This utility reformats and checks Python source code files in a Git repository. However, it only applies reformatting and reports errors in regions which have changed in the Git working tree since the last commit.
The reformatters and linters supported are:
- Black for code reformatting
- isort for sorting imports
- Mypy for static type checking
- Pylint for generic static checking of code
- Flake8 for style guide enforcement
New in version 1.1.0: Support for Mypy, Pylint and other linters.
You want to start unifying code style in your project using Black. Maybe you also like to standardize on how to order your imports, or do static type checking or other static analysis for your code.
However, instead of formatting the whole code base in one giant commit, you'd like to only change formatting when you're touching the code for other reasons.
This can also be useful when contributing to upstream codebases that are not under your complete control.
However, partial formatting is not supported by Black itself, for various good reasons, and it won't be implemented either (134, 142, 245, 370, 511, 830).
This is where darker
enters the stage.
This tool is for those who want to do partial formatting anyway.
Note that this tool is meant for special situations when dealing with existing code bases. You should just use Black and isort as is when starting a project from scratch.
To install, use:
pip install darker
The darker <myfile.py>
or darker <directory>
command
reads the original file(s),
formats them using Black,
combines original and formatted regions based on edits,
and writes back over the original file(s).
Alternatively, you can invoke the module directly through the python
executable,
which may be preferable depending on your setup.
Use python -m darker
instead of darker
in that case.
By default, darker
just runs Black to reformat the code.
You can enable additional features with command line options:
-i
/--isort
: Reorder imports using isort-L <linter>
/--lint <linter>
: Run a supported linter:
New in version 1.1.0: The -L
/ --lint
option.
This example walks you through a minimal practical use case for Darker.
First, create an empty Git repository:
$ mkdir /tmp/test
$ cd /tmp/test
$ git init
Initialized empty Git repository in /tmp/test/.git/
In the root of that directory, create the ill-formatted Python file our_file.py
:
if True: print('hi')
print()
if False: print('there')
Commit that file:
$ git add our_file.py
$ git commit -m "Initial commit"
[master (root-commit) a0c7c32] Initial commit
1 file changed, 3 insertions(+)
create mode 100644 our_file.py
Now modify the first line in that file:
if True: print('CHANGED TEXT')
print()
if False: print('there')
You can ask Darker to show the diff for minimal reformatting which makes edited lines conform to Black rules:
$ darker --diff our_file.py
--- our_file.py
+++ our_file.py
@@ -1,3 +1,4 @@
-if True: print('CHANGED TEXT')
+if True:
+ print("CHANGED TEXT")
print()
if False: print('there')
If you omit the --diff
option,
Darker replaces the files listed on the command line
with partially reformatted ones as shown above:
$ darker our_file.py
Now the contents of our_file.py
will have changed.
Note that the original print()
and if False: ...
lines have not been reformatted
since they had not been edited!
if True:
print("CHANGED TEXT")
print()
if False: print('there')
You can also ask Darker to reformat edited lines in all Python files in the repository:
$ darker .
Or, if you want to compare to another branch (or, in fact, any commit) instead of the last commit:
$ darker --revision master .
Project-specific default options for darker
, Black and isort
are read from the project's pyproject.toml
file in the repository root.
isort also looks for a few other places for configuration.
For more details, see:
The following command line arguments can also be used to modify the defaults:
-r REVISION, --revision REVISION
Git revision against which to compare the working tree.
Tags, branch names, commit hashes, and other expressions
like HEAD~5 work here. Also a range like master...HEAD or
master... can be used to compare the best common ancestor.
With the magic value :PRE-COMMIT:, Darker expects the
revision range from the PRE_COMMIT_FROM_REF and
PRE_COMMIT_TO_REF environment variables.
--diff Don't write the files back, just output a diff for
each file on stdout. Highlight syntax on screen if
the `pygments` package is available.
--check Don't write the files back, just return the status.
Return code 0 means nothing would change. Return code
1 means some files would be reformatted.
-i, --isort Also sort imports using the `isort` package
-L CMD, --lint CMD Also run a linter on changed files. CMD can be a name
of path of the linter binary, or a full quoted command
line
-c PATH, --config PATH
Ask `black` and `isort` to read configuration from PATH.
-S, --skip-string-normalization
Don't normalize string quotes or prefixes
--no-skip-string-normalization
Normalize string quotes or prefixes. This can be used
to override `skip_string_normalization = true` from a
configuration file.
-l LINE_LENGTH, --line-length LINE_LENGTH
How many characters per line to allow [default: 88]
To change default values for these options for a given project,
add a [tool.darker]
section to pyproject.toml
in the project's root directory.
For example:
[tool.darker]
src = [
"src/mypackage",
]
revision = "master"
diff = true
check = true
isort = true
lint = [
"pylint",
]
log_level = "INFO"
New in version 1.0.0:
- The
-c
,-S
and-l
command line options. - isort is configured with
-c
and-l
, too.
New in version 1.1.0: The command line options
-r
/--revision
--diff
--check
--no-skip-string-normalization
-L
/--lint
New in version 1.2.0: Support for
- commit ranges in
-r
/--revision
. - a
[tool.darker]
section inpyproject.toml
.
New in version 1.2.2: Support for -r :PRE-COMMIT:
/ --revision=:PRE_COMMIT:
Many editors have plugins or recipes for integrating Black.
You may be able to adapt them to be used with darker
.
See editor integration in the Black documentation.
Install
darker
:$ pip install darker
Locate your
darker
installation folder.On macOS / Linux / BSD:
$ which darker /usr/local/bin/darker # possible location
On Windows:
$ where darker %LocalAppData%\Programs\Python\Python36-32\Scripts\darker.exe # possible location
Open External tools in PyCharm/IntelliJ IDEA
On macOS:
PyCharm -> Preferences -> Tools -> External Tools
On Windows / Linux / BSD:
File -> Settings -> Tools -> External Tools
Click the
+
icon to add a new external tool with the following values:- Name: Darker
- Description: Use Black to auto-format regions changed since the last git commit.
- Program: <install_location_from_step_2>
- Arguments:
"$FilePath$"
If you need any extra command line arguments like the ones which change Black behavior, you can add them to the
Arguments
field, e.g.:--config /home/myself/black.cfg "$FilePath$"
Format the currently opened file by selecting
Tools -> External Tools -> Darker
.- Alternatively, you can set a keyboard shortcut by navigating to
Preferences or Settings -> Keymap -> External Tools -> External Tools - Darker
- Alternatively, you can set a keyboard shortcut by navigating to
Optionally, run
darker
on every file save:- Make sure you have the File Watcher plugin installed.
- Go to
Preferences or Settings -> Tools -> File Watchers
and click+
to add a new watcher:- Name: Darker
- File type: Python
- Scope: Project Files
- Program: <install_location_from_step_2>
- Arguments:
$FilePath$
- Output paths to refresh:
$FilePath$
- Working directory:
$ProjectFileDir$
- Uncheck "Auto-save edited files to trigger the watcher"
Install
darker
:$ pip install darker
Locate your
darker
installation folder.On macOS / Linux / BSD:
$ which darker /usr/local/bin/darker # possible location
On Windows:
$ where darker %LocalAppData%\Programs\Python\Python36-32\Scripts\darker.exe # possible location
Add these configuration options to VS code,
Cmd-Shift-P
,Open Settings (JSON)
:"python.formatting.provider": "black", "python.formatting.blackPath": "<install_location_from_step_2>", "python.formatting.blackArgs": ["--diff"],
You can pass additional arguments to darker
in the blackArgs
option
(e.g. ["--diff", "--isort"]
), but make sure at least --diff
is included.
Unlike Black and many other formatters, darker
needs access to the Git history.
Therefore it does not work properly with classical auto reformat plugins.
You can though ask vim to run darker
on file save with the following in your
.vimrc
:
set autoread
autocmd BufWritePost *.py silent :!darker %
BufWritePost
to rundarker
once the file has been saved,silent
to not ask for confirmation each time,:!
to run an external command,%
for current file name.
Vim should automatically reload the file.
New in version 1.2.1
To use Darker locally as a Git pre-commit hook for a Python project, do the following:
- Install pre-commit in your environment (see pre-commit Installation for details).
Create a base pre-commit configuration:
pre-commit sample-config >.pre-commit-config.yaml
Append to the created
.pre-commit-config.yaml
the following lines:- repo: https://github.com/akaihola/darker rev: 1.2.2 hooks: - id: darker
install the Git hook scripts:
pre-commit install
Darker takes a git diff
of your Python files,
records which lines of current files have been edited or added since the last commit.
It then runs Black and notes which chunks of lines were reformatted.
Finally, only those reformatted chunks on which edited lines fall (even partially)
are applied to the edited file.
Also, in case the --isort
option was specified,
isort is run on each edited file before applying Black.
Similarly, each linter requested using the --lint <command> option is run,
and only linting errors/warnings on modified lines are displayed.
BSD. See LICENSE.rst
.
- black-macchiato
- darken (deprecated in favor of Darker; thanks Carreau for inspiration!)
The following projects are related to Black or Darker in some way or another. Some of them we might want to integrate to be part of a Darker run.
- blacken-docs – Run Black on Python code blocks in documentation files
- blackdoc – Run Black on documentation code snippets
- velin – Reformat docstrings that follow the numpydoc convention
- diff-cov-lint – Pylint and coverage reports for git diff only
- xenon – Monitor code complexity
- pyupgrade – Upgrade syntax for newer versions of the language (see #51)
Thanks goes to these wonderful people (emoji key):
This project follows the all-contributors specification. Contributions of any kind are welcome!