The WebAssembly (WASI) version of swift-format
. This project's goal is to be merged into swiftlang/swift-format.
You can download swift-format.wasm
from the following pages.
The checked items are currently supported. The others are planned to be supported, but currently are not.
wasm
and wasm3
) (iOS, iPadOS)
wasm3
has an issue: holzschu/a-shell#836-p
and --parallel
options are not implementedswift-format
provides the formatting technology for
SourceKit-LSP and the building
blocks for doing code formatting transformations.
This package can be used as a command line tool or linked into other applications as a Swift Package Manager dependency and invoked via an API.
NOTE: No default Swift code style guidelines have yet been proposed. The style that is currently applied by
swift-format
is just one possibility, and the code is provided so that it can be tested on real-world code and experiments can be made by modifying it.
As of Swift 5.8, swift-format depends on the version of SwiftSyntax whose parser has been rewritten in Swift and no longer has dependencies on libraries in the Swift toolchain.
This change allows swift-format
to be built, developed, and run using
any version of Swift that can compile it, decoupling it from the version
that supported a particular syntax. However, earlier versions of swift-format
will still not be able to recognize new syntax added in later versions of the
language and parser.
Note also that the version numbering scheme has changed to match
SwiftSyntax; the 5.8 release of swift-format is 508.0.0
, not 0.50800.0
.
swift-format
versions 0.50700.0 and earlier depend on versions of
SwiftSyntax that used a standalone
parsing library distributed as part of the Swift toolchain. When using these
versions, you should check out and build swift-format
from the release
tag or branch that is compatible with the version of Swift you are using.
The major and minor version components of swift-format
and SwiftSyntax must
be the same—this is expressed in the SwiftSyntax
dependency in
Package.swift—and those version components must match the
Swift toolchain that is installed and used to build and run the formatter:
Xcode Release | Swift Version | swift-format Branch / Tags |
---|---|---|
– | Swift at main |
main |
Xcode 14.0 | Swift 5.7 | release/5.7 / 0.50700.x |
Xcode 13.3 | Swift 5.6 | release/5.6 / 0.50600.x |
Xcode 13.0–13.2 | Swift 5.5 | swift-5.5-branch / 0.50500.x |
Xcode 12.5 | Swift 5.4 | swift-5.4-branch / 0.50400.x |
Xcode 12.0–12.4 | Swift 5.3 | swift-5.3-branch / 0.50300.x |
Xcode 11.4–11.7 | Swift 5.2 | swift-5.2-branch / 0.50200.x |
Xcode 11.0–11.3 | Swift 5.1 | swift-5.1-branch |
For example, if you are using Xcode 13.3 (Swift 5.6), you will need
swift-format
0.50600.0.
If you are mainly interested in using swift-format (rather than developing it), then you can get it in three different ways:
Swift 6 (included with Xcode 16) and above include swift-format in the toolchain. You can run swift-format
from anywhere on the system using swift format
(notice the space instead of dash). To find the path at which swift-format
is installed in Xcode, run xcrun --find swift-format
.
Run brew install swift-format
to install the latest version.
Install swift-format
using the following commands:
VERSION=510.1.0 # replace this with the version you need
git clone https://github.com/swiftlang/swift-format.git
cd swift-format
git checkout "tags/$VERSION"
swift build -c release
Note that the git checkout
command above will leave the repository in a
"detached HEAD" state. This is fine if building and running the tool is all you
want to do.
Once the build has finished, the swift-format
executable will be located at
.build/release/swift-format
.
To test that the formatter was built successfully and is compatible with your Swift toolchain, you can also run the following command:
swift test --parallel
We recommend using the --parallel
flag to speed up the test run since there
are a large number of tests.
The general invocation syntax for swift-format
is as follows:
swift-format [SUBCOMMAND] [OPTIONS...] [FILES...]
The tool supports a number of subcommands, each of which has its own options
and are described below. Descriptions of the subcommands that are available
can also be obtained by running swift-format --help
, and the description of
a specific subcommand can be obtained by using the --help
flag after the
subcommand name; for example, swift-format lint --help
.
swift-format [format] [OPTIONS...] [FILES...]
The format
subcommand formats one or more Swift source files (or source code
from standard input if no file paths are given on the command line). Writing
out the format
subcommand is optional; it is the default behavior if no other
subcommand is given.
This subcommand supports all of the common lint and format options, as well as the formatting-only options below:
-i/--in-place
: Overwrites the input files when formatting instead of
printing the results to standard output. No backup of the original file is
made before it is overwritten.swift-format lint [OPTIONS...] [FILES...]
The lint
subcommand checks one or more Swift source files (or source code
from standard input if no file paths are given on the command line) for style
violations and prints diagnostics to standard error for any violations that
are detected.
This subcommand supports all of the common lint and format options, as well as the linting-only options below:
-s/--strict
: If this option is specified, lint warnings will cause the
tool to exit with a non-zero exit code (failure). By default, lint warnings
do not prevent a successful exit; only fatal errors (for example, trying to
lint a file that does not exist) cause the tool to exit unsuccessfully.The following options are supported by both the format
and lint
subcommands:
--assume-filename <path>
: The file path that should be used in
diagnostics when linting or formatting from standard input. If this option
is not provided, then <stdin>
will be used as the filename printed in
diagnostics.
--color-diagnostics/--no-color-diagnostics
: By default, swift-format
will print diagnostics in color if standard error is connected to a
terminal and without color otherwise (for example, if standard error is
being redirected to a file). These flags can be used to force colors on
or off respectively, regardless of whether the output is going to a
terminal.
--configuration <file>
: The path to a JSON file that contains
configurable settings for
swift-format
. If omitted, a default configuration is use (which
can be seen by running swift-format dump-configuration
).
--ignore-unparsable-files
: If this option is specified and a source file
contains syntax errors or can otherwise not be parsed successfully by the
Swift syntax parser, it will be ignored (no diagnostics will be emitted
and it will not be formatted). Without this option, an error will be
emitted for any unparsable files.
-p/--parallel
: Process files in parallel, simultaneously across
multiple cores.
-r/--recursive
: If specified, then the tool will process .swift
source
files in any directories listed on the command line and their descendants.
Without this flag, it is an error to list a directory on the command line.
swift-format dump-configuration
The dump-configuration
subcommand dumps the default configuration in JSON
format to standard output. This can be used to simplify generating a custom
configuration, by redirecting it to a file and editing it.
For any source file being checked or formatted, swift-format
looks for a
JSON-formatted file named .swift-format
in the same directory. If one is
found, then that file is loaded to determine the tool's configuration. If the
file is not found, then it looks in the parent directory, and so on.
If no configuration file is found, a default configuration is used. The
settings in the default configuration can be viewed by running
swift-format dump-configuration
, which will dump it to standard
output.
If the --configuration <file>
option is passed to swift-format
, then that
configuration will be used unconditionally and the file system will not be
searched.
See Documentation/Configuration.md for a description of the configuration file format and the settings that are available.
Running swift-format -v
or swift-format --version
will print version
information about swift-format
version and then exit.
swift-format
can be easily integrated into other tools written in Swift.
Instead of invoking the formatter by spawning a subprocess, users can depend on
swift-format
as a Swift Package Manager dependency and import the
SwiftFormat
module, which contains the entry points into the formatter's
diagnostic and correction behavior.
Formatting behavior is provided by the SwiftFormatter
class and linting
behavior is provided by the SwiftLinter
class. These APIs can be passed
either a Swift source file URL
or a Syntax
node representing a
SwiftSyntax syntax tree. The latter capability is particularly useful for
writing code generators, since it significantly reduces the amount of trivia
that the generator needs to be concerned about adding to the syntax nodes it
creates. Instead, it can pass the in-memory syntax tree to the SwiftFormat
API and receive perfectly formatted code as output.
Please see the documentation in the
SwiftFormatter
and
SwiftLinter
classes for more
information about their usage.
The main
branch is used for development. Pull requests should be created
to merge into the main
branch; changes that are low-risk and compatible with
the latest release branch may be cherry-picked into that branch after they have
been merged into main
.
If you are interested in developing swift-format
, there is additional
documentation about that here.
Contributions to Swift are welcomed and encouraged! Please see the Contributing to Swift guide.
Before submitting the pull request, please make sure you have tested your changes and that they follow the Swift project guidelines for contributing code.
To be a truly great community, Swift.org needs to welcome developers from all walks of life, with different backgrounds, and with a wide range of experience. A diverse and friendly community will have more great ideas, more unique perspectives, and produce more great code. We will work diligently to make the Swift community welcoming to everyone.
To give clarity of what is expected of our members, Swift has adopted the code of conduct defined by the Contributor Covenant. This document is used across many open source communities, and we think it articulates our values well. For more, see the Code of Conduct.