swift-format
allows users to configure a subset of its behavior, both when
used as a command line tool or as an API.
A swift-format
configuration file is a JSON file with the following
top-level keys and values:
-
version
(number): The version of the configuration file. For now, this should always be1
. -
lineLength
(number): The maximum allowed length of a line, in characters. -
indentation
(object): The kind and amount of whitespace that should be added when indenting one level. The object value of this property should have exactly one of the following properties:spaces
(number): One level of indentation is the given number of spaces.tabs
(number): One level of indentation is the given number of tabs.
-
tabWidth
(number): The number of spaces that should be considered equivalent to one tab character. This is used during line length calculations when tabs are used for indentation. -
maximumBlankLines
(number): The maximum number of consecutive blank lines that are allowed to be present in a source file. Any number larger than this will be collapsed down to the maximum. -
spacesBeforeEndOfLineComments
(number): The number of spaces between the last token on a non-empty line and a line comment starting with//
. -
respectsExistingLineBreaks
(boolean): Indicates whether or not existing line breaks in the source code should be honored (if they are valid according to the style guidelines being enforced). If this settings isfalse
, then the formatter will be more "opinionated" by only inserting line breaks where absolutely necessary and removing any others, effectively canonicalizing the output. -
lineBreakBeforeControlFlowKeywords
(boolean): Determines the line-breaking behavior for control flow keywords that follow a closing brace, likeelse
andcatch
. If true, a line break will be added before the keyword, forcing it onto its own line. If false (the default), the keyword will be placed after the closing brace (separated by a space). -
lineBreakBeforeEachArgument
(boolean): Determines the line-breaking behavior for generic arguments and function arguments when a declaration is wrapped onto multiple lines. If true, a line break will be added before each argument, forcing the entire argument list to be laid out vertically. If false (the default), arguments will be laid out horizontally first, with line breaks only being fired when the line length would be exceeded. -
lineBreakBeforeEachGenericRequirement
(boolean): Determines the line-breaking behavior for generic requirements when the requirements list is wrapped onto multiple lines. If true, a line break will be added before each requirement, forcing the entire requirements list to be laid out vertically. If false (the default), requirements will be laid out horizontally first, with line breaks only being fired when the line length would be exceeded. -
lineBreakBetweenDeclarationAttributes
(boolean): Determines the line-breaking behavior for adjacent attributes on declarations. If true, a line break will be added between each attribute, forcing the attribute list to be laid out vertically. If false (the default), attributes will be laid out horizontally first, with line breaks only being fired when the line length would be exceeded. -
prioritizeKeepingFunctionOutputTogether
(boolean): Determines if function-like declaration outputs should be prioritized to be together with the function signature right (closing) parenthesis. If false (the default), function output (i.e. throws, return type) is not prioritized to be together with the signature's right parenthesis, and when the line length would be exceeded, a line break will be fired after the function signature first, indenting the declaration output one additional level. If true, A line break will be fired further up in the function's declaration (e.g. generic parameters, parameters) before breaking on the function's output. -
indentConditionalCompilationBlocks
(boolean): Determines if conditional compilation blocks are indented. If this setting isfalse
the body of#if
,#elseif
, and#else
is not indented. Defaults totrue
. -
lineBreakAroundMultilineExpressionChainComponents
(boolean): Determines whether line breaks should be forced before and after multiline components of dot-chained expressions, such as function calls and subscripts chained together through member access (i.e. "." expressions). When any component is multiline and this option is true, a line break is forced before the "." of the component and after the component's closing delimiter (i.e. right paren, right bracket, right brace, etc.). -
spacesAroundRangeFormationOperators
(boolean): Determines whether whitespace should be forced before and after the range formation operators...
and..<
. -
multiElementCollectionTrailingCommas
(boolean): Determines whether multi-element collection literals should have trailing commas. Defaults totrue
.
TODO: Add support for enabling/disabling specific syntax transformations in the pipeline.
An example .swift-format
configuration file is shown below.
{
"version": 1,
"lineLength": 100,
"indentation": {
"spaces": 2
},
"maximumBlankLines": 1,
"respectsExistingLineBreaks": true,
"lineBreakBeforeControlFlowKeywords": true,
"lineBreakBeforeEachArgument": true
}
In the rules
block of .swift-format
, you can specify which rules to apply
when linting and formatting your project. Read the
rules documentation to see the list of all
supported linter and formatter rules, and their overview.
You can also run this command to see the list of rules in the default
swift-format
configuration:
$ swift-format dump-configuration
The SwiftConfiguration
module contains a Configuration
type that is
equivalent to the JSON structure described above. (In fact, Configuration
conforms to Codable
and is how the JSON form is read from and written to
disk.)
The SwiftFormatter
and SwiftLinter
APIs in the SwiftFormat
module take a
mandatory Configuration
argument that specifies how the formatter should
behave when acting upon source code or syntax trees.
The default initializer for Configuration
creates a value equivalent to the
default configuration that would be printed by invoking
swift-format dump-configuration
. API users can also provide their own
configuration by modifying this value or loading it from another source using
Swift's Codable
APIs.