Extends #9682 to error if the nursery selector is used or nursery rules
are selected without preview.
Part of #7992 — we will remove this in 0.3.0 instead so we can provide
nice errors in 0.2.0.
Fixes#7350
## Summary
* `--show-source` and `--no-show-source` are now deprecated.
* `output-format` supports two new variants, `full` and `concise`.
`text` is now a deprecated variant, and any use of it is treated as the
default serialization format.
* `--output-format` now default to `concise`
* In preview mode, `--output-format` defaults to `full`
* `--show-source` will still set `--output-format` to `full` if the
output format is not otherwise specified.
* likewise, `--no-show-source` can override an output format that was
set in a file-based configuration, though it will also be overridden by
`--output-format`
## Test Plan
A lot of tests were updated to use `--output-format=full`. Additional
tests were added to ensure the correct deprecation warnings appeared,
and that deprecated options behaved as intended.
## Summary
Un-gates the behavior to allow `sys.path` modifications between imports,
which removed a bunch of false positives in the ecosystem CI at the
time.
## Summary
At present, our versioning policy forbids the addition of safe fixes to
stable rules outside of a minor release, so we've accumulated a bunch of
new fixes that are behind `--preview`, and can be ungated in v0.2.0.
To find these, I just grepped for `preview.is_enabled()` and identified
all such cases. I then audited the `preview_rules` test fixtures and
removed any tests that existed only to test this autofix behavior.
## Summary
This rule was added to flake8-bugbear. In general, we tend to prefer
redirecting to prominent plugins when our own rules are reimplemented
(since more projects have `B` activated than `RUF`).
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
Changes our warning for combined use of `--preview` and `--select
NURSERY` to a hard error.
This should go out _before_ #9680 where we will ban use of `NURSERY`
outside of preview as well (see #9683).
Part of https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/7992
## Summary
Per https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9570:
> `dtype` are a bit of a strange beast, but definitely best thought of
as instances, not classes, and they are meant to be comparable not just
to their own class, but also to the corresponding scalar types (e.g.,
`x.dtype == np.float32`) and strings (e.g., `x.dtype == ['i1,i4']`;
basically, `__eq__` always tries to do `dtype(other)`.
This PR thus allows comparisons to `dtype` in preview.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9570.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
This review contains a fix for
[RET504](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/unnecessary-assign/)
(unnecessary-assign)
The problem is that Ruff suggests combining a return statement inside
contextlib.suppress. Even though it is an unsafe fix it might lead to an
invalid code that is not equivalent to the original one.
See: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/5909
## Test Plan
```bash
cargo test
```
## Summary
Given a statement like `colors = 6`, we currently treat the cell as an
automagic (since `colors` is an automagic) -- i.e., we assume it's
equivalent to `%colors = 6`. This PR adds some additional detection
whereby if the statement is an _assignment_, we avoid treating it as
such. I audited the list of automagics, and I believe this is safe for
all of them.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/8526.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9648.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
This review contains a fix for
[PIE810](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/rules/multiple-starts-ends-with/)
(multiple-starts-ends-with)
The problem is that ruff suggests combining multiple startswith/endswith
calls into a single call even though there might be a call with tuple of
strs. This leads to calling startswith/endswith with tuple of tuple of
strs which is incorrect and violates startswith/endswith conctract and
results in runtime failure.
However the following will be valid and fixed correctly =>
```python
x = ("hello", "world")
y = "h"
z = "w"
msg = "hello world"
if msg.startswith(x) or msg.startswith(y) or msg.startswith(z) :
sys.exit(1)
```
```
ruff --fix --select PIE810 --unsafe-fixes
```
=>
```python
if msg.startswith(x) or msg.startswith((y,z)):
sys.exit(1)
```
See: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/8906
## Test Plan
```bash
cargo test
```
## Summary
This rule was just incorrect, it didn't match the examples in the docs.
(It's a very rarely-used rule since it's not included in any of the
conventions.)
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9452.
## Summary
Add a rule for defaultdict(default_factory=callable). Instead suggest
using defaultdict(callable).
See: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9509
If a user tries to bind a "non-callable" to default_factory, the rule
ignores it. Another option would be to warn that it's probably not what
you want. Because Python allows the following:
```python
from collections import defaultdict
defaultdict(default_factory=1)
```
this raises after you actually try to use it:
```python
dd = defaultdict(default_factory=1)
dd[1]
```
=>
```bash
KeyError: 1
```
Instead using callable directly in the constructor it will raise (not
being a callable):
```python
from collections import defaultdict
defaultdict(1)
```
=>
```bash
TypeError: first argument must be callable or None
```
## Test Plan
```bash
cargo test
```
## Summary
When we are analyzing the implicit return rule this change add an
additional check to verify if the call expression has been annotated
with NoReturn type from typing module.
See: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/5474
## Test Plan
```bash
cargo test
```
Previously, without the 'wrap_help' feature enabled, Clap would not do
any auto-wrapping of help text. For help text with long lines, this
tends to lead to non-ideal formatting. It can be especially difficult to
read when the width of the terminal is smaller.
This commit enables 'wrap_help', which will automatically cause Clap to
query the terminal size and wrap according to that. Or, if the terminal
size cannot be determined, it will default to a maximum line width of
100.
Ref https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/9599#discussion_r1464992692
## Summary
If you paste in the TOML for our default configuration (from the docs),
it's rejected by our JSON Schema:

It seems like the issue is with:
```toml
# Set the line length limit used when formatting code snippets in
# docstrings.
#
# This only has an effect when the `docstring-code-format` setting is
# enabled.
docstring-code-line-length = "dynamic"
```
Specifically, since that value uses a custom Serde implementation, I
guess Schemars bails out? This PR adds a custom representation to allow
`"dynamic"` (but no other strings):

This seems like it should work but I don't have a great way to test it.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9630.
## Summary
Checks for unnecessary `dict` comprehension when creating a new
dictionary from iterable. Suggest to replace with
`dict.fromkeys(iterable)`
See: https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9592
## Test Plan
```bash
cargo test
```
## Summary
This PR introduces a new rule to sort `__slots__` and `__match_args__`
according to a [natural sort](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_sort_order), as was
requested in https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/1198#issuecomment-1881418365.
The implementation here generalises some of the machinery introduced in
3aae16f1bd
so that different kinds of sorts can be applied to lists of string
literals. (We use an "isort-style" sort for `__all__`, but that isn't
really appropriate for `__slots__` and `__match_args__`, where nearly
all items will be snake_case.) Several sections of code have been moved
from `sort_dunder_all.rs` to a new module, `sorting_helpers.rs`, which
`sort_dunder_all.rs` and `sort_dunder_slots.rs` both make use of.
`__match_args__` is very similar to `__all__`, in that it can only be a
tuple or a list. `__slots__` differs from the other two, however, in
that it can be any iterable of strings. If slots is a dictionary, the
values are used by the builtin `help()` function as per-attribute
docstrings that show up in the output of `help()`. (There's no
particular use-case for making `__slots__` a set, but it's perfectly
legal at runtime, so there's no reason for us not to handle it in this
rule.)
Note that we don't do an autofix for multiline `__slots__` if `__slots__` is a dictionary: that's out of scope. Everything else, we can nearly always fix, however.
## Test Plan
`cargo test` / `cargo insta review`.
I also ran this rule on CPython, and the diff looked pretty good
---
Co-authored-by: Micha Reiser <micha@reiser.io>
## Summary
Implement rule `mutable-fromkeys-value` (`RUF023`).
Autofixes
```python
dict.fromkeys(foo, [])
```
to
```python
{key: [] for key in foo}
```
The fix is marked as unsafe as it changes runtime behaviour. It also
uses `key` as the comprehension variable, which may not always be
desired.
Closes#4613.
## Test Plan
`cargo test`
## Summary
When determining whether _any_ settings have namespace packages, we need
to consider the global settings (as would be provided via `--config`).
This was a subtle fallout of a refactor.
Closes https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/issues/9579.
## Test Plan
Tested locally by compiling Ruff and running against this
[namespace-test](https://github.com/gokay05/namespace-test) repo.
## Summary
This PR detects whether PLR0917 is being applied to a method or class
method, and if so, it ignores the first argument for the purposes of
counting the number of positional arguments.
## Test Plan
New tests have been added to the corresponding fixture.
Closes#9552.