/pycln

A formatter for finding and removing unused import statements.

Primary LanguagePythonMIT LicenseMIT

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A formatter for finding and removing unused import statements.

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Docstrings: reStructuredText Code style: black Code style: prettier


Read the documentation on Github pages!


Installation and usage

Installation

Pycln requires Python 3.6+ and can be easily installed using the most common Python packaging tools. We recommend installing the latest stable release from PyPI with pip:

$ pip install pycln

Usage

By default Pycln will remove any unused import statement, So the simplest usage is to specify the path only:

$ pycln [PATH]

Also, it's possible to run pycln as a package:

$ python3 -m pycln [PATH]

NOTE: you may need to use -a/--all option for more satisfying results. see -a/--all flag.

Further information can be found in our docs:

Configuration

Pycln is able to read project-specific default values for its command line options from a configuration file like pyproject.toml or setup.cfg. This is especially useful for specifying custom CLI arguments/options like path/paths, --include, --exclude/--extend-exclude, or even --all.

You can find more details in our documentation:

And if you're looking for more general configuration documentation:

Used by

The following notable open-source projects trust and use Pycln:

The following organizations use Pycln:

Are we missing anyone? Let us know.

License

MIT

Contributing

A big welcome for considering contributing to make the project better!

You can get started by reading this:

You can also dive directly into the technicalities:

Change log

The log has become rather long. It moved to its own file.

See CHANGELOG.

Authors

The author list is quite long nowadays, so it lives in its own file.

See AUTHORS

Code of Conduct

Everyone participating in the Pycln project, and in particular in the issue tracker, and pull requests is expected to treat other people with respect.


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