Formats your code with whatever formatter your project is already using. π§Ό
formatly
can automatically detect and format with:
See Formatter Detection for details on how they are detected.
npx formatly <files>
formatly
takes in any number of glob patterns.
It will then:
- Detect which supported formatter is configured in the repository
- Pass those glob patterns directly to the formatter
For example, to match all directories and folders in the current directory:
npx formatly *
To match only .ts
files in src/
:
npx formatly "src/**/*.ts"
npm i formatly
The formatly
package exports the functions used by the formatly
CLI.
Runs formatting on any number of glob pattern string
s.
import { formatly } from "formatly";
await formatly(["*"]);
Parameters:
patterns: string[]
(required): any number of glob patternsoptions: FormatlyOptions
(optional):cwd: string
(optional): working directory, if not"."
Resolves with a FormatlyReport
, which is either:
FormatlyReportError
if a formatter could not be determined, which an object containing:ran: false
FormatlyReportResult
if a formatter could be determined, which is an object containing:formatter: Formatter
: as resolved byresolveFormatter
ran: true
result: Result
, theResult
from running the formatter withexeca
For example, to run formatting on TypeScript source files in a child directory and check the result:
import { formatly } from "formatly";
const report = await formatly(["src/**/*.ts"], { cwd: "path/to/project" });
if (!report.ran) {
console.error("Could not determine formatter.");
return;
}
const { formatter, result } = report;
if (result.code) {
console.error(`Error running ${formatter.runner}:`, result.stderr);
} else {
console.log(`Formatted with ${formatter.name}! π§Ό`);
}
Detects which of the supported formatters to use for a directory.
import { resolveFormatter } from "formatly";
const formatter = await resolveFormatter();
// {
// name: "Prettier",
// runner: "npx prettier --write",
// testers: { ... }
// }
console.log(formatter);
Parameters:
cwd: string
(optional): working directory, if not"."
Resolves with either:
undefined
if a formatter could not be detectedFormatter
if one can be found, which is an object containing:name: string
: English name of the formatterrunner: string
: the shell command used to run the formattertesters: object
: strings and regular expressions used to test for the formatter
Formatters are detected based on the first match from, in order:
- Existence of the formatter's default supported config file name
- The formatter's name in a
package.json
fmt
orformat
script - Well-known root-level
package.json
key
Formatter | Config File | Package Key | Script |
---|---|---|---|
Biome | Configure Biome | biome |
|
deno fmt | Deno Configuration > Formatting | deno |
|
dprint | dprint setup | dprint |
|
Prettier | Prettier Configuration File | "prettier" |
prettier |
Want support for a formatter not mentioned here? Great! Please file a feature request GitHub issue. π
Formatly is a tool for any developer tool that creates files for users.
If your tool creates, say, a config file that users are meant to check into their repository, you probably want that file to be formatted per the user's preference.
But there are several popular formatters in use today: it's not enough to just call to prettier.format
.
Formatly takes away the burden of
- Detecting which formatter -if any- a userland project is using
- Calling to that formatter's API(s) to format the file
No. Formatly is a detection + wrapping layer around formatters such as Prettier. Userland projects still need to configure a formatter themselves.
See .github/CONTRIBUTING.md
, then .github/DEVELOPMENT.md
.
Thanks! π
Josh Goldberg β¨ π» π π€ π π§ π π§ π |
π This package was templated with
create-typescript-app
using thecreate
engine.