Message ID | 20181008202903.100166-2-sandals@crustytoothpaste.net (mailing list archive) |
---|---|
State | New, archived |
Headers | show |
Series | EditorConfig file | expand |
On Mon, Oct 08 2018, brian m. carlson wrote: > Contributors to Git use a variety of editors, each with their own > configuration files. Because C lacks the defined norms on how to indent > and style code that other languages, such as Ruby and Rust, have, it's > possible for various contributors, especially new ones, to have > configured their editor to use a style other than the style the Git > community prefers. > > To make automatically configuring one's editor easier, provide an > EditorConfig file. This is an INI-style configuration file that can be > used to specify editor settings and can be understood by a wide variety > of editors. Some editors include this support natively; others require > a plugin. Regardless, providing such a file allows users to > automatically configure their editor of choice with the correct settings > by default. > > Provide global settings to set the character set to UTF-8 and insert a > final newline into files. Provide language-specific settings for C, > Shell, Perl, and Python files according to what CodingGuidelines already > specifies. Since the indentation of other files varies, especially > certain AsciiDoc files, don't provide any settings for them until a > clear consensus forward emerges. > > Set the line length for commit messages to 72 characters, which is the > generally accepted line length for emails, since we send patches by > email. > > Don't specify an end of line type. While the Git community uses > Unix-style line endings in the repository, some Windows users may use > Git's auto-conversion support and forcing Unix-style line endings might > cause problems for those users. > > Finally, leave out a root directive, which would prevent reading other > EditorConfig files higher up in the tree, in case someone wants to set > the end of line type for their system in such a file. > > Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> > --- > .editorconfig | 14 ++++++++++++++ > 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+) > create mode 100644 .editorconfig > > diff --git a/.editorconfig b/.editorconfig > new file mode 100644 > index 0000000000..83227fa0b2 > --- /dev/null > +++ b/.editorconfig > @@ -0,0 +1,14 @@ > +[*] > +charset = utf-8 > +insert_final_newline = true > + > +[*.{c,h,sh,perl}] > +indent_style = tab > +tab_width = 8 It looks like we can add at least "pm" and "pl" to that pattern: $ git ls-files|grep -E -v -e '\.(c|h|sh|perl)$' | grep -F .| sed 's/.*\.//'|sort|uniq -c|sort -nr|head -n 15 631 txt 56 expect 48 po 41 test 40 tcl 34 gitignore 24 pm 18 patch 18 diff 16 pl 15 side 14 gitattributes 12 dump 11 sample 9 master > +[*.py] > +indent_style = space > +indent_size = 4 > + > +[COMMIT_EDITMSG] > +max_line_length = 72
On Mon, Oct 08, 2018 at 10:53:52PM +0200, Ævar Arnfjörð Bjarmason wrote: > > It looks like we can add at least "pm" and "pl" to that pattern: Sure. I didn't think we had any of those, but you've just proven me wrong. I'll send a v3 shortly.
diff --git a/.editorconfig b/.editorconfig new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..83227fa0b2 --- /dev/null +++ b/.editorconfig @@ -0,0 +1,14 @@ +[*] +charset = utf-8 +insert_final_newline = true + +[*.{c,h,sh,perl}] +indent_style = tab +tab_width = 8 + +[*.py] +indent_style = space +indent_size = 4 + +[COMMIT_EDITMSG] +max_line_length = 72
Contributors to Git use a variety of editors, each with their own configuration files. Because C lacks the defined norms on how to indent and style code that other languages, such as Ruby and Rust, have, it's possible for various contributors, especially new ones, to have configured their editor to use a style other than the style the Git community prefers. To make automatically configuring one's editor easier, provide an EditorConfig file. This is an INI-style configuration file that can be used to specify editor settings and can be understood by a wide variety of editors. Some editors include this support natively; others require a plugin. Regardless, providing such a file allows users to automatically configure their editor of choice with the correct settings by default. Provide global settings to set the character set to UTF-8 and insert a final newline into files. Provide language-specific settings for C, Shell, Perl, and Python files according to what CodingGuidelines already specifies. Since the indentation of other files varies, especially certain AsciiDoc files, don't provide any settings for them until a clear consensus forward emerges. Set the line length for commit messages to 72 characters, which is the generally accepted line length for emails, since we send patches by email. Don't specify an end of line type. While the Git community uses Unix-style line endings in the repository, some Windows users may use Git's auto-conversion support and forcing Unix-style line endings might cause problems for those users. Finally, leave out a root directive, which would prevent reading other EditorConfig files higher up in the tree, in case someone wants to set the end of line type for their system in such a file. Signed-off-by: brian m. carlson <sandals@crustytoothpaste.net> --- .editorconfig | 14 ++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 14 insertions(+) create mode 100644 .editorconfig