keep-sorted

command module
v0.4.0 Latest Latest
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Published: Mar 5, 2024 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 8 Imported by: 0

README

keep-sorted

go workflow status pre-commit workflow status

keep-sorted is a language-agnostic formatter that sorts lines between two markers in a larger file.

Usage

Surround the lines to keep sorted with keep-sorted start and keep-sorted end in comments. For example, in Java:

Before
@Component(
    modules = {

      UtilsModule.class,
      GetRequestModule.class,
      PostRequestModule.class,
      AuthModule.class,
      MonitoringModule.class,
      LoggingModule.class,

    })
interface FrontendComponent {
  FrontendRequestHandler requestHandler();
}
After
@Component(
    modules = {
+     // keep-sorted start
      AuthModule.class,
      GetRequestModule.class,
      LoggingModule.class,
      MonitoringModule.class,
      PostRequestModule.class,
      UtilsModule.class,
+     // keep-sorted end
    })
interface FrontendComponent {
  FrontendRequestHandler requestHandler();
}

You can also nest keep-sorted blocks:

                              
foo = [

  'y',
  'x',
  'z',

]
bar = [

  '1',
  '3',
  '2',

]

+# keep-sorted start block=yes
 bar = [
+  # keep-sorted start
   '1',
   '2',
   '3',
+  # keep-sorted end
 ]
 foo = [
+  # keep-sorted start
   'x',
   'y',
   'z',
+  # keep-sorted end
 ]
+# keep-sorted end
Sorting your file
$ keep-sorted [file1] [file2] ...

If the file is -, the tool will read from stdin and write to stdout.

pre-commit

You can automatically run keep-sorted by adding this repository to your pre-commit.

- repo: https://github.com/google/keep-sorted
  rev: v0.4.0
  hooks:
    - id: keep-sorted

Options

Pre-sorting options

Pre-sorting options tell keep-sorted what content in your file constitutes a single logical line that needs to be sorted.

Line continuations

By default, keep-sorted will interpret increasing indentation as a line continuation and group indented lines with the lines above. If you don't want this behavior, line continuation can be disabled via group=no.

// keep-sorted start
private final Bar bar;
private final Baz baz =
    new Baz()
private final Foo foo;
// keep-sorted end
+// keep-sorted start group=no
     new Baz()
 private final Bar bar;
 private final Baz baz =
 private final Foo foo;
 // keep-sorted end
Blocks

Alternatively, block=yes is an opt-in way to handle more complicated blocks of code, with some gotchas. It looks at characters that are typically expected to be closed in a single logical line of code (e.g., braces are balanced). Thus, what gets considered a group is the smallest set of lines that has all the typical symbols balanced (parentheses, braces, brackets, and quotes). This allows for sorting data such as Go structs and JSON objects.

  widgets := []widget{

    {
      Name: "def",
    },
    {
      Name: "abc",
    },

  }
  widgets := []widget{
+   // keep-sorted start block=yes
    {
      Name: "abc",
    },
    {
      Name: "def",
    },
+   // keep-sorted end
  }

Warning: for performance and simplicity reasons, this is extremely basic parsing and is fooled by things like unbalanced symbols in strings. As well, it's not language aware, so the groups are still being sorted as basic strings. e.g., "{\n" comes before "{Name:", so mixing the line break and whitespace usage may cause unexpected sorting.

Note: angle brackets (< and >) are not supported by block mode due to being used for mathematical expressions in an unbalanced format.

Custom grouping

Another way to group lines together is with the group_prefixes argument. This takes a comma-separated list of prefixes. Any line beginning with one of those prefixes will be treated as a continuation line.


spaghetti
with meatballs
peanut butter
and jelly
hamburger
with lettuce
and tomatoes

+// keep-sorted start group_prefixes=and,with
 hamburger
 with lettuce
 and tomatoes
 peanut butter
 and jelly
 spaghetti
 with meatballs
+// keep-sorted end
Comments

Comments embedded within the sorted block are made to stick with their successor. The comment lines must start with the same comment marker as the keep-sorted instruction itself (e.g. # in the case below). keep-sorted will recognize //, /*, #, --, ;, and <!-- as comment markers, for any other kinds of comments, use sticky_prefixes.

This special handling can be disabled by specifying the parameter sticky_comments=no:

# keep-sorted start
# alice
username: al1
# bob
username: bo2
# charlie
username: ch3
# keep-sorted end
+# keep-sorted start sticky_comments=no
# alice
# bob
# charlie
username: al1
username: bo2
username: ch3
 # keep-sorted end

More prefixes can be made to stick with their successor. The argument sticky_prefixes takes a comma-separated list of prefixes that will all be treated as sticky. These prefixes cannot contain space characters.

+// keep-sorted start sticky_prefixes=/*,@Annotation
 Baz baz;
 /* Foo */
 @Annotation
 Foo foo;
 // keep-sorted end
Skipping lines

In some cases, it may not be possible to have the start directive on the line immediately before the sorted region. In this case, skip_lines can be used to indicate how many lines are to be skipped before the sorted region.

For instance, this can be used with a Markdown table, to prevent the headers and the dashed line after the headers from being sorted:


Name    | Value
------- | -----
Charlie | Baz
Delta   | Qux
Bravo   | Bar
Alpha   | Foo

+<!-- keep-sorted start skip_lines=2 -->
 Name    | Value
 ------- | -----
 Alpha   | Foo
 Bravo   | Bar
 Charlie | Baz
 Delta   | Qux
+<!-- keep-sorted end -->
Sorting options

Sorting options tell keep-sorted how the logical lines in your keep-sorted block should be sorted.

Case sensitivity

By default, keep-sorted is case-sensitive. This means that uppercase letters will be ordered before lowercase ones. This behavior can be changed to sort case-insensitively using the case flag:

# keep-sorted start
Bravo
Delta
Foxtrot
alpha
charlie
echo
# keep-sorted end
+# keep-sorted start case=no
 alpha
 Bravo
 charlie
 Delta
 echo
 Foxtrot
 # keep-sorted end
Numeric sorting

By default, keep-sorted uses lexical sorting. Depending on your data, this is not what you might want. By specifying numeric=yes, sequences of digits embedded in the lines are interpreted by their numeric values and sorted accordingly:

progress = (
  # keep-sorted start
  'PROGRESS_100_PERCENT',
  'PROGRESS_10_PERCENT',
  'PROGRESS_1_PERCENT',
  'PROGRESS_50_PERCENT',
  'PROGRESS_5_PERCENT',
  # keep-sorted end
)
progress = (
+ # keep-sorted start numeric=yes
  'PROGRESS_1_PERCENT',
  'PROGRESS_5_PERCENT',
  'PROGRESS_10_PERCENT',
  'PROGRESS_50_PERCENT',
  'PROGRESS_100_PERCENT',
  # keep-sorted end
)
Prefix sorting

Sometimes, it is useful to specify a custom ordering for some elements. The argument prefix_order=… takes a comma-separated list of prefixes that is matched against the lines to be sorted: if the line starts with one of the specified values, it is put at the corresponding position. If an empty prefix is specified, any line not covered by other prefixes is matched.





// keep-sorted start
DO_SOMETHING_WITH_BAR,
DO_SOMETHING_WITH_FOO,
FINAL_BAR,
FINAL_FOO,
INIT_BAR,
INIT_FOO
// keep-sorted end
 // Keep this list sorted with
 //   - INIT_* first
 //   - FINAL_* last
 //   - Everything else in between
+// keep-sorted start prefix_order=INIT_,,FINAL_
 INIT_BAR,
 INIT_FOO,
 DO_SOMETHING_WITH_BAR,
 DO_SOMETHING_WITH_FOO,
 FINAL_BAR,
 FINAL_FOO
 // keep-sorted end

This can also be combined with numeric sorting:

droid_components = [
+ # keep-sorted start numeric=yes prefix_order=R2,C3
  R2D2_BOLTS_5_MM,
  R2D2_BOLTS_10_MM,
  R2D2_PROJECTOR,
  C3PO_ARM_L,
  C3PO_ARM_R,
  C3PO_HEAD,
  R4_MOTIVATOR,
  # keep-sorted end
]
Ignore prefixes

For some use cases, there are prefix strings that would be best ignored when trying to keep items in an order. The argument ignore_prefixes=… takes a comma-separated list of prefixes that are ignored for sorting purposes. If the line starts with any or no whitespace followed by one of the listed prefixes, the prefix is treated as the empty string for sorting purposes.

// keep-sorted start
fs.setBoolFlag("paws_with_cute_toebeans", true)
fs.setBoolFlag("whiskered_adorable_dog", true)
fs.setIntFlag("pretty_whiskered_kitten", 6)
// keep-sorted end
+// keep-sorted start ignore_prefixes=fs.setBoolFlag,fs.setIntFlag
 fs.setBoolFlag("paws_with_cute_toebeans", true)
 fs.setIntFlag("pretty_whiskered_kitten", 6)
 fs.setBoolFlag("whiskered_adorable_dog", true)
 // keep-sorted end

This can also be combined with numerical sorting:

 droid_components = [
+  # keep-sorted start numeric=yes ignore_prefixes=R2D2,C3PO,R4
   C3PO_ARM_L,
   C3PO_ARM_R,
   R2D2_BOLTS_5_MM,
   R2D2_BOLTS_10_MM,
   C3PO_HEAD,
   R4_MOTIVATOR,
   R2D2_PROJECTOR,
   # keep-sorted end
 ]
Post-sorting options

Post-sorting options are additional convenience features that make the resulting code more readable.

Duplicates

By default, keep-sorted removes duplicates from the sorted section. If different comments are attached to otherwise identical lines, the entries are preserved:

# keep-sorted start
rotation: bar
# Add bar twice!
rotation: bar
rotation: baz
rotation: foo
# keep-sorted end

The duplicate handling can be changed with the switch remove_duplicates:

+# keep-sorted start remove_duplicates=no
 rotation: bar
 rotation: bar
 rotation: baz
 rotation: baz
 rotation: baz
 rotation: foo
 # keep-sorted end
Newline separated

There is also a newline_separated=yes option that can be used to add blank lines between the items that keep-sorted is sorting:

# keep-sorted start
Apples
Bananas
Oranges
Pineapples
# keep-sorted end



+# keep-sorted start newline_separated=yes
 Apples
 
 Bananas
 
 Oranges
 
 Pineapples
 # keep-sorted end

Documentation

Overview

keep-sorted is a tool that sorts lines between two markers in a larger file.

Directories

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