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Version: 2.23 (prerelease)

yapf


A formatter for Python files (https://github.com/google/yapf).

This version of Pants uses yapf version 0.40.2 by default. Use a dedicated lockfile and the install_from_resolve option to control this.

Backend: pants.backend.python.lint.yapf

Config section: [yapf]

Basic options

args

--yapf-args="[<shell_str>, <shell_str>, ...]"
PANTS_YAPF_ARGS
pants.toml
[yapf]
args = [
<shell_str>,
<shell_str>,
...,
]
default: []

Arguments to pass directly to yapf, e.g. --yapf-args='--no-local-style'.

Certain arguments, specifically --recursive, --in-place, and --parallel, will be ignored because Pants takes care of finding all the relevant files and running the formatting in parallel.

skip

--[no-]yapf-skip
PANTS_YAPF_SKIP
pants.toml
[yapf]
skip = <bool>
default: False

If true, don't use yapf when running pants fmt and pants lint.

Advanced options

config

--yapf-config=<file_option>
PANTS_YAPF_CONFIG
pants.toml
[yapf]
config = <file_option>
default: None

Path to style file understood by yapf (https://github.com/google/yapf#formatting-style/).

Setting this option will disable [yapf].config_discovery. Use this option if the config is located in a non-standard location.

config_discovery

--[no-]yapf-config-discovery
PANTS_YAPF_CONFIG_DISCOVERY
pants.toml
[yapf]
config_discovery = <bool>
default: True

If true, Pants will include any relevant config files during runs (.style.yapf, pyproject.toml, and setup.cfg).

Use [yapf].config instead if your config is in a non-standard location.

console_script

--yapf-console-script=<str>
PANTS_YAPF_CONSOLE_SCRIPT
pants.toml
[yapf]
console_script = <str>
default: yapf

The console script for the tool. Using this option is generally preferable to (and mutually exclusive with) specifying an --entry-point since console script names have a higher expectation of staying stable across releases of the tool. Usually, you will not want to change this from the default.

entry_point

--yapf-entry-point=<str>
PANTS_YAPF_ENTRY_POINT
pants.toml
[yapf]
entry_point = <str>
default: None

The entry point for the tool. Generally you only want to use this option if the tool does not offer a --console-script (which this option is mutually exclusive with). Usually, you will not want to change this from the default.

install_from_resolve

--yapf-install-from-resolve=<str>
PANTS_YAPF_INSTALL_FROM_RESOLVE
pants.toml
[yapf]
install_from_resolve = <str>
default: None

If specified, install the tool using the lockfile for this named resolve.

This resolve must be defined in [python].resolves, as described in https://www.pantsbuild.org/2.23/docs/python/overview/lockfiles#lockfiles-for-tools.

The resolve's entire lockfile will be installed, unless specific requirements are listed via the requirements option, in which case only those requirements will be installed. This is useful if you don't want to invalidate the tool's outputs when the resolve incurs changes to unrelated requirements.

If unspecified, and the lockfile option is unset, the tool will be installed using the default lockfile shipped with Pants, which uses yapf version 0.40.2.

If unspecified, and the lockfile option is set, the tool will use the custom yapf "tool lockfile" generated from the version and extra_requirements options. But note that this mechanism is deprecated.

interpreter_constraints

--yapf-interpreter-constraints="['<str>', '<str>', ...]"
PANTS_YAPF_INTERPRETER_CONSTRAINTS
pants.toml
[yapf]
interpreter_constraints = [
'<str>',
'<str>',
...,
]
default:
[
  "CPython>=3.7,<4"
]

Python interpreter constraints for this tool.

requirements

--yapf-requirements="['<str>', '<str>', ...]"
PANTS_YAPF_REQUIREMENTS
pants.toml
[yapf]
requirements = [
'<str>',
'<str>',
...,
]
default: []

If install_from_resolve is specified, install these requirements, at the versions provided by the specified resolve's lockfile.

Values can be pip-style requirements (e.g., tool or tool==1.2.3 or tool>=1.2.3), or addresses of python_requirement targets (or targets that generate or depend on python_requirement targets). Make sure to use the // prefix to refer to targets using their full address from the root (e.g. //3rdparty/python:tool). This is necessary to distinguish address specs from local or VCS requirements.

The lockfile will be validated against the requirements - if a lockfile doesn't provide the requirement (at a suitable version, if the requirement specifies version constraints) Pants will error.

If unspecified, install the entire lockfile.

Deprecated options

None

None