exfmt 🌸
exfmtis in alpha. If you run into any problems, please report them.The format produced by exfmt will change significantly before the 1.0.0 release. If this will cause problems for you, please refrain from using exfmt during the alpha- and beta-test periods.
exfmt is inspired by Aaron VonderHaar's elm-format, and aims
to format Elixir source code largely according to the standards
defined in Aleksei Magusev's Elixir Style Guide.
# exfmt takes any Elixir code...
defmodule MyApp, do: (
use( SomeLib )
def run( data ), do: {
:ok,
data
}
)
# and rewrites it in a clean and idiomatic style:
defmodule MyApp do
use SomeLib
def run(data) do
{:ok, data}
end
end
The benefits of exfmt:
- It makes code easier to write, because you never have to worry about minor formatting concerns while powering out new code.
- It makes code easier to read, because there are no longer distracting minor stylistic differences between different code bases. As such, your brain can map more efficiently from source to mental model.
- It makes code easier to maintain, because you can no longer have diffs related only to formatting; every diff necessarily involves a material change.
- It saves your team time debating how to format things, because there is a standard tool that formats everything the same way.
- It saves you time because you don't have to nitpick over formatting details of your code.
Contents
Usage
# Preview the exfmt formatting of an Elixir source file
mix exfmt path/to/file.exEditor integration
Atom
Atom users can install Ron Green's exfmt-atom package.
Vim
Vim users can use exfmt with Steve Dignam's Neoformat.
Once installed the following config will enable formatting of the current
Elixir buffer using :Neoformat. For further instructions, please reference
the Neoformat documentation.
let g:neoformat_elixir_exfmt = {
\ 'exe': 'mix',
\ 'args': ['exfmt', '--stdin'],
\ 'stdin': 1
\ }
let g:neoformat_enabled_elixir = ['exfmt']Visual Studio Code
VSCode users can use exfmt with James Hrisho's vscode-exfmt package.