In 529aa4b011
by setting the identifier info to nullptr, we started to subtly
interfere with the parts in the beginning of the function,
529aa4b011/clang/lib/Format/UnwrappedLineParser.cpp (L991)
causing the preprocessor nesting to change in some cases. E.g., for the
added regression test, clang-format started incorrectly guessing the
language as C++.
This tries to address this by introducing an internal identifier info
element to use instead.
Reviewed By: curdeius, MyDeveloperDay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120315
Adds a new option InsertBraces to insert the optional braces after
if, else, for, while, and do in C++.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120217
We can return as early as possible and only calculate IsComparison if we
really need to. Also cache getPrecedence() instead of querying it at
most 4 times.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119923
This reverts commit e021987273.
This commit provokes failures in formatting tests of polly.
Cf. https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/205/builds/3320.
That's probably because of `)` being annotated as `CastRParen` instead of `Unknown` before, hence being kept on the same line with the next token.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53876.
This is a solution for standard C++ casts: const_cast, dynamic_cast, reinterpret_cast, static_cast.
A general approach handling all possible casts is not possible without semantic information.
Consider the code:
```
static_cast<T>(*function_pointer_variable)(arguments);
```
vs.
```
some_return_type<T> (*function_pointer_variable)(parameters);
// Later used as:
function_pointer_variable = &some_function;
return function_pointer_variable(args);
```
In the latter case, it's not a cast but a variable declaration of a pointer to function.
Without knowing what `some_return_type<T>` is (and clang-format does not know it), it's hard to distinguish between the two cases. Theoretically, one could check whether "parameters" are types (not a cast) and "arguments" are value/expressions (a cast), but that might be inefficient (needs lots of lookahead).
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D120140
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/24781.
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/38160.
This patch splits `TT_RecordLBrace` for classes/enums/structs/unions (and other records, e.g. interfaces) and uses the brace type to avoid the error-prone scanning for record token.
The mentioned bugs were provoked by the scanning being too limited (and so not considering `const` or `constexpr`, or other qualifiers, on an anonymous struct variable declaration).
Moreover, the proposed solution is more efficient as we parse tokens once only (scanning being parsing too).
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119785
We can now configure the space between requires and the following paren,
seperate for clauses and expressions.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113369
Detect requires expressions in more unusable contexts. This is far from
perfect, but currently we have no good metric to decide between a
requires expression and a trailing requires clause.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119138
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53758.
Braces in loops and in `if` statements with leading (block) comments were formatted according to `BraceWrapping.AfterFunction` and not `AllowShortBlocksOnASingleLine`/`AllowShortLoopsOnASingleLine`/`AllowShortIfStatementsOnASingleLine`.
Previously, the code:
```
while (true) {
f();
}
/*comment*/ while (true) {
f();
}
```
was incorrectly formatted to:
```
while (true) {
f();
}
/*comment*/ while (true) { f(); }
```
when using config:
```
BasedOnStyle: LLVM
BreakBeforeBraces: Custom
BraceWrapping:
AfterFunction: false
AllowShortBlocksOnASingleLine: false
AllowShortLoopsOnASingleLine: false
```
and it was (correctly but by chance) formatted to:
```
while (true) {
f();
}
/*comment*/ while (true) {
f();
}
```
when using enabling brace wrapping after functions:
```
BasedOnStyle: LLVM
BreakBeforeBraces: Custom
BraceWrapping:
AfterFunction: true
AllowShortBlocksOnASingleLine: false
AllowShortLoopsOnASingleLine: false
```
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119649
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53576.
There was an inconsistency in formatting of delete expressions.
Before:
```
delete (void*)a;
delete[](void*) a;
```
After this patch:
```
delete (void*)a;
delete[] (void*)a;
```
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119117
- Add or remove empty lines surrounding union blocks.
- Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53229, in which
keywords like class and struct in a line ending with left brace or
whose next line is left brace only, will be falsely recognized as
definition line, causing extra empty lines inserted surrounding blocks
with no need to be formatted.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D119067
The l_brace token in a macro definition should not be set to
TT_FunctionLBrace.
This patch could have fixed#42087.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118969
The second space in `void foo() &` is always produced by clang-format,
and isn't evidence of any particular style.
Before this patch, it was considered evidence of PAS_Right, because
there is a space before a pointerlike ampersand.
This caused the following code to have "unstable" pointer alignment:
void a() &;
void b() &;
int *x;
PAS_Left, Derive=false would produce 'int* x' with other lines unchanged.
But subsequent formatting with Derive=true would produce 'int *x' again.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118921
* Give I[1] and I[-1] a name:
- Easier to understand
- Easier to debug (since you don't go through operator[] everytime)
* TheLine->First != TheLine->Last follows since last is a l brace and
first isn't.
* Factor the check for is(tok::l_brace) out.
* Drop else after return.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115060
This commit changes the condition of requiring comment to start with
alphanumeric characters to make no change only for a certain set of
characters, currently horizontal whitespace and punctuation characters,
to support wider set of leading characters unrelated to documentation
generation directives.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118869
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/31592.
This commits enables lexing of digraphs in C++11 and onwards.
Enabling them in C++03 is error-prone, as it would unconditionally treat sequences like "<:" as digraphs, even if they are followed by a single colon, e.g. "<::" would be treated as "[:" instead of "<" followed by "::". Lexing in C++11 doesn't have this problem as it looks ahead the following token.
The relevant excerpt from Lexer::LexTokenInternal:
```
// C++0x [lex.pptoken]p3:
// Otherwise, if the next three characters are <:: and the subsequent
// character is neither : nor >, the < is treated as a preprocessor
// token by itself and not as the first character of the alternative
// token <:.
```
Also, note that both clang and gcc turn on digraphs by default (-fdigraphs), so clang-format should match this behaviour.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118706
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52772.
This patch fixes the formatting of the code:
```
auto aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa = {};
auto b = g([] {
return;
});
```
which should be left as is, but before this patch was formatted to:
```
auto aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa = {};
auto b = g([] {
return;
});
```
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115972
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/34626.
Before, the include sorter would break the code:
```
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdint.h> /* long
comment */
```
and change it into:
```
#include <stdint.h> /* long
#include <stdio.h>
comment */
```
This commit handles only the most basic case of a single block comment on an include line, but does not try to handle all the possible edge cases with multiple comments.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118627
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53441.
Expected code:
```
/**/ //
int a; //
```
was before misformatted to:
```
/**/ //
int a; //
```
Because the "remaining length" (after the starting `/*`) of an empty block comment `/**/` was computed to be 0 instead of 2.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118475
SortJavaScriptImports attempts to set its currently parsed token to an
invalid token when it reaches the end of the line. However in doing so,
it used a `FormatToken`, which contains a `Token Tok`. `Token` does not
have a constructor, so its fields start out as uninitialized memory.
`Token::startToken()` initializes all fields. Calling it in
`JavaScriptImportSorter`'s constructor thus fixes the problem.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118448
import X = A.B.C;
Previously, these were unhandled and would terminate import sorting.
With this change, aliases sort as their own group, coming last after all
other imports.
Aliases are not sorted within their group, as they may reference each
other, so order is significant.
This reverts commit f750c3d95a. It fixes
the msan issue by not parsing past the end of the line when handling
import aliases.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118446
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53430.
Initially, I had a quick and dirty approach, but it led to a myriad of special cases handling comments (that may add unwrapped lines).
So I added TT_RecordLBrace type annotations and it seems like a much nicer solution.
I think that in the future it will allow us to clean up some convoluted code that detects records.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118337
Users can define aliases for long symbols using import aliases:
import X = A.B.C;
Previously, these were unhandled and would terminate import sorting.
With this change, aliases sort as their own group, coming last after all
other imports.
Aliases are not sorted within their group, as they may reference each
other, so order is significant.
Revision URI: https://reviews.llvm.org/D118361
- Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/53227 that wrongly
indents multiline comments
- Fixes wrong detection of single-line opening braces when used along
with those only opening scopes, causing crashes due to duplicated
replacements on the same token:
void foo()
{
{
int x;
}
}
- Fixes wrong recognition of first line of definition when the line
starts with block comment, causing crashes due to duplicated
replacements on the same token for this leads toward skipping the line
starting with inline block comment:
/*
Some descriptions about function
*/
/*inline*/ void bar() {
}
- Fixes wrong recognition of enum when used as a type name rather than
starting definition block, causing crashes due to duplicated
replacements on the same token since both actions for enum and for
definition blocks were taken place:
void foobar(const enum EnumType e) {
}
- Change to use function keyword for JavaScript instead of comparing
strings
- Resolves formatting conflict with options EmptyLineAfterAccessModifier
and EmptyLineBeforeAccessModifier (prompts with --dry-run (-n) or
--output-replacement-xml but no observable change)
- Recognize long (len>=5) uppercased name taking a single line as return
type and fix the problem of adding newline below it, with adding new
token type FunctionLikeOrFreestandingMacro and marking tokens in
UnwrappedLineParser:
void
afunc(int x) {
return;
}
TYPENAME
func(int x, int y) {
// ...
}
- Remove redundant and repeated initialization
- Do no change to newlines before EOF
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117520
LLVM Programmer’s Manual strongly discourages the use of `std::vector<bool>` and suggests `llvm::BitVector` as a possible replacement.
Currently, some users of `std::vector<bool>` cannot switch to `llvm::BitVector` because it doesn't implement the `pop_back()` and `back()` functions.
To enable easy transition of `std::vector<bool>` users, this patch implements `llvm::BitVector::pop_back()` and `llvm::BitVector::back()`.
Reviewed By: dexonsmith
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117115
This factors out a pattern that comes up from time to time.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117769
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/44601.
This patch handles a bug when parsing a below example code :
```
template <class> class S;
template <class T> bool operator<(S<T> const &x, S<T> const &y) {
return x.i < y.i;
}
template <class T> class S {
int i = 42;
friend bool operator< <>(S const &, S const &);
};
int main() { return S<int>{} < S<int>{}; }
```
which parse `< <>` as `<< >`, not `< <>` in terms of tokens as discussed in discord.
1. Add a condition in `tryMergeLessLess()` considering `operator` keyword and `>`
2. Force to leave a whitespace between `tok::less` and a template opener
3. Add unit test
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117398
This style is similar to AlwaysBreak, but places closing brackets on new lines.
For example, if you have a multiline parameter list, clang-format currently only supports breaking per-parameter, but places the closing bracket on the line of the last parameter.
Function(
param1,
param2,
param3);
A style supported by other code styling tools (e.g. rustfmt) is to allow the closing brackets to be placed on their own line, aiding the user in being able to quickly infer the bounds of the block of code.
Function(
param1,
param2,
param3
);
For prior work on a similar feature, see: https://reviews.llvm.org/D33029.
Note: This currently only supports block indentation for closing parentheses.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109557
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/24784.
With config:
```
AllowShortFunctionsOnASingleLine: Inline
NamespaceIndentation: All
```
The code:
```
namespace Test
{
void f()
{
return;
}
}
```
was incorrectly formatted to:
```
namespace Test
{
void f() { return; }
}
```
since the function `f` was considered being inside a class/struct/record.
That's because the check was simplistic and only checked for a non-zero indentation level of the line starting `f`.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D117142
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/27037
Sorry its taken so long to get to this issue! (got it before it hit its 6th birthday!)
```
void operator delete(void *foo)ATTRIB;
```
(void *foo) is incorrectly determined to be a C-Style Cast resulting in the space being removed after the ) and before the attrib, due to the detection of
```
delete (A* )a;
```
The following was previously unaffected
```
void operator new(void *foo) ATTRIB;
```
Fixes#27037
Reviewed By: curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116920
Fixes https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52976.
- Make no formatting for macros
- Attach comment with definition headers
- Make no change on use of empty lines at block start/end
- Fix misrecognition of keyword namespace
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116663
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
I think the deque was chosen because of a better push_front, but in
combination with llvm::reverse the push_back'ed vector should be the
better choice.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115064
This change adds an option AfterOverloadedOperator in SpaceBeforeParensOptions to add a space between overloaded operator and opening parentheses in clang-format.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116283
* Give I[1] and I[-1] a name:
- Easier to understand
- Easier to debug (since you don't go through operator[] everytime)
* TheLine->First != TheLine->Last follows since last is a l brace and
first isn't.
* Factor the check for is(tok::l_brace) out.
* Drop else after return.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115060
This commit resolves GitHub issue #45895 (Bugzilla #46550), to
add or remove empty line between definition blocks including
namespaces, classes, structs, enums and functions.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116314
My team has a vendetta against lines ending with an open parenthesis, thought it might be useful for others too 😊
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116170
There is some similar looking code in `TokenAnnotator.cpp` but given that I've
never worked on clang-format before I don't know what the purpose of that code
is and how it's related to `UnwrappedLineParser.cpp`.
Either way, it fixes clang-format with `BraceWrapping.AfterEnum=true` and
`AllowShortEnumsOnASingleLine=false` to behave like the documentation says.
Before this patch:
```
enum
{
A,
B
} myEnum;
```
After this patch:
```
enum {
A,
B
} myEnum;
```
According to the unittests which I had to modify this would change the LLVM
style. Please evaluate if you want to change the defaults or if you consider
the current style a bug.
Reviewed By: curdeius, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106349
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52881
It seems that clang-format off/on is not being honoured in regard to adding spaces.
My understanding of clang-format off/on is that it marks the token as finalized based on whether formatting is currently enabled or disabled.
This was causing a space to be added between the `<` and `<<` in the Cuda kernel `foo<<<1, 1>>>();`
This if doesn't solve this actual issue but ensure that clang-format is at least honoured.
Reviewed By: curdeius, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116494
This diff extends the -style=file option to allow a config file to be specified explicitly. This is useful (for instance) when adding IDE commands to reformat code to a personal style.
Usage: `clang-format -style=file:<path/to/config/file> ...`
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius, MyDeveloperDay, zwliew
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D72326
Currently, we are unable to inherit from a chain of parent configs where the outermost parent config has `BasedOnStyle: InheritParentConfig` set. This patch adds a test case for this scenario, and adds support for it.
To illustrate, suppose we have the following directory structure:
```
- e/
|- .clang-format (BasedOnStyle: InheritParentConfig) <-- outermost config
|- sub/
|- .clang-format (BasedOnStyle: InheritParentConfig)
|- sub/
|- .clang-format (BasedOnStyle: InheritParentConfig)
|- code.cpp
```
Now consider what happens when we run `clang-format --style=file /e/sub/sub/code.cpp`.
Without this patch, on a release build, only the innermost config will be applied. On a debug build, clang-format crashes due to an assertion failure.
With this patch, clang-format behaves as we'd expect, applying all 3 configs.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116371
Single-variant enums were still getting placed on a single line
even when AllowShortEnumsOnASingleLine was false. This fixes that
by checking that setting when looking to merge lines.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116188
Move the handling of brace wrapping after => from unwrapped line
parser to token annotator and clean up the parser.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115967
It appears that this regressed the formatting of initializer lists in some
cases, see comments on https://reviews.llvm.org/D114583. I'll follow-up
by adding regression tests for these.
This reverts commit c41b3b0fa0.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D116000
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/49804
Interaction between IndentExternBlock and AfterExternBlock means you cannot have AfterExternBlock = true and IndentExternBlock = NoIndent/Indent
This patch resolves that
```
BraceWrapping:
AfterExternBlock: true
IndentExternBlock: AfterExternBlock
```
Fixes: #49804
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115879
The alignment fix introduced by https://reviews.llvm.org/D104388 caused a regression whereby formatting of code that follows the lambda block is incorrect i.e. separate expressions are put on the same line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115738
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/52715Fixes#52715
`AllowShortBlocksOnASingleLine` seems to never be checked for "Empty" as such if its used it will be considered "Always" as we only ever check `AllowShortBlocksOnASingleLine != Never`
This impacts C++ as well as C# hence the slightly duplicated test.
Reviewed By: curdeius, jbcoe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115794
https://github.com/llvm/llvm-project/issues/48642
clang-format does not respect raw string literals when sorting includes
```
const char *RawStr = R"(
)";
```
Running clang-format over with SortIncludes enabled transforms this code to:
```
const char *RawStr = R"(
)";
```
The following code tries to minimize this impact during IncludeSorting, by treating R"( and )" as equivalent of // clang-format off/on
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D115168Fixes#48642
Responding to a Discord call to help {D113977} and heavily inspired by the unlanded {D34225} add some support to help coroutinues from not being formatted from
```for co_await(auto elt : seq)```
to
```
for
co_await(auto elt : seq)
```
Because of the dominance of clang-format in the C++ community, I don't think we should make it the blocker that prevents users from embracing the newer parts of the standard because we butcher the layout of some of the new constucts.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, Quuxplusone, ChuanqiXu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114859
Make sure we do not try to change line comments that are non-regular, i.e. do
not start with "//" or "#". This can for example happen when "//" is
broken into two lines with an escaped newline.
Previously, clang-format would not correctly identify preprocessor
directives directly following a conflict marker, which would result in
violating the formatter's invariants.
The provided test fails in assert mode before this change.
{D110833} regressed behavior of spaces before parentheses for operators, this revision reverts that so that operators are handled as they were before.
I think in hindsight it was a mistake to try and consume operator behaviour in with the function behaviour, I think Operators can be considered a special style. Its seems the code is getting confused as to if this is a function declaration or definition.
I think latterly we can consider adding an operator parentheses specific custom option but this should have been explicitly called out as it can impact projects.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114696
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52517
clang-format is butchering modules, this could easily become a barrier to entry for modules given clang-formats wide spread use.
Prevent the following from adding spaces around the `:` (cf was considering the ':' as an InheritanceColon)
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, owenpan, ChuanqiXu
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114151
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=52595
missing space between `T(&&)` but not between `T (&` due to && being incorrectly thought of as `UnaryOperator` rather than `PointerOrReference`
```
int operator()(T (&)[N]) { return 0; }
int operator()(T(&&)[N]) { return 1; }
```
Existing Unit tests are changed because actually I think they are originally incorrect, and are inconsistent with the (&) cases that are 4 or 5 lines above them.
Reviewed By: curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114519
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=47936
Using the MultiLine setting for BraceWrapping.AfterControlStatement appears to disable AllowShortFunctionsOnASingleLine, even in cases without any control statements
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D114521
Make all code go through FormatTokenSource instead of going around it, which
makes changes to TokenSource brittle.
Add LLVM_DEBUG in FormatTokenSource to be able to follow the token stream.
When building clang-format with -Wall on Visual Studio 20119 we see the following, prevent this the only -Wall error
```
..FormatTokenLexer.cpp(45) : warning C4868: compiler may not enforce left-to-right evaluation order in braced initializer list
```
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113844
1. IndexTokenSource::getNextToken cannot return nullptr; some code was
still written assuming it can; make getNextToken more resilient against
incorrect input and fix its call-sites.
2. Change various asserts that can happen due to user provided input to
conditionals in the code.
Makes clang-format bail out if an in-memory source file with an
unsupported BOM is handed in instead of creating source locations that
are violating clang's assumptions.
In the future, we should add support to better transport error messages
like this through clang-format instead of printing to stderr and not
creating any changes.
Looks like the work of {D113393} requires manual clang-formatting intervention.
Removal of the space between `auto` and `{}`
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, Quuxplusone
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113826
The coding style of some projects requires to have more control on space
before opening parentheses.
The goal is to add the support of clang-format to more projects.
For example adding a space only for function definitions or
declarations.
This revision adds SpaceBeforeParensOptions to configure each option
independently from one another.
Differentiel Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110833
[NFC] This patch fixes URLs containing "master". Old URLs were either broken or
redirecting to the new URL.
Reviewed By: #libc, ldionne, mehdi_amini
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D113186
Currently constructor initializer lists sometimes format incorrectly
when there is a preprocessor directive in the middle of the list.
This patch fixes the issue when parsing the initilizer list by
ignoring the preprocessor directive when checking if a block is
part of an initializer list.
rdar://82554274
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109951
Earlier during the development of {D69764} I felt it was no longer necessary to
ensure we were not trying to change code which didn't need to change
and we felt this could be removed, however I'd like to bring this back for now
as I am seeing some false positives in terms of the "replacements"
What I see is the generation of a replacement which is a "No Op" on the original
code, I think this comes about because of the merging of replacements:
```
static const a;
->
const static a;
->
static const a;
```
The replacements don't really merge, in such a way as to identify when we have gone
back to the original
Also remove the Penalty as I'm not using it (and it became marked as set and no used,
I'd rather get rid of it if it means nothing)
I think we need to do this step for now, as many people use the --output-replacements-xml
to identify that the file "needs a clang-format"
The same can be seen with the -n or --dry-run option as this uses the replacements
to drive the error/warning output.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D110392
Developers these days seem to argue over east vs west const like they used to argue over tabs vs whitespace or the various bracing style. These previous arguments were mainly eliminated with tools like `clang-format` that allowed those rules to become part of your style guide. Anyone who has been using clang-format in a large team over the last couple of years knows that we don't have those religious arguments any more, and code reviews are more productive.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fv--IKZFVO8https://mariusbancila.ro/blog/2018/11/23/join-the-east-const-revolution/https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6s6bacI424
The purpose of this revision is to try to do the same for the East/West const discussion. Move the debate into the style guide and leave it there!
In addition to the new `ConstStyle: Right` or `ConstStyle: Left` there is an additional command-line argument `--const-style=left/right` which would allow an individual developer to switch the source back and forth to their own style for editing, and back to the committed style before commit. (you could imagine an IDE might offer such a switch)
The revision works by implementing a separate pass of the Annotated lines much like the SortIncludes and then create replacements for constant type declarations.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D69764
Commits 58494c856a, f6bc614546, and 0fc27ef196 added special
handlings for K&R C function definitions and caused some
JavaScript/TypeScript regressions which were addressed in D107267,
D108538, and D108620. This patch would have prevented these known
regressions and will fix any unknown ones.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D109582
Currently, we have no front-end type for ppc_fp128 type in IR. PowerPC
target generates ppc_fp128 type from long double now, but there's option
(-mabi=(ieee|ibm)longdouble) to control it and we're going to do
transition from IBM extended double-double ppc_fp128 to IEEE fp128 in
the future.
This patch adds type __ibm128 which always represents ppc_fp128 in IR,
as what GCC did for that type. Without this type in Clang, compilation
will fail if compiling against future version of libstdcxx (which uses
__ibm128 in headers).
Although all operations in backend for __ibm128 is done by software,
only PowerPC enables support for it.
There's something not implemented in this commit, which can be done in
future ones:
- Literal suffix for __ibm128 type. w/W is suitable as GCC documented.
- __attribute__((mode(IF))) should be for __ibm128.
- Complex __ibm128 type.
Reviewed By: rjmccall
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93377
Add backward compatibility tests for mapping the deprecated
ConstructorInitializerAllOnOneLineOrOnePerLine and
AllowAllConstructorInitializersOnNextLine to
PackConstructorInitializers.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108882
The default value of the now deprecated
AllowAllConstructorInitializersOnNextLine was always true
regardless of the value of BasedOnStyle. This patch fixes the typo
in the code that handles the related backward compatibility.
LLVM 13.0.0-rc2 shows change of behaviour in enum and interface BraceWrapping (likely before we simply didn't wrap) but may be related to {D99840}
Logged as https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=51640
This change ensure AfterEnum works for
`internal|public|protected|private enum A {` in the same way as it works for `enum A {` in C++
A similar issue was also observed with `interface` in C#
Reviewed By: krasimir, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108810
Add a new option PackConstructorInitializers and deprecate the
related options ConstructorInitializerAllOnOneLineOrOnePerLine and
AllowAllConstructorInitializersOnNextLine. Below is the mapping:
PackConstructorInitializers ConstructorInitializer... AllowAll...
Never - -
BinPack false -
CurrentLine true false
NextLine true true
The option value Never fixes PR50549 by always placing each
constructor initializer on its own line.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108752
TypeScript 4.3 added a new "override" keyword for class members. This
lets clang-format know about it, so it can format code using it
properly.
Reviewed By: krasimir
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108692
This fixes up a regression we found from
https://reviews.llvm.org/D107267: in specific contexts, clang-format
stopped breaking after the `)` in TypeScript decorations. There were no test cases covering this, so I added one.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108538
Clean up the detection of parameter declarations in K&R C function
definitions. Also make it more precise by requiring the second
token after the r_paren to be either a star or keyword/identifier.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D108094
After
9da70ab3d4
we saw a few regressions around trailing attribute definitions and in
typedefs (examples in the added test cases). There's some tension
distinguishing K&R definitions from attributes at the parser level,
where we have to decide if we need to put the type of the K&R definition
on a new unwrapped line before we have access to the rest of the line,
so we're scanning backwards and looking for a pattern like f(a, b). But
this type of pattern could also be an attribute macro, or the whole
declaration could be a typedef itself. I updated the code to check for a
typedef at the beginning of the line and to not consider raw identifiers
as possible first K&R declaration (but treated as an attribute macro
instead). This is not 100% correct heuristic, but I think it should be
reasonably good in practice, where we'll:
* likely be in some very C-ish code when using K&R style (e.g., stuff
that uses `struct name a;` instead of `name a;`
* likely be in some very C++-ish code when using attributes
* unlikely mix up the two in the same declaration.
Ideally, we should only decide to add the unwrapped line before the K&R
declaration after we've scanned the rest of the line an noticed the
variable declarations and the semicolon, but the way the parser is
organized I don't see a good way to do this in the current parser, which
only has good context for the previously visited tokens. I also tried
not emitting an unwrapped line there and trying to resolve the situation
later in the token annotator and the continuation indenter, and that
approach seems promising, but I couldn't make it to work without
messing up a bunch of other cases in unit tests.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107950
A follow-up to
f6bc614546
where we handle the case where the semicolon is followed by a trailing
comment.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107907
Some files still contained the old University of Illinois Open Source
Licence header. This patch replaces that with the Apache 2 with LLVM
Exception licence.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107528
https://reviews.llvm.org/D105964 updated the detection of function
definitions. It had the unfortunate effect to start marking object
definitions with attribute-like macros as function definitions.
This addresses this issue.
Reviewed By: owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107269
The patch https://reviews.llvm.org/D105964 (58494c856a)
updated detection of function declaration names. It had the unfortunate
consequence that it started breaking between `function` and the function
name in some cases in JavaScript code.
This patch addresses this.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, owenpan
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D107267
Previously, with AllowShortEnumsOnASingleLine disabled, enums that would have otherwise fit on a single line would always put the opening brace on its own line.
This patch ensures that these enums will only put the brace on its own line if the existing attachment rules indicate that it should.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D99840
Break an unwrapped line before the first parameter declaration in a
K&R C function definition.
This fixes PR51074.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D106112
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50727
When processing C# Lambda expression in the indentation can goes a little wrong,
resulting the the closing } being at the wrong indentation level and meaning the remaining part of the file is
incorrectly indented.
This can be a fairly common pattern for when C# wants to peform a UI action from a thread,
and it wants to invoke that action on the main thread
Reviewed By: exv, jbcoe
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104388
I find as I develop I'm moving between many different languages C++,C#,JavaScript all the time. As I move between the file types I like to keep `clang-format` as my formatting tool of choice. (hence why I initially added C# support in {D58404}) I know those other languages have their own tools but I have to learn them all, and I have to work out how to configure them, and they may or may not have integration into my IDE or my source code integration.
I am increasingly finding that I'm editing additional JSON files as part of my daily work and my editor and git commit hooks are just not setup to go and run [[ https://stedolan.github.io/jq/ | jq ]], So I tend to go to [[ https://jsonformatter.curiousconcept.com/ | JSON Formatter ]] and copy and paste back and forth. To get nicely formatted JSON. This is a painful process and I'd like a new one that causes me much less friction.
This has come up from time to time:
{D10543}
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/35856565/clang-format-a-json-filehttps://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=18699
I would like to stop having to do that and have formatting JSON as a first class clang-format support `Language` (even if it has minimal style settings at present).
This revision adds support for formatting JSON using the inbuilt JSON serialization library of LLVM, With limited control at present only over the indentation level
This adds an additional Language into the .clang-format file to separate the settings from your other supported languages.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D93528
https://bugs.llvm.org/show_bug.cgi?id=50702
I believe {D44609} may be too aggressive with brace wrapping rules which doesn't always apply to Lamdbas
The introduction of BeforeLambdaBody and AllowShortLambdasOnASingleLine has impact on brace handling on other block types, which I suspect we didn't see before as people may not be using the BeforeLambdaBody style
From what I can tell this can be seen by the unit test I change as its not honouring the orginal LLVM brace wrapping style for the `Fct()` function
I added a unit test from PR50702 and have removed some of the code (which has zero impact on the unit test, which kind of suggests its unnecessary), some additional attempt has been made to try and ensure we'll only break on what is actually a LamdbaLBrace
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104222
This is mostly a mechanical change, but a testcase that contains
parts of the StringRef class (clang/test/Analysis/llvm-conventions.cpp)
isn't touched.
This introduces ReferenceAlignment style option modeled around
PointerAlignment.
Style implementors can specify Left, Right, Middle or Pointer to
follow whatever the PointerAlignment option specifies.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104096
Currently the lambda body indents relative to where the lambda signature is located. This instead lets the user
choose to align the lambda body relative to the parent scope that contains the lambda declaration. Thus:
someFunction([] {
lambdaBody();
});
will always have the same indentation of the body even when the lambda signature goes on a new line:
someFunction(
[] {
lambdaBody();
});
whereas before lambdaBody would be indented 6 spaces.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D102706
21c18d5a04
improved the detection of multiplication in function call argument lists,
but unintentionally regressed the handling of function type casts (there
were no tests covering those).
This patch improves the detection of function type casts and adds a few tests.
Reviewed By: HazardyKnusperkeks
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104209
The previous implementation would accidentally still sort the individual
named imports, even if the module reference was in a clang-format off
block.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D104101
This allows to set a different indent width for preprocessor statements.
Example:
#ifdef __linux_
# define FOO
#endif
int main(void)
{
return 0;
}
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103286
This re-applies the old patch D27651, which was never landed, into the
latest "main" branch, without understanding the code. I just applied
the changes "mechanically" and made it compiling again.
This makes the right pointer alignment working as expected.
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR27353
For instance
const char* const* v1;
float const* v2;
SomeVeryLongType const& v3;
was formatted as
const char *const * v1;
float const * v2;
SomeVeryLongType const &v3;
This patch keep the *s or &s aligned to the right, next to their variable.
The above example is now formatted as
const char *const *v1;
float const *v2;
SomeVeryLongType const &v3;
It is a pity that this still does not work with clang-format in 2021,
even though there was a fix available in 2016. IMHO right pointer alignment
is the default case in C, because syntactically the pointer belongs to the
variable.
See
int* a, b, c; // wrong, just the 1st variable is a pointer
vs.
int *a, *b, *c; // right
Prominent example is the Linux kernel coding style.
Some styles argue the left pointer alignment is better and declaration
lists as shown above should be avoided. That's ok, as different projects
can use different styles, but this important style should work too.
I hope that somebody that has a better understanding about the code,
can take over this patch and land it into main.
For now I must maintain this fork to make it working for our projects.
Cheers,
Gerhard.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103245
{D74265} reduced the aggressiveness of line breaking following C# attributes, however this change removed any support for attributes on properties, causing significant ugliness to be introduced.
This revision goes some way to addressing that by re-introducing the more aggressive check to `mustBreakBefore()`, but constraining it to the most common cases where we use properties which should not impact the "caller info attributes" or the "[In , Out]" decorations that are normally put on pinvoke
It does not address my additional concerns of the original change regarding multiple C# attributes, as these are somewhat incorrectly handled by virtue of the fact its not recognising the second attribute as an attribute at all. But instead thinking its an array.
The purpose of this revision is to get back to where we were for the most common of cases as a stepping stone to resolving this. However {D74265} has broken a lot of C# code and this revision will go someway alone to addressing the majority.
Reviewed By: jbcoe, HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103307
This inheritance list style has been widely adopted by Symantec,
a division of Broadcom Inc. It breaks after the commas that
separate the base-specifiers:
class Derived : public Base1,
private Base2
{
};
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D103204
WG14 adopted N2645 and WG21 EWG has accepted P2334 in principle (still
subject to full EWG vote + CWG review + plenary vote), which add
support for #elifdef as shorthand for #elif defined and #elifndef as
shorthand for #elif !defined. This patch adds support for the new
preprocessor directives.
This fixes two errors:
Previously, clang-format was splitting up type identifiers from the
nullable ?. This changes this behavior so that the type name sticks with
the operator.
Additionally, nullable operators attached to return types in interface
functions were not parsed correctly. Digging deeper, it looks like
interface bodies were being parsed differently than classes and structs,
causing MustBeDeclaration to be incorrect for interface members. They
now share the same logic.
One other change is reintroducing the CSharpNullable type independent of
JsTypeOptionalQuestion. Despite having a similar semantic purpose, their
actual syntax differs quite a bit.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101860
Fixes https://llvm.org/PR35099.
I'm not sure if this decision was intentional but its definitely confusing for users.
Reviewed By: MyDeveloperDay, HazardyKnusperkeks, curdeius
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101628
This fixes another bogus build error on gcc, e.g. https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/118/builds/2504.
/home/ssglocal/clang-cmake-x86_64-avx2-linux/clang-cmake-x86_64-avx2-linux-perf/llvm/clang/lib/Format/UnwrappedLineFormatter.cpp:424:42: error: binding ‘clang::format::FormatToken* const’ to reference of type ‘clang::format::FormatToken*&’ discards qualifiers
auto IsElseLine = [&First = TheLine->First]() -> bool {
^
Previously, the JavaScript import sorter would ignore `// clang-format
off` and `on` comments. This change fixes that. It tracks whether
formatting is enabled for a stretch of imports, and then only sorts and
merges the imports where formatting is enabled, in individual chunks.
This means that there's no meaningful total order when module references are mixed
with blocks that have formatting disabled. The alternative approach
would have been to sort all imports that have formatting enabled in one
group. However that raises the question where to insert the
formatting-off block, which can also impact symbol visibility (in
particular for exports). In practice, sorting in chunks probably isn't a
big problem.
This change also simplifies the general algorithm: instead of tracking
indices separately and sorting them, it just sorts the vector of module
references. And instead of attempting to do fine grained tracking of
whether the code changed order, it just prints out the module references
text, and compares that to the previous text. Given that source files
typically have dozens, but not even hundreds of imports, the performance
impact seems negligible.
Differential Revision: https://reviews.llvm.org/D101515
This fixes another bogus build error on gcc, e.g. https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/110/builds/2974.
/home/ssglocal/clang-cmake-x86_64-avx2-linux/clang-cmake-x86_64-avx2-linux/llvm/clang/lib/Format/TokenAnnotator.cpp:3412:34: error: binding ‘const clang::format::FormatStyle’ to reference of type ‘clang::format::FormatStyle&’ discards qualifiers
auto ShouldAddSpacesInAngles = [&Style = this->Style,
^
This fixes a bogus build error on gcc, e.g. https://lab.llvm.org/buildbot/#/builders/110/builds/2973.
/home/ssglocal/clang-cmake-x86_64-avx2-linux/clang-cmake-x86_64-avx2-linux/llvm/clang/lib/Format/TokenAnnotator.cpp:3097:53: error: binding ‘const clang::SourceRange’ to reference of type ‘clang::SourceRange&’ discards qualifiers
auto HasExistingWhitespace = [&Whitespace = Right.WhitespaceRange]() {
^