Skip to content

🌷 Run code formatter on buffer contents without moving point, using RCS patches and dynamic programming.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

radian-software/apheleia

Repository files navigation

Apheleia

Good code is automatically formatted by tools like Black or Prettier so that you and your team spend less time on formatting and more time on building features. It's best if your editor can run code formatters each time you save a file, so that you don't have to look at badly formatted code or get surprised when things change just before you commit. However, running a code formatter on save suffers from the following two problems:

  1. It takes some time (e.g. around 200ms for Black on an empty file), which makes the editor feel less responsive.
  2. It invariably moves your cursor (point) somewhere unexpected if the changes made by the code formatter are too close to point's position.

Apheleia is an Emacs package which solves both of these problems comprehensively for all languages, allowing you to say goodbye to language-specific packages such as Blacken and prettier-js.

The approach is as follows:

  1. Run code formatters on after-save-hook, rather than before-save-hook, and do so asynchronously. Once the formatter has finished running, check if the buffer has been modified since it started; only apply the changes if not.
  2. After running the code formatter, generate an RCS patch showing the changes and then apply it to the buffer. This prevents changes elsewhere in the buffer from moving point. If a patch region happens to include point, then use a dynamic programming algorithm for string alignment to determine where point should be moved so that it remains in the same place relative to its surroundings. Finally, if the vertical position of point relative to the window has changed, adjust the scroll position to maintain maximum visual continuity. (This includes iterating through all windows displaying the buffer, if there are more than one.) The dynamic programming algorithm runs in quadratic time, which is why it is only applied if necessary and to a single patch region.

Installation

Apheleia is available on MELPA. It is easiest to install it using straight.el:

(straight-use-package 'apheleia)

However, you may install using any other package manager if you prefer.

Dependencies

Emacs 27 or later is supported. Apheleia does not include any formatters. You must install any formatter separately that you wish to use. As long as it is on $PATH then Apheleia will pick it up automatically; missing formatters will silently be skipped, but errors from invoking installed formatters will be reported on buffer save.

It is recommended to have Bash installed, as this is used as a dependency for Apheleia to invoke certain formatters (e.g. Node.js-based formatters).

Windows support is not guaranteed due to lack of support for common open standards on this platform. Pull requests adjusting Apheleia for improved cross-platform portability will be accepted, but no guarantees are made about stability on Windows.

User guide

To your init-file, add the following form:

(apheleia-global-mode +1)

The autoloading has been configured so that this will not cause Apheleia to be loaded until you save a file.

By default, Apheleia is configured to format with Black, Prettier, and Gofmt on save in all relevant major modes. To configure this, you can adjust the values of the following variables:

  • apheleia-formatters: Alist mapping names of formatters (symbols like black and prettier) to commands used to run those formatters (such as ("black" "-") and (npx "prettier" input)). See the docstring for more information.
    • You can manipulate this alist using standard Emacs functions. For example, to add some command-line options to Black, you could use:

      (setf (alist-get 'black apheleia-formatters)
            '("black" "--option" "..." "-"))
    • There are a list of symbols that are interpreted by apheleia specially when formatting a command (example: npx). Any non-string entries in a formatter that doesn't equal one of these symbols is evaluated and replaced in place. This can be used to pass certain flags to the formatter process depending on the state of the current buffer. For example:

      (push '(shfmt . ("beautysh"
                       "-filename" filepath
                       (when-let ((indent (bound-and-true-p sh-basic-offset)))
                         (list "--indent-size" (number-to-string indent)))
                       (when indent-tabs-mode "--tab")
                       "-"))
            apheleia-formatters)

      This adds an entry to apheleia-formatters for the beautysh formatter. The evaluated entries makes it so that the --tab flag is only passed to beautysh when the value of indent-tabs-mode is true. Similarly the indent-size flag is passed the exact value of the sh-basic-offset variable only when it is bound. Observe that one of these evaluations returns a list of flags whereas the other returns a single string. These are substituted into the command as you'd expect.

    • You can also use Apheleia to format buffers that have no underlying files. In this case the value of file and filepath will be the name of the current buffer with any special characters for the file-system (such as * on windows) being stripped out.

      This is also how the extension for any temporary files apheleia might create will be determined. If you're using a formatter that determines the file-type from the extension you should name such buffers such that their suffixed with the extension. For example a buffer called *foo-bar.c* that has no associated file will have an implicit file-name of foo-bar.c and any temporary files will be suffixed with a .c extension.

    • You can implement formatters as arbitrary Elisp functions which operate directly on a buffer, without needing to invoke an external command. This can be useful to integrate with e.g. language servers. See the docstring for more information on the expected interface for Elisp formatters.

  • apheleia-mode-alist: Alist mapping major modes and filename regexps to names of formatters to use in those modes and files. See the docstring for more information.
    • You can use this variable to configure multiple formatters for the same buffer by setting the cdr of an entry to a list of formatters to run instead of a single formatter. For example you may want to run isort and black one after the other.

      (setf (alist-get 'isort apheleia-formatters)
            '("isort" "--stdout" "-"))
      (setf (alist-get 'python-mode apheleia-mode-alist)
            '(isort black))

      This will make apheleia run isort on the current buffer and then black on the result of isort and then use the final output to format the current buffer.

      Warning: At the moment there's no smart or configurable error handling in place. This means if one of the configured formatters fail (for example if isort isn't installed) then apheleia just doesn't format the buffer at all, even if black is installed.

      Warning: If a formatter uses file (rather than filepath or input or none of these keywords), it can't be chained after another formatter, because file implies that the formatter must read from the original file, not an intermediate temporary file. For this reason it's suggested to avoid the use of file in general.

  • apheleia-formatter: Optional buffer-local variable specifying the formatter to use in this buffer. Overrides apheleia-mode-alist. You can set this in a local variables list, or in .dir-locals.el (e.g. ((python-mode . ((apheleia-formatter . (isort black)))))), or in a custom hook of your own that sets the local variable conditionally.
  • apheleia-inhibit: Optional buffer-local variable, if set to non-nil then Apheleia does not turn on automatically even if apheleia-global-mode is on.

You can run M-x apheleia-mode to toggle automatic formatting on save in a single buffer, or M-x apheleia-global-mode to toggle the default setting for all buffers. Also, even if apheleia-mode is not enabled, you can run M-x apheleia-format-buffer to manually invoke the configured formatter for the current buffer. Running with a prefix argument will cause the command to prompt you for which formatter to run.

Apheleia does not currently support TRAMP, and is therefore automatically disabled for remote files.

If an error occurs while formatting, a message is displayed in the echo area. You can jump to the error by invoking M-x apheleia-goto-error, or manually switch to the log buffer mentioned in the message.

You can configure error reporting using the following user options:

  • apheleia-hide-log-buffers: By default, errors from formatters are put in buffers named like *apheleia-cmdname-log*. If you customize this user option to non-nil then a space is prepended to the names of these buffers, hiding them by default in switch-to-buffer (you must type a space to see them).
  • apheleia-log-only-errors: By default, only failed formatter runs are logged. If you customize this user option to nil then all runs are logged, along with whether or not they succeeded. This could be helpful in debugging.

The following user options are also available:

  • apheleia-post-format-hook: Normal hook run after Apheleia formats a buffer. Run if the formatting is successful, even when no changes are made to the buffer.
  • apheleia-max-alignment-size: The maximum number of characters that a diff region can have to be processed using Apheleia's dynamic programming algorithm for point alignment. This cannot be too big or Emacs will hang noticeably on large reformatting operations, since the DP algorithm is quadratic-time.
  • apheleia-mode-lighter: apheleia-mode lighter displayed in the mode-line. If you don't want to display it, use nil. Otherwise, its value must be a string.

Apheleia exposes some hooks for advanced customization:

  • apheleia-formatter-exited-hook: Abnormal hook which is run after a formatter has completely finished running for a buffer. Not run if the formatting was interrupted and no action was taken. Receives two arguments: the symbol for the formatter that was run (e.g. black, or it could be a list if multiple formatters were run in a chain), and a boolean for whether there was an error.

  • apheleia-inhibit-functions: List of functions to run before turning on Apheleia automatically from apheleia-global-mode. If one of these returns non-nil then apheleia-mode is not enabled in the buffer.

  • apheleia-skip-functions: List of functions to run before each Apheleia formatter invocation. If one of these returns non-nil then the formatter is not run, even if apheleia-mode is enabled.

Formatter configuration

There is no configuration interface in Apheleia for formatter behavior. The way to configure a formatter is by editing a standard config file that it reads (e.g. .prettierrc.json), or setting an environment variable that it reads, or by changing the entry in apheleia-formatters to customize the command-line arguments.

There is one exception to this, which is that Apheleia's default command-line arguments for the built-in formatters will automatically check Emacs' indentation options for the corresponding major mode, and pass that information to the formatter. This way, the indentation (tabs vs spaces, and how many) applied by the formatter will match what electric indentation in Emacs is doing, preventing a shuffle back and forth as you type.

This behavior can be disabled by setting apheleia-formatters-respect-indent-level to nil.

Troubleshooting

Try running your formatter outside of Emacs to verify it works there. Check what command-line options it is configured with in apheleia-formatters.

To debug internal bugs, race conditions, or performance issues, try setting apheleia-log-debug-info to non-nil and check the contents of *apheleia-debug-log*. It will have detailed trace information about most operations performed by Apheleia.

Known issues

  • process aphelieia-whatever no longer connected to pipe; closed it: This happens on older Emacs versions when formatting a buffer with size greater than 65,536 characters. There is no known workaround besides disabling apheleia-mode for the affected buffer, or upgrading to a more recent version of Emacs. See #20.

Contributing

Please see the contributor guide for my projects for general information, and the following sections for Apheleia-specific details.

There's also a wiki that could do with additions/clarity. Any improvement suggestions should be submitted as an issue.

Adding a formatter

I have done my best to make it straightforward to add a formatter. You just follow these steps:

  1. Install your formatter on your machine so you can test.
  2. Create an entry in apheleia-formatters with how to run it. (See the docstring of this variable for explanation about the available keywords.)
  3. Add entries for the relevant major modes in apheleia-mode-alist.
  4. See if it works for you!
  5. Add a file at test/formatters/installers/yourformatter.bash which explains how to install the formatter on Ubuntu. This will be used by CI.
  6. Test with make fmt-build FORMATTERS=yourformatter to do the installation, then make fmt-docker to start a shell with the formatter available. Verify it runs in this environment.
  7. Add an example input (pre-formatting) and output (post-formatting) file at test/formatters/samplecode/yourformatter/in.whatever and test/formatters/samplecode/yourformatter/out.whatever.
  8. Verify that the tests are passing, using make fmt-test FORMATTERS=yourformatter from inside the fmt-docker shell.
  9. Submit a pull request, CI should now be passing!

Acknowledgements

I got the idea for using RCS patches to avoid moving point too much from prettier-js, although that package does not implement the dynamic programming algorithm which Apheleia uses to guarantee stability of point even within a formatted region.

Note that despite this inspiration, Apheleia is a clean-room implementation which is free of the copyright terms of prettier-js.

About

🌷 Run code formatter on buffer contents without moving point, using RCS patches and dynamic programming.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published