## Summary
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/6025 (which contains a
more thorough description of the issue). Previously, the `# noqa` here
was being marked as unused, but removing it raised `SIM114`:
```python
def foo():
a = True
b = False
if a > b: # noqa: SIM114
return 3
elif a == b:
return 3
```
**Summary** Add a formatter progress testing script to CI. This script
will 1) print the black compability on each run 2) catch regressions wrt
to formatter stability, emitting invalid syntax and other kinds of bugs
(e.g. #5917) before they land on main 3) have an additional layer of
real world tests when implementing new nodes or other new formatter
code.
This is currently a bash script, i'm not sure if we want to keep it that
way, or switch to e.g. the regular ecosystem scripts. The output
separation of `format_dev` could also use some polishing. We should also
consider pinning commits so we don't get spurious regression when they
change their code.
**Test Plan** The script extends CI.
## Summary
My intuition is that it's faster to do these checks as-needed rather
than allocation new hash maps and vectors for the arguments. (We
typically only query once anyway.)
## Summary
This PR adds a `logger-objects` setting that allows users to mark
specific symbols a `logging.Logger` objects. Currently, if a `logger` is
imported, we only flagged it as a `logging.Logger` if it comes exactly
from the `logging` module or is `flask.current_app.logger`.
This PR allows users to mark specific loggers, like
`logging_setup.logger`, to ensure that they're covered by the
`flake8-logging-format` rules and others.
For example, if you have a module `logging_setup.py` with the following
contents:
```python
import logging
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
```
Adding `"logging_setup.logger"` to `logger-objects` will ensure that
`logging_setup.logger` is treated as a `logging.Logger` object when
imported from other modules (e.g., `from logging_setup import logger`).
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/5694.
I don't know whether we want to make this change but here's some data...
Binary size:
- `main`: 30,384
- `charlie/match-phf`: 30,416
llvm-lines:
- `main`: 1,784,148
- `charlie/match-phf`: 1,789,877
llvm-lines and binary size are both unchanged (or, by < 5) when moving
from `u8` to `u32` return types, and even when moving to `char` keys and
values. I didn't expect this, but I'm not very knowledgable on this
topic.
Performance:
```
Confusables/match/src time: [4.9102 µs 4.9352 µs 4.9777 µs]
change: [+1.7469% +2.2421% +2.8710%] (p = 0.00 < 0.05)
Performance has regressed.
Found 12 outliers among 100 measurements (12.00%)
2 (2.00%) low mild
4 (4.00%) high mild
6 (6.00%) high severe
Confusables/match-with-skip/src
time: [2.0676 µs 2.0945 µs 2.1317 µs]
change: [+0.9384% +1.6000% +2.3920%] (p = 0.00 < 0.05)
Change within noise threshold.
Found 8 outliers among 100 measurements (8.00%)
3 (3.00%) high mild
5 (5.00%) high severe
Confusables/phf/src time: [31.087 µs 31.188 µs 31.305 µs]
change: [+1.9262% +2.2188% +2.5496%] (p = 0.00 < 0.05)
Performance has regressed.
Found 15 outliers among 100 measurements (15.00%)
3 (3.00%) low mild
6 (6.00%) high mild
6 (6.00%) high severe
Confusables/phf-with-skip/src
time: [2.0470 µs 2.0486 µs 2.0502 µs]
change: [-0.3093% -0.1446% +0.0106%] (p = 0.08 > 0.05)
No change in performance detected.
Found 4 outliers among 100 measurements (4.00%)
2 (2.00%) high mild
2 (2.00%) high severe
```
The `-with-skip` variants add our optimization which first checks
whether the character is ASCII. So `match` is way, way faster than PHF,
but it tends not to matter since almost all source code is ASCII anyway.
## Summary
This pull request add supports for `int`, `float` and `bool` types in
`UP018`
rule to convert empty call to the default value of the type or remove
the call
if a value of the same type is provided as an argument.
## Test Plan
Added tests for `int`, `float` and `bool` types.
Partially resolves#5988
**Summary** Add a `EmptyWithDanglingComments` format helper that formats
comments inside empty parentheses, brackets or curly braces. Previously,
this was implemented separately, and partially incorrectly, for each use
case.
Empty `()`, `[]` and `{}` are special because there can be dangling
comments, and they can be in
two positions:
```python
x = [ # end-of-line
# own line
]
```
These comments are dangling because they can't be assigned to any
element inside as they would
in all other cases.
**Test Plan** Added a regression test.
145 (from previously 149) instances of unstable formatting remaining.
```
$ cargo run --bin ruff_dev --release -- format-dev --stability-check --error-file formatter-ecosystem-errors.txt --multi-project target/checkouts > formatter-ecosystem-progress.txt
$ rg "Unstable formatting" target/formatter-ecosystem-errors.txt | wc -l
145
```
## Summary
This is equivalent for a single flag, but I think it's more likely to be
correct when the bitflags are modified -- the primary reason being that
we sometimes define flags as the union of other flags, e.g.:
```rust
const ANNOTATION = Self::TYPING_ONLY_ANNOTATION.bits() | Self::RUNTIME_ANNOTATION.bits();
```
In this case, `flags.contains(Flag::ANNOTATION)` requires that _both_
flags in the union are set, whereas `flags.intersects(Flag::ANNOTATION)`
requires that _at least one_ flag is set.
## Summary
Use the `find_keyword` helper function instead of reimplementing it.
Follows on from #5983 by doing a different search.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
F507 should not be raised when the right-hand side value is a non-tuple
object.
```python
'%s' % (1, 2, 3) # throws
'%s' % [1, 2, 3] # doesn't throw
'%s' % {1, 2, 3} # doesn't throw
```
## Summary
<!-- What's the purpose of the change? What does it do, and why? -->
Fix a regression introduced by
https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/5638. A multiline expression
can't be safely inserted into a format field.
### Example
```
> cat a.py
"{}".format(
[
1,
2,
3,
]
)
> cargo run -p ruff_cli -- check a.py --no-cache --select UP032 --fix
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.07s
Running `target/debug/ruff check a.py --no-cache --select UP032 --fix`
error: Autofix introduced a syntax error in `a.py` with rule codes UP032: EOL while scanning string literal at byte offset 5
---
f"{[
1,
2,
3,
]}"
---
a.py:1:1: UP032 Use f-string instead of `format` call
Found 1 error.
```
## Test Plan
New test cases
## Summary
Checks that `append`, `extend` and `remove` methods are not called on
`__all__`. See [original
implementation](2a86db8271/pyi.py (L1133-L1138)).
```
$ flake8 --select Y026 crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI056.pyi
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI056.pyi:3:1: Y056 Calling ".append()" on "__all__" may not be supported by all type checkers (use += instead)
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI056.pyi:4:1: Y056 Calling ".extend()" on "__all__" may not be supported by all type checkers (use += instead)
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI056.pyi:5:1: Y056 Calling ".remove()" on "__all__" may not be supported by all type checkers (use += instead)
```
```
$ ./target/debug/ruff --select PYI026 crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI056.pyi --no-cache
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI056.pyi:3:1: PYI056 Calling ".append()" on "__all__" may not be supported by all type checkers (use += instead)
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI056.pyi:4:1: PYI056 Calling ".extend()" on "__all__" may not be supported by all type checkers (use += instead)
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI056.pyi:5:1: PYI056 Calling ".remove()" on "__all__" may not be supported by all type checkers (use += instead)
Found 3 errors.
```
ref #848
## Test Plan
Snapshots and manual runs of flake8.
## Summary
These are skipped as an optimization, but it feels kind of unnecessary
and makes the code a bit more confusing than is worthwhile.
(non-`strict` is also by far the more popular setting, and the default.)
## Summary
I ran into this in the wild. It looks like Ruff will collapse the `else`
and `elif` branches here (i.e., it doesn't recognize that they're too
independent import blocks):
```python
if "sdist" in cmds:
_sdist = cmds["sdist"]
elif "setuptools" in sys.modules:
from setuptools.command.sdist import sdist as _sdist
else:
from setuptools.command.sdist import sdist as _sdist
from distutils.command.sdist import sdist as _sdist
```
Likely fallout from the `elif_else_branches` refactor.
**Summary** Fix implemented in
https://github.com/astral-sh/RustPython-Parser/pull/35: Previously,
empty lambda arguments (e.g. `lambda: 1`) would get the range of the
entire expression, which leads to incorrect comment placement. Now empty
lambda arguments get an empty range between the `lambda` and the `:`
tokens.
**Test Plan** Added a regression test.
149 instances of unstable formatting remaining.
```
$ cargo run --bin ruff_dev --release -- format-dev --stability-check --error-file formatter-ecosystem-errors.txt --multi-project target/checkouts > formatter-ecosystem-progress.txt
$ rg "Unstable formatting" target/formatter-ecosystem-errors.txt | wc -l
149
```
**Summary** Add script to shrink all formatter errors: This started as a
fun idea and turned out really useful: This script gives us a single
Python file with all formatter stability errors. I want to keep it
around to occasionally update #5828 so I added it to the git.
**Test Plan** None, this is a helper script
## Summary
**Don't minimize files that don't match in the first place** This adds a
sanity check to the minimizer script that the
input matches the condition (e.g. unstable formatting). Otherwise we run
through all checks with the whole file, which is extremely slow. It's
more reasonable for downstream usage to write an empty string to the
output file instead.
## Summary
Allow `respect_gitignore` even when not in a git repo
## Test Plan
Within the Ruff repository:
1. Renamed `.git` to `.hello-world`
2. Added `test.py` in root folder
3. Added `test.py` to `.gitignore`
4. Ran `cargo run --bin ruff -- check --no-cache --isolated --show-files
.` with
and without `--respect-gitignore` flag
fixes: #5930
## Summary
We now allow RUF015 to fix cases like:
```python
list(range(10))[0]
list(x.y)[0]
list(x["y"])[0]
```
Further, we fix generators like:
```python
[i + 1 for i in x][0]
```
By rewriting to `next(iter(i + 1 for i in x))`.
I've retained the special-case that rewrites `[i for i in x][0]` to
`next(iter(x))`.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/5764.
## Summary
Similar to #5852 and a bunch of related PRs -- trying to move rules that
rely on point-in-time semantic analysis to _after_ the semantic model
building.
## Summary
Implements `PYI017` or `Y017` from `flake8-pyi` plug-in. Mirrors
[upstream
implementation](ceab86d16b/pyi.py (L1039-L1048)).
It checks for any assignment with more than 1 target or an assignment to
anything other than a name, and raises a violation for these in stub
files.
Couldn't find a clear and concise explanation for why this is to be
avoided and what is preferred for attribute cases like:
```python
a.b = int
```
So welcome some input there, to learn and to finish up the docs.
## Test Plan
Added test cases from upstream plug-in in a fixture (both `.py` and
`.pyi`). Added a few more.
## Issue link
Refers: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/848
<!--
Thank you for contributing to Ruff! To help us out with reviewing,
please consider the following:
- Does this pull request include a summary of the change? (See below.)
- Does this pull request include a descriptive title?
- Does this pull request include references to any relevant issues?
-->
## Summary
- Remove space when start of slice is empty
- Treat unary op except `not` as simple expression
## Test Plan
Add some simple tests for unary op expressions in slice
Closes#5673
This shrinks a good bit more than previously, which was helpful for all
the formatter bugs. fwiw i treat this as a very ad-hoc script since it's
mainly my ecosystem bug processing companion.
## Summary
It can happen that we can't read a file (a python file, a jupyter
notebook or pyproject.toml), which needs to be handled and handled
consistently for all file types. Instead of using `Err` or `error!`, we
emit E602 with the io error as message and continue. This PR makes sure
we handle all three cases consistently, emit E602.
I'm not convinced that it should be possible to disable io errors, but
we now handle the regular case consistently and at least print warning
consistently.
I went with `warn!` but i can change them all to `error!`, too.
It also checks the error case when a pyproject.toml is not readable. The
error message is not very helpful, but it's now a bit clearer that
actually ruff itself failed instead vs this being a diagnostic.
## Examples
This is how an Err of `run` looks now:

With an unreadable file and `IOError` disabled:

(we lint zero files but count files before linting not during so we exit
0)
I'm not sure if it should (or if we should take a different path with
manual ExitStatus), but this currently also triggers when `files` is
empty:

## Test Plan
Unix only: Create a temporary directory with files with permissions
`000` (not readable by the owner) and run on that directory. Since this
breaks the assumptions of most of the test code (single file, `ruff`
instead of `ruff_cli`), the test code is rather cumbersome and looks a
bit misplaced; i'm happy about suggestions to fit it in closer with the
other tests or streamline it in other ways. I added another test for
when the entire directory is not readable.
## Summary
Completes documentation for the `flake8-fixme` (`FIX`) ruleset. Related
to #2646.
Tweaks the violation message. For example,
```
FIX001 Line contains FIXME
```
becomes
```
FIX001 Line contains FIXME, consider resolving the issue
```
This is because the previous message was unclear if it was warning
against the use of FIXME tags per se, or the code the FIXME tag was
annotating.
## Test Plan
`cargo test && python scripts/check_docs_formatted.py`
## Summary
Checks for `typehint.TypeAlias` annotation in type aliases. See
[original
source](https://github.com/PyCQA/flake8-pyi/blob/main/pyi.py#L1085).
```
$ flake8 --select Y026 crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi:4:1: Y026 Use typing_extensions.TypeAlias for type aliases, e.g. "NewAny: TypeAlias = Any"
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi:5:1: Y026 Use typing_extensions.TypeAlias for type aliases, e.g. "OptinalStr: TypeAlias = typing.Optional[str]"
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi:6:1: Y026 Use typing_extensions.TypeAlias for type aliases, e.g. "Foo: TypeAlias = Literal['foo']"
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi:7:1: Y026 Use typing_extensions.TypeAlias for type aliases, e.g. "IntOrStr: TypeAlias = int | str"
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi:8:1: Y026 Use typing_extensions.TypeAlias for type aliases, e.g. "AliasNone: TypeAlias = None"
```
```
$ ./target/debug/ruff --select PYI026 crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi --no-cache
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi:4:1: PYI026 Use `typing.TypeAlias` for type aliases in `NewAny`, e.g. "NewAny: typing.TypeAlias = Any"
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi:5:1: PYI026 Use `typing.TypeAlias` for type aliases in `OptinalStr`, e.g. "OptinalStr: typing.TypeAlias = typing.Optional[str]"
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi:6:1: PYI026 Use `typing.TypeAlias` for type aliases in `Foo`, e.g. "Foo: typing.TypeAlias = Literal["foo"]"
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi:7:1: PYI026 Use `typing.TypeAlias` for type aliases in `IntOrStr`, e.g. "IntOrStr: typing.TypeAlias = int | str"
crates/ruff/resources/test/fixtures/flake8_pyi/PYI026.pyi:8:1: PYI026 Use `typing.TypeAlias` for type aliases in `AliasNone`, e.g. "AliasNone: typing.TypeAlias = None"
Found 5 errors.
```
ref: #848
## Test Plan
Snapshots, manual runs of flake8.
## Summary
As part of my continued quest to separate semantic model-building from
diagnostic emission, this PR moves our unresolved-reference rules to a
deferred pass. So, rather than emitting diagnostics as we encounter
unresolved references, we now track those unresolved references on the
semantic model (just like resolved references), and after traversal,
emit the relevant rules for any unresolved references.
## Summary
Add known problems to `compare-to-empty-string` documentation. Related
to #5873.
Tweaked the example in the documentation to be a tad more concise and
correct (that the rule is most applicable when comparing to a `str`
variable).
## Test Plan
`python scripts/check_docs_formatted.py`
## Summary
This PR moves two rules (`invalid-all-format` and `invalid-all-object`)
out of the name-binding phase, and into the dedicated pass over all
bindings that occurs at the end of the `Checker`. This is part of my
continued quest to separate the semantic model-building logic from the
actual rule enforcement.
**Summary** Previously, `RUF014` would be part of ruff.schema.json
depending on whether or not the `unreachable-code` feature was active.
This caused problems for contributors who got unrelated RUF014 changes
when updating the schema without the feature active.
An alternative would be to always add `RUF014`.
**Test plan** `cargo dev generate-all` and `cargo run --bin ruff_dev
--features unreachable-code -- generate-all` now have the same effect.
## Summary
This crate now contains utilities for dealing with trivia more broadly:
whitespace, newlines, "simple" trivia lexing, etc. So renaming it to
reflect its increased responsibilities.
To avoid conflicts, I've also renamed `Token` and `TokenKind` to
`SimpleToken` and `SimpleTokenKind`.
## Summary
The vector of names here is immutable -- we never push to it after
initialization. Boxing reduces the size of the variant from 32 bytes to
24 bytes. (See:
https://nnethercote.github.io/perf-book/type-sizes.html#boxed-slices.)
It doesn't make a difference here, since it's not the largest variant,
but it still seems like a prudent change (and I was considering adding
another field to this variant, though I may no longer do so).
**Summary** This replaces the `todo!()` with a type alias stub in the
formatter. I added the tests from
704eb40108/parser/src/parser.rs (L901-L936)
as ruff python formatter tests.
**Test Plan** None, testing is part of the actual implementation
**Summary** Fix the formatter crash with `x[(1) :: ]` and related code.
**Problem** For assigning comments in slices in subscripts, we need to
find the positions of the colons to assign comments before and after the
colon to the respective lower/upper/step node (or dangling in that
section). Formatting `x[(1) :: ]` was broken because we were looking for
a `:` after the `1` but didn't consider that there could be a `)`
outside the range of the lower node, which contains just the `1` and no
optional parentheses.
**Solution** Use the simple tokenizer directly and skip all closing
parentheses.
**Test Plan** I added regression tests.
Closes#5733
**Summary** Add a static string error message to the formatter syntax
error so we can disambiguate where the syntax error came from
**Test Plan** No fixed tests, we don't expect this to occur, but it
helped with transformers syntax error debugging:
```
Error: Failed to format node
Caused by:
syntax error: slice first colon token was not a colon
```
## Summary
No behavior change, but this is in theory more efficient, since we can
just iterate over the flat `Binding` vector rather than having to
iterate over binding chains via the `Scope`.
## Summary
This PR moves the "unused exception" rule out of the visitor and into a
deferred check. When we can base rules solely on the semantic model, we
probably should, as it greatly simplifies the `Checker` itself.
## Summary
The `SemanticModel` currently stores the "body" of a given `Suite`,
along with the current statement index. This is used to support "next
sibling" queries, but we only use this in exactly one place -- the rule
that simplifies constructs like this to `any` or `all`:
```python
for x in y:
if x == 0:
return True
return False
```
Instead of tracking the state, we can just do a (slightly more
expensive) traversal, by finding the node within its parent and
returning the next node in the body.
Note that we'll only have to do this extremely rarely -- namely, for
functions that contain something like:
```python
for x in y:
if x == 0:
return True
```