Awesome
purescript-tidy
A syntax tidy-upper (formatter) for PureScript.
Install
$ npm install -g purs-tidy
Also available for Nix via Nixpkgs 22.11+ and Easy PureScript Nix
Usage
You can use purs-tidy
to format files in place or via STDIN / STDOUT (which is useful for editor integration):
Formatting a collection of files in place:
$ purs-tidy format-in-place "src/**/*.purs"
Using STDIN to format a file:
$ purs-tidy format < MyFile.purs
You can also use purs-tidy
to verify whether files have already been formatted. This is often useful to verify, in continuous integration, that all project files are formatted according to the configuration. Files that would be changed by running format-in-place
are listed out.
Verifying files are formatted
$ purs-tidy check "src/**/*.purs"
All files are formatted.
Configuration
You can see all configuration that purs-tidy
accepts using the --help
flag for the command you are using:
$ purs-tidy format-in-place --help
Some common options include:
--indent
to set the number of spaces used in indentation, which defaults to 2 spaces--arrow-first
or--arrow-last
to control whether type signatures put arrows first on the line or last on the line (purty-style), which defaults to arrow-first.
You can generate a .tidyrc.json
using the generate-config
command. If a .tidyrc.json
file is found, it will be used in lieu of CLI arguments.
Operator Precedence
To support correct operator precedence without having to parse your entire
source tree (potentially for a single file), purs-tidy
uses a pre-baked
operator precedence table. By default, purs-tidy
ships with a table built
from the core and contrib organizations. If you need support for more
operators, you can generate your own table using the generate-operators
command.
$ spago sources | xargs purs-tidy generate-operators > .tidyoperators
$ purs-tidy generate-config --arrow-first --unicode-never --operators .tidyoperators
Editor Support
Spacemacs
Spacemacs' Purescript layer supports formatting using purs-tidy out of the box.
You can run the formatter manually with either M-x spacemacs/purescript-format
or with the shortcut SPC m =
.
To enable automatic formatting of the buffer on save, enable purescript-fmt-on-save
in your spacemacs config:
(setq-default dotspacemacs-configuration-layers '(
(purescript :variables
purescript-fmt-on-save t)))
Vim
via ALE
Add to your other fixers .vimrc
or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/neovim/init.vim
let b:ale_fixers = { 'purescript': [ 'purstidy' ] }
" suggested to fix on save
let g:ale_fix_on_save = 1
via Neoformat
Add to your .vimrc
or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/neovim/init.vim
let g:neoformat_enabled_purescript = ['purstidy']
VS Code
via PureScript IDE
The PureScript IDE plugin for VS Code supports purs-tidy
as a built-in formatter in versions after 0.25.1
. Choose purs-tidy
from the list of supported formatters in the settings, or add this to your settings.json
:
"purescript.formatter": "purs-tidy"
Development
Requirements
purs
: 0.15spago
: 0.20node
: 14esbuild
: 0.14
Running bin
For local development pointing to the output
directory:
$ npm run build
$ ./bin/index.dev.js --help
For a local production build pointing to the bundle
directory:
$ npm run bundle
$ ./bin/index.js --help
If you would like to use your local build of purs-tidy
in your editor, use path to bin/index.js
instead of the purs-tidy
binary in your settings. For example, instead of setting the format command to purs-tidy format
, set it to $TIDY_DIR/bin/index.js format
where $TIDY_DIR
is the location of your checkout of this repository.
Running test
To accept snapshot tests:
$ npm run test -- -a "--accept"
Generating the built-in operator table
$ npm run generate-default-operators