Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
137 lines (104 loc) · 5.78 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

137 lines (104 loc) · 5.78 KB

swift-format

swift-format provides the formatting technology for SourceKit-LSP and the building blocks for doing code formatting transformations.

This package can be used as a command line tool or linked into other applications as a Swift Package Manager dependency and invoked via an API.

NOTE: No default Swift code style guidelines have yet been proposed. The style that is currently applied by swift-format is just one possibility, and the code is provided so that it can be tested on real-world code and experiments can be made by modifying it.

Matching swift-format to Your Swift Version

swift-format depends on SwiftSyntax and the standalone parsing library that is distributed as part of the Swift toolchain. The SwiftSyntax version in use must match the toolchain version, so you should check out and build swift-format from the branch that is compatible with the version of Swift you are using. This version dependency is also expressed in the SwiftSyntax dependency in Package.swift.

Xcode Release Swift Version swift-format Branch
Swift at main main
Xcode 12.0 Swift 5.3 swift-5.3-branch
Xcode 11.4 Swift 5.2 swift-5.2-branch
Xcode 11.0 Swift 5.1 swift-5.1-branch

For example, if you are using Xcode 12.0 (Swift 5.3), you can check out and build swift-format using the following commands:

git clone -b swift-5.3-branch https://github.com/apple/swift-format.git
cd swift-format
swift build

You can also add the --single-branch option if you only want to clone that specific branch.

The main branch is used for development and may depend on either a release version of Swift or on a developer snapshot. Changes committed to main that are compatible with the latest release branch will be cherry-picked into that branch.

To test that the formatter was built succesfully and is compatible with your Swift toolchain, you can run the following command:

swift test --parallel

We recommend using the --parallel flag to speed up the test run since there are a large number of tests.

Command Line Usage

swift-format [OPTIONS] FILE...

The swift-format tool can be invoked with one or more .swift source files, as well as the following command line options:

  • -v/--version: Prints the swift-format version and exits.

  • -m/--mode <format|lint|dump-configuration>: The mode in which to run swift-format. The format mode formats source files. The lint mode only prints diagnostics indicating style violations. The dump-configuration mode dumps the default swift-format configuration to standard output.

    If unspecified, the default mode is format.

  • --configuration <file>: The path to a JSON file that contains configurable settings for swift-format. If omitted, a default configuration is use (which can be seen by running --mode dump-configuration).

  • -i/--in-place: Overwrites the input files when formatting instead of printing the results to standard output.

  • -p/--parallel: Process files in parallel, simultaneously across multiple cores.

  • -r/--recursive: If specified, then the tool will process .swift source files in any directories listed on the command line and their descendants. Without this flag, it is an error to list a directory on the command line.

Configuration

For any source file being checked or formatted, swift-format looks for a JSON-formatted file named .swift-format in the same directory. If one is found, then that file is loaded to determine the tool's configuration. If the file is not found, then it looks in the parent directory, and so on.

If no configuration file is found, a default configuration is used. The settings in the default configuration can be viewed by running swift-format --mode dump-configuration, which will dump it to standard output.

If the --configuration <file> option is passed to swift-format, then that configuration will be used unconditionally and the file system will not be searched.

See Documentation/Configuration.md for a description of the configuration file format and the settings that are available.

API Usage

swift-format can be easily integrated into other tools written in Swift. Instead of invoking the formatter by spawning a subprocess, users can depend on swift-format as a Swift Package Manager dependency and import the SwiftFormat module, which contains the entry points into the formatter's diagnostic and correction behavior.

Formatting behavior is provided by the SwiftFormatter class and linting behavior is provided by the SwiftLinter class. These APIs can be passed either a Swift source file URL or a Syntax node representing a SwiftSyntax syntax tree. The latter capability is particularly useful for writing code generators, since it significantly reduces the amount of trivia that the generator needs to be concerned about adding to the syntax nodes it creates. Instead, it can pass the in-memory syntax tree to the SwiftFormat API and receive perfectly formatted code as output.

Please see the documentation in the SwiftFormatter and SwiftLinter classes for more information about their usage.

Development

If you are interested in developing swift-format, there is additional documentation about that here.