format
  :program dhall-command
  :args '("format")
  :lighter " DF")

The reformatter-define macro expands to code which generates dhall-format-buffer and dhall-format-region interactive commands, and a local minor mode called dhall-format-on-save-mode. The :args and :program expressions will be evaluated at runtime, so they can refer to variables that may (later) have a buffer-local value. A custom variable will be generated for the mode lighter, with the supplied value becoming the default.

The generated minor mode allows idiomatic per-directory or per-file customisation, via the "modes" support baked into Emacs' file-local and directory-local variables mechanisms. For example, users of the above example might add the following to a project-specific .dir-locals.el file:

((dhall-mode
   (mode . dhall-format-on-save)))

See the documentation for reformatter-define, which provides a number of options for customising the generated code.

Library authors might like to provide autoloads for the generated code, e.g.:

;;;###autoload (autoload 'dhall-format-buffer "current-file" nil t)
;;;###autoload (autoload 'dhall-format-region "current-file" nil t)
;;;###autoload (autoload 'dhall-format-on-save-mode "current-file" nil t)

Examples of usage in the wild

To find reverse dependencies, look for "Needed by" on the MELPA page for reformatter. Here are some specific examples:

Rationale

I contribute to a number of Emacs programming language modes and tools, and increasingly use code reformatters in my daily work. It's surprisingly difficult to write robust, correct code to apply these reformatters, given that it must consider such issues as:

  • Missing programs
  • Buffers not yet saved to a file
  • Displaying error output
  • Colorising ANSI escape sequences in any error output
  • Handling file encodings correctly

With this library, I hope to help the community standardise on best practices, and make things easier for tool authors and end users alike.

FAQ

How is this different from format-all.el?

format-all is a very different approach: it aims to provide a single minor mode which you then enable and configure to do the right thing (including nothing) for all the languages you use. It even tries to tell you how to install missing programs. It's an interesting project, but IMO it's hard to design the configuration for such a grand unified approach, and it can get complex. For example, you'd have to be able to configure which of two possible reformatters you want to use for a specific language, and to be able to do that on a per-project basis.

In contrast reformatter produces small, self-contained and separate formatters and minor modes which all work consistently and are individually configured. It makes it possible to replace existing formatter code, and it's also very convenient for users to define their own ad-hoc reformatter wrappers

Installation

Manual

Ensure reformatter.el is in a directory on your load-path, and add the following to your ~/.emacs or ~/.emacs.d/init.el:

(require 'reformatter)

MELPA

If you're an Emacs 24 user or you have a recent version of package.el you can install reformatter from the MELPA repository. The version of reformatter there will always be up-to-date.

About

Author: Steve Purcell

Homepage: https://github.com/purcell/emacs-reformatter


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