llvm-project/clang/docs/ClangFormat.rst

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===========
ClangFormat
===========
`ClangFormat` describes a set of tools that are built on top of
:doc:`LibFormat`. It can support your workflow in a variety of ways including a
standalone tool and editor integrations.
Standalone Tool
===============
:program:`clang-format` is located in `clang/tools/clang-format` and can be used
to format C/C++/Java/JavaScript/Objective-C/Protobuf code.
.. code-block:: console
$ clang-format -help
OVERVIEW: A tool to format C/C++/Java/JavaScript/Objective-C/Protobuf code.
If no arguments are specified, it formats the code from standard input
and writes the result to the standard output.
If <file>s are given, it reformats the files. If -i is specified
together with <file>s, the files are edited in-place. Otherwise, the
result is written to the standard output.
USAGE: clang-format [options] [<file> ...]
OPTIONS:
Clang-format options:
-assume-filename=<string> - When reading from stdin, clang-format assumes this
filename to look for a style config file (with
-style=file) and to determine the language.
-cursor=<uint> - The position of the cursor when invoking
clang-format from an editor integration
-dump-config - Dump configuration options to stdout and exit.
Can be used with -style option.
-fallback-style=<string> - The name of the predefined style used as a
fallback in case clang-format is invoked with
-style=file, but can not find the .clang-format
file to use.
Use -fallback-style=none to skip formatting.
-i - Inplace edit <file>s, if specified.
-length=<uint> - Format a range of this length (in bytes).
Multiple ranges can be formatted by specifying
several -offset and -length pairs.
When only a single -offset is specified without
-length, clang-format will format up to the end
of the file.
Can only be used with one input file.
-lines=<string> - <start line>:<end line> - format a range of
lines (both 1-based).
Multiple ranges can be formatted by specifying
several -lines arguments.
Can't be used with -offset and -length.
Can only be used with one input file.
-offset=<uint> - Format a range starting at this byte offset.
Multiple ranges can be formatted by specifying
several -offset and -length pairs.
Can only be used with one input file.
-output-replacements-xml - Output replacements as XML.
-sort-includes - Sort touched include lines
-style=<string> - Coding style, currently supports:
LLVM, Google, Chromium, Mozilla, WebKit.
Use -style=file to load style configuration from
.clang-format file located in one of the parent
directories of the source file (or current
directory for stdin).
Use -style="{key: value, ...}" to set specific
parameters, e.g.:
-style="{BasedOnStyle: llvm, IndentWidth: 8}"
-verbose - If set, shows the list of processed files
Generic Options:
-help - Display available options (-help-hidden for more)
-help-list - Display list of available options (-help-list-hidden for more)
-version - Display the version of this program
When the desired code formatting style is different from the available options,
the style can be customized using the ``-style="{key: value, ...}"`` option or
by putting your style configuration in the ``.clang-format`` or ``_clang-format``
file in your project's directory and using ``clang-format -style=file``.
An easy way to create the ``.clang-format`` file is:
.. code-block:: console
clang-format -style=llvm -dump-config > .clang-format
Available style options are described in :doc:`ClangFormatStyleOptions`.
Vim Integration
===============
There is an integration for :program:`vim` which lets you run the
:program:`clang-format` standalone tool on your current buffer, optionally
selecting regions to reformat. The integration has the form of a `python`-file
which can be found under `clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format.py`.
This can be integrated by adding the following to your `.vimrc`:
.. code-block:: vim
map <C-K> :pyf <path-to-this-file>/clang-format.py<cr>
imap <C-K> <c-o>:pyf <path-to-this-file>/clang-format.py<cr>
The first line enables :program:`clang-format` for NORMAL and VISUAL mode, the
second line adds support for INSERT mode. Change "C-K" to another binding if
you need :program:`clang-format` on a different key (C-K stands for Ctrl+k).
With this integration you can press the bound key and clang-format will
format the current line in NORMAL and INSERT mode or the selected region in
VISUAL mode. The line or region is extended to the next bigger syntactic
entity.
It operates on the current, potentially unsaved buffer and does not create
or save any files. To revert a formatting, just undo.
An alternative option is to format changes when saving a file and thus to
have a zero-effort integration into the coding workflow. To do this, add this to
your `.vimrc`:
.. code-block:: vim
function! Formatonsave()
let l:formatdiff = 1
pyf ~/llvm/tools/clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format.py
endfunction
autocmd BufWritePre *.h,*.cc,*.cpp call Formatonsave()
Emacs Integration
=================
Similar to the integration for :program:`vim`, there is an integration for
:program:`emacs`. It can be found at `clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format.el`
and used by adding this to your `.emacs`:
.. code-block:: common-lisp
(load "<path-to-clang>/tools/clang-format/clang-format.el")
(global-set-key [C-M-tab] 'clang-format-region)
This binds the function `clang-format-region` to C-M-tab, which then formats the
current line or selected region.
BBEdit Integration
==================
:program:`clang-format` cannot be used as a text filter with BBEdit, but works
well via a script. The AppleScript to do this integration can be found at
`clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format-bbedit.applescript`; place a copy in
`~/Library/Application Support/BBEdit/Scripts`, and edit the path within it to
point to your local copy of :program:`clang-format`.
With this integration you can select the script from the Script menu and
:program:`clang-format` will format the selection. Note that you can rename the
menu item by renaming the script, and can assign the menu item a keyboard
shortcut in the BBEdit preferences, under Menus & Shortcuts.
Visual Studio Integration
=========================
Download the latest Visual Studio extension from the `alpha build site
<https://llvm.org/builds/>`_. The default key-binding is Ctrl-R,Ctrl-F.
Script for patch reformatting
=============================
The python script `clang/tools/clang-format/clang-format-diff.py` parses the
output of a unified diff and reformats all contained lines with
:program:`clang-format`.
.. code-block:: console
usage: clang-format-diff.py [-h] [-i] [-p NUM] [-regex PATTERN] [-style STYLE]
Reformat changed lines in diff. Without -i option just output the diff that
would be introduced.
optional arguments:
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-i apply edits to files instead of displaying a diff
-p NUM strip the smallest prefix containing P slashes
-regex PATTERN custom pattern selecting file paths to reformat
-style STYLE formatting style to apply (LLVM, Google, Chromium, Mozilla,
WebKit)
So to reformat all the lines in the latest :program:`git` commit, just do:
.. code-block:: console
git diff -U0 --no-color HEAD^ | clang-format-diff.py -i -p1
With Mercurial/:program:`hg`:
.. code-block:: console
hg diff -U0 --color=never | clang-format-diff.py -i -p1
In an SVN client, you can do:
.. code-block:: console
svn diff --diff-cmd=diff -x -U0 | clang-format-diff.py -i
The option `-U0` will create a diff without context lines (the script would format
those as well).