Skip to content

Roxe322/wemake-python-styleguide

 
 

Repository files navigation

wemake-python-styleguide

wemake.services Supporters Build Status codecov Python Version wemake-python-styleguide


Welcome to the strictest and most opinionated Python linter ever.

wemake-python-styleguide logo

wemake-python-styleguide is actually a flake8 plugin with some other plugins as dependencies.

Quickstart

pip install wemake-python-styleguide

You will also need to create a setup.cfg file with the configuration.

Try it online!

We highly recommend to also use:

  • flakeheaven for easy integration into a legacy codebase
  • nitpick for sharing and validating configuration across multiple projects

Running

flake8 your_module.py

This app is still just good old flake8! And it won't change your existing workflow.

invocation results

See "Usage" section in the docs for examples and integrations.

We also support GitHub Actions as first class-citizens. Try it out!

Strict is the new cool

Strict linting offers the following benefits to developers and companies:

  1. Ensures consistency - no matter who works on it, the end product will always be the same dependable code
  2. Helps avoid potential bugs - strict rules make sure that you don't make common mistakes
  3. Efficient code reviews - each piece of code has a similar familiar style and syntax. If it passes all the checks, there's little left to review!
  4. Fewer code revisions - strict linting ensures that you don't have to re-write the codebase again and again
  5. Reduce code redundancy - Sometimes we write complex code as we are thinking in a certain way about a problem. The linter offers suggestions that can help simplify the code and eliminate redundant statements

What we are about

The ultimate goal of this project is to make all people write exactly the same Python code.

flake8 pylint black mypy wemake-python-styleguide
Formats code?
Finds style issues? 🤔 🤔
Finds bugs? 🤔
Finds complex code? 🤔
Has a lot of strict rules? 🤔
Has a lot of plugins? 🤔

We have several primary objectives:

  1. Enforce python3.7+ usage
  2. Significantly reduce the complexity of your code and make it more maintainable
  3. Enforce "There should be one -- and preferably only one -- obvious way to do it" rule to coding and naming styles
  4. Protect developers from possible errors and enforce best practices

You can find all error codes and plugins in the docs.

What we are not

We are not planning to do the following things:

  1. Assume or check types, use mypy together with our linter
  2. Reformat code, since we believe that developers should do that
  3. Check for SyntaxError or logical bugs, write tests instead
  4. Appeal to everyone. But, you can switch off any rules that you don't like

Supporting us 🎉

We in wemake.services make all our tools open-source by default, so the community can benefit from them. If you use our tools and they make your life easier and brings business value, you can return us a favor by supporting the work we do.

Gold Tier

Silver Tier

Bronze Tier

Show your style 😎

If you use our linter - it means that your code is awesome. You can be proud of it! And you should share your accomplishment with others by including a badge in your README file. It looks like this:

wemake-python-styleguide

Markdown

[![wemake-python-styleguide](https://img.shields.io/badge/style-wemake-000000.svg)](https://github.com/wemake-services/wemake-python-styleguide)

Restructured text

.. image:: https://img.shields.io/badge/style-wemake-000000.svg
   :target: https://github.com/wemake-services/wemake-python-styleguide

Contributing

We warmly welcome all contributions!

List of contributors

See "Contributing" section in the documentation if you want to contribute.

You can start with issues that need some help right now.

About

The strictest and most opinionated python linter ever!

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 99.8%
  • Other 0.2%