GitHub - codingjoe/relint: Write your own linting rules using regular expressions. (original) (raw)
reLint
Regular Expression Linter
Write your own linting rules using regular expressions.
Installation
python3 -m pip install relint
# or, if you have super advanced linting expressions
python3 -m pip install "relint[regex]"
Examples & Recipes – The reLint Cookbook
Usage
You can write your own regular rules in a YAML file, like so:
- name: No ToDo pattern: '(?i)todo' # case insensitive flag hint: Get it done right away! filePattern: .*.(py|js) error: false
The name
attribute is the name of your linter, the pattern
can be any regular expression. The linter does lint entire files, therefore your expressions can match multiple lines and include newlines.
You can narrow down the file types your linter should be working with, by providing the optional filePattern
attribute. The default is .*
.
The optional error
attribute allows you to only show a warning but not exit with a bad (non-zero) exit code. The default is true
.
The following command will lint all files in the current directory:
relint -c .relint.yml FILE FILE2 ...
The default configuration file name is .relint.yml
within your working directory, but you can provide any YAML or JSON file.
If you prefer linting changed files (cached on git) you can use the option --diff [-d]
or --git-diff [-g]
:
git diff --unified=0 | relint my_file.py --diff
pre-commit
You can automate the linting process by adding apre-commit hook to your project. Add the following entry to your .pre-commit-config.yaml
:
- repo: https://github.com/codingjoe/relint
rev: 1.4.0
hooks:
- id: relint args: [-W] # optional, if you want to fail on warnings during commit