how to format a python source file with tools?
Diez B. Roggisch
deets at nospam.web.de
Fri Nov 27 10:58:01 EST 2009
李白,字一日 schrieb:
> On Nov 27, 3:35 pm, Ben Finney <ben+pyt... at benfinney.id.au> wrote:
>> 李白,字一日 <calid... at gmail.com> writes:
>>> or is it possible for large source files?
>> Is what possible? What do you want the tool to do?
>>
>> --
>> \ “I do not believe in forgiveness as it is preached by the |
>> `\ church. We do not need the forgiveness of God, but of each |
>> _o__) other and of ourselves.” —Robert G. Ingersoll |
>> Ben Finney
>
> sometimes i need to merge some code snippets from files into a file,
> and when time comes to do this merge, i always find it difficult to
> reformat the python code
> because after pasting and copy, the code indentation different from
> one to another.
> and it is the tedious job for us to manually move the code from one
> segment to another.
>
> so i would like to have a tool to intelligently format the code for me
> and make the code more beautiful
> and automated.
This is not possible. Consider the following situation:
code a:
if something:
do_something()
code b:
if anything:
do_something_else()
No lets say you copy b after a. At which level should it be? Like this
if something:
do_something()
if anything:
do_something_else()
Or like this?
if something:
do_something()
if anything:
do_something_else()
Both are semantically radically different, and only you know which one
is the right one.
What my editor (emacs) allows, and other IDEs/editors as well is to mark
blocks, and shift these wholesome left or right, to get the desired
indention level.
The only thing that migh be automatized after a piece of code is valid
is normalization, like de-tabifying or making everything based on 4
space characters indention. No idea if there is something out there that
does that.
Diez
More information about the Python-list
mailing list