Cpplint is a command-line tool to check C/C++ files for style issues according to Google's C++ style guide.
Cpplint used to be developed and maintained by Google Inc. at google/styleguide. Nowadays, Google is no longer maintaining the public version of cpplint, and pretty much everything in their repo's PRs and issues about cpplint have gone unimplemented.
This fork aims to update cpplint to modern specifications, and be (somewhat) more open to adding fixes and features to make cpplint usable in wider contexts.
To install cpplint from PyPI, run:
$ pip install cpplint
If you get the "This environment is externally managed" error, try to search and install cpplint with your system's package manager (e.g. apt, rpm, pacman...). If it doesn't exist, you can either package cpplint for your distribution or repeat the steps above with the --break-system-packages
flag.
$ cpplint [OPTIONS] files
For full usage instructions, run:
$ cpplint --help
- python 3 compatibility
- more default file extensions
- customizable file extensions with the --extensions argument
- continuous integration on github
- support for recursive file discovery via the --recursive argument
- support for excluding files via --exclude
- JUnit XML output format
- Overriding repository root auto-detection via --repository
- Support
#pragma once
as an alternative to header include guards - ... and quite a bit more
Thanks to Google Inc. for open-sourcing their in-house tool.
Thanks to our contributors.