Correct Python indentation in Visual Studio Code. See the extension on the VSCode Marketplace and its source code on GitHub.
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When you press Enter
, your Python code is parsed up to the cursor in order to find the correct indentation level of nearby lines. Because the "correct" indentation level can be an arbitrary number of spaces, the use of tabs (\t
) is not supported.
For more detailed explanation of the behavior, see the section "Detailed Behavior" below.
There are three exposed settings.
pythonIndent.useTabOnHangingIndent
pythonIndent.useTabOnHangingIndent
- boolean, the default is false
- If true, after creating a hanging indent (see footnote 1 of PEP8 for a definition of a hanging indent), you can use the tab key to leave the indented section and go to the ending bracket.
pythonIndent.trimLinesWithOnlyWhitespace
- boolean, the default is false
- If true, trims lines that contain only whitespace after pressing Enter on them. This behavior is similar to VS Code's default.
pythonIndent.keepHangingBracketOnLine
- boolean, the default is false
- If true, when creating a hanging indent, do not put the closing bracket on its own line.
See the change log.
There are three main cases when determining the correct indentation, described below.
In cases when you have your cursor between an open bracket (one of [({
) and its closing bracket pair (the corresponding one of })]
), this extension will keep subsequent lines indented just to the right of where it was opened:
data = {'a': 0,
| # <- pressing enter should put your cursor at the "|"
| # <- this is where default VS Code puts your cursor
Even heavily nested brackets are handled:
data = {'a': 0,
'b': [[1, 2],
| # <- match the more recently opened [ instead of the {
| # <- default behavior of VS Code
data = {'a': 0,
'b': [[1, 2],
[3, 4]],
| # <- since the lists are all closed, go back to the { position
| # <- default behavior of VS Code
data = {'a': 0,
'b': [[1, 2],
[3, 4]],
'c': 5}
| # <- go back to indentation level before any brackets were opened
| # <- default behavior of VS Code
In the full example below, default VS Code required nine extra key presses (three tabs, two spaces, and four backspaces) to match the automatic indentation of this extension.
data = {'a': 0,
'b': [[1, 2],
[3, 4]],
'c': 5}
done(data)
When you have opened a bracket, but not yet inserted any content, pressing Enter
will create a hanging indent, matching the base behavior of VS Code.
result = my_func(
| # <- your cursor should end up here
) # <- the closing bracket should end up here
You can use the setting useTabOnHangingIndent
to make it so that when you are done typing you can simply press Tab
to be taken to the closing bracket.
If there is content to the right of your cursor when you press Enter
, then this extension falls back on just indenting by your set tab size.
# The "|" is your cursor's location
result = my_func(|x, y, z)
# and when you press Enter...
result = my_func(
|x, y, z)
If you never want to have the closing bracket end up on its own line (i.e. you always want to just indent by the set tab size), use the keepHangingBracketOnLine
configuration setting. Warning: This may cause confusing indentation with function definitions as the argument list and the function code may end up at the same indentation level.
It's not often used, but a backslash to continue a line will also result in the next line being indented.
my_long_calculation = 1234 + \
5678
Some keywords in Python imply certain indentation behaviors. For example, if there is a return
statement, then we know the next line can be un-indented (or dedented) since no statements can follow a return
in the same code block. Other keywords that follow the same pattern are pass
, break
, continue
, and raise
.
Similarly, if there is an else:
on the current line, then the current line needs to be dedented, and the next line needs to be indented relative to the new position of the else:
. Other keywords that follow the same pattern are elif ...:
, except ...:
, and finally:
. Some examples are shown below.
if True:
pass
else:|
# and when you press Enter...
if True:
pass
else:
|
But if you have manually changed the indentation, the extension should not change it for you:
if True:
if True:
pass
else:|
# and when you press Enter, do NOT dedent!
if True:
if True:
pass
else:
|
# Or even more nested
if True:
if True:
if True:
pass
else:|
# and when you press Enter, still do NOT dedent
if True:
if True:
if True:
pass
else:
|
If (and only if) you press Enter
while your cursor is in the middle of a comment, then the next line will automatically be made into a comment.
# As always, the "|" indicates your cursor
def f():
# This function is |gonna be REAL good!
def f():
# This function is
# |gonna be REAL good
You can trim whitespace from lines that contain only whitespace by using the trimLinesWithOnlyWhitespace
configuration setting (the default is to not trim whitespace in this way). This setting brings the behavior closer to native VSCode behavior.
# In the below code, the character "·" represents a space
def f():
····|
# The default of false preserves whitespace
def f():
····
····|
# Setting trimLinesWithOnlyWhitespace = true will trim the whitespace
def f():
····|
See the developer docs for pointers on how to develop this extension.
This style of indentation has not been prioritized for support by the vscode-python team, and it's unclear if it ever will be.
See some related issues: [1], [2], [3], [4], [5]
Known caveats are listed below.
- Using tabs (
\t
) for your indentation will not work. - If your Python code is not correctly formatted, you may not get correct indentation.
- The extension works by registering the
Enter
key as a keyboard shortcut. The conditions when the shortcut is triggered have been heavily restricted, but there may still be times this extension is unexpectedly overridingEnter
behavior. Specifically,vim
related plugins seem to require special attention. See thewhen
clause in package.json.
If you experience any problems, please submit an issue, or a pull request.