this post was submitted on 29 Mar 2024
977 points (98.3% liked)
Programmer Humor
19623 readers
26 users here now
Welcome to Programmer Humor!
This is a place where you can post jokes, memes, humor, etc. related to programming!
For sharing awful code theres also Programming Horror.
Rules
- Keep content in english
- No advertisements
- Posts must be related to programming or programmer topics
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
sets the diff to ignore whitespace
Lines changed: 3
The pipeline should handle formatting. No matter how you screw it up, once you commit, it gets formatted to an agreed upon standard.
Or auto rejected when the format doesn't fit.
Yeah I think that's what he meant. You don't want CI editing commits.
I use pre-commit for this. It's pretty decent. The major flaws I've found with it:
Each linter has to be in its own repo (for most linter types). So it's not really usable for project-specific lints.
Doesn't really work with e.g. pyright or pylint unless you use no third party dependencies because you need a venv set up with your dependencies installed and pre-commit (fairly reasonably) doesn't take care of that.
Overall it's good, with some flaws, but there's nothing better available so you should definitely use it.
I've used pre-commit pretty extensively over the years and I'm confused.
Not sure what you mean by this. I have pre-commit set up to do linting in several different projects, and even have it running multiple differently-configured lint jobs in the same repo.
Again, I have pre-commit set up on multiple repos running pylint with multiple different plugins. Pre-commit absolutely does take care of setting up venvs with needed dependencies.
I don't mean using lints, I mean writing custom ones. Say you have a custom lint you want to use but it only will ever be used for that specific project. You can't just put the lint code in a subdirectory. It has to go in a separate repo.
Again I think you might be misunderstanding. It will install pylint fine, but if your project does e.g.
import yaml
, it's not going to set up a venv and install pyyaml for you.You can run locally defined hooks with pre-commit, just define them in the
repo: local
section of the.pre-commit-config.yaml
, and have it run a bash/python/whatever script or something that invokes your custom linting, wherever it lives in your file structure.Yeah I misspoke/misremembered there. For Python based stuff, it uses the currently active virtualenv or your global python install, so it relies on you installing your own dependencies. Which isn't really that big a deal imo, because you need to install those dependencies to run/debug/test locally anyways.
Sounds like you're just googling it rather than actually speaking from experience. Suppose I have written a Python lint and it's in my
ci/lints/foo
folder. How do I tell pre-commit that? (Hint: you can't)For small Python projects, maybe not. The project I'm working on has multiple sub-projects and those each have their own venvs, pyproject.tomls, etc.
Like I said, I've used pre-commit for multiple years now. If you can run your lints from a command line, you can configure pre-commit to run them.
Monorepos definitely make things a bit trickier, but again, you absolutely can write a local pre-commit hook that runs a bash command or script that 1.) activates the necessary venv and 2.) runs the lint command. I know this because I've done it, multiple times.
Yes but the whole point of pre-commit is it takes care of installing the lints. For most supported languages this requires the lint to be in its own repo. That is very annoying for project-specific lints that you would ideally want to just put in a subdirectory. Does that make sense?
Yeah there's not really any point using pre-commit at that point.
Some diff tools don't handle indentation by default.
So if you add a wrapper, it counts everything inside it as "changed"
That's what "toggle whitespace diff" is for.
You can do that? How?
Pre-commit hooks is a common approach to this, so that whatever is committed gets processed. Another possibility would be to set a bot on the repo to do automated commits after human-made ones, but that can get a little noisy.
Haha! Jokes on you! It was mostly gnu makefile calls to ruby scripts!!!! You've just broken the build a million different ways!
(Short for "The joke is on you".)