cljfmt is a tool for detecting and fixing formatting errors in Clojure code.
Its defaults are based on the Clojure Style Guide, but it also has many customization options to suit a particular project or team.
It is not the goal of the project to provide a one-to-one mapping between a Clojure syntax tree and formatted text; rather the intent is to correct formatting errors with minimal changes to the existing structure of the text.
If you want format completely unstructured Clojure code, the zprint project may be more suitable.
The --indents
and --alias-map
keys have been removed from the CLI,
in favor of using a configuration file instead.
The :indents
key has been split into :indents
and :extra-indents
.
The :indents
key replaces all default indents, while the
:extra-indents
key will append to the default indents.
If you need to retain backward compatibility with an older version of
cljfmt, then you can add the :legacy/merge-indents?
key to your
configuration:
{:legacy/merge-indents? true
:indents {example.core/foo [[:inner 0]]}}
This will treat :indents
as if it were :extra-indents
. i.e. it is
equivalent to:
{:extra-indents {example.core/foo [[:inner 0]]}}
cljfmt integrates with many existing build tools, or can be used as a library. As an end user, you have the choice of:
The fastest way to run cljfmt is via a precompiled binary. If you're using
Linux or MacOS, you can run the following command to install the binary into
/usr/local/bin
:
/bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/weavejester/cljfmt/HEAD/install.sh)"
You can also run this command to update cljfmt to the latest version.
If you're using Windows, there's a zipped up binary you can download and extract manually.
To use cljfmt to check for formatting errors in your project, run:
cljfmt check
And to fix those errors:
cljfmt fix
Use --help
for a list of all the command-line options.
For persistent configuration, you can use a configuration file.
The official Clojure CLI supports installation of thirdparty tools. To install cljfmt as a tool, run:
clj -Ttools install io.github.weavejester/cljfmt '{:git/tag "0.13.0"}' :as cljfmt
To use the tool to check for formatting errors in your project, run:
clj -Tcljfmt check
And to fix those errors:
clj -Tcljfmt fix
Leiningen is a popular Clojure build tool. To use cljfmt with
Leiningen, add the following plugin to your project.clj
file:
:plugins [[dev.weavejester/lein-cljfmt "0.13.0"]]
To use the plugin to check code for formatting errors, run:
lein cljfmt check
And to fix those errors:
lein cljfmt fix
To configure it, put a :cljfmt
key and a map of options in your
project file. See the configuration section for more details.
cljfmt can be run as a library that formats a string of Clojure code or recursively checks / fixes paths like the CLI tool. First, add the dependency:
{:deps {dev.weavejester/cljfmt {:mvn/version "0.13.0"}}}
Then use the library:
(require '[cljfmt.core :as fmt])
(fmt/reformat-string "(defn sum [x y]\n(+ x y))")
;; => "(defn sum [x y]\n (+ x y))"
To load the configuration for the current directory:
(require '[cljfmt.config :as cfg])
(fmt/reformat-string "(+ x\ny)" (cfg/load-config))
;; => "(+ x\n y)"
Be sure to set the report fn to the clojure one as shown below. Otherwise the
check
and fix
fns will assume they're running in console mode and will
call System/exit
, print to stdout, etc.
(require '[cljfmt.tool :as fmt]
'[cljfmt.report :as report])
(fmt/check {:paths ["/path/to/check"], :report report/clojure})
Or to recursively fix paths:
(require '[cljfmt.tool :as fmt]
'[cljfmt.report :as report])
(fmt/fix {:paths ["/path/to/fix"], :report report/clojure})
You can also use cljfmt via your editor. Several Clojure editing environments have support for cljfmt baked in:
In most environments, cljfmt will look for the following configuration files in the current and parent directories:
.cljfmt.edn
.cljfmt.clj
cljfmt.edn
cljfmt.clj
The configuration file should contain a map of options.
In Leiningen, the configuration is found in on the :cljfmt
key in the
project map:
:cljfmt {}
In order to load the standard configuration file from Leiningen, add the
:load-config-file?
key to the :cljfmt
map:
:cljfmt {:load-config-file? true}
:indentation?
-
true if cljfmt should correct the indentation of your code.
Defaults to true.
:indents
-
a map of var symbols to indentation rules, i.e. {symbol [& rules]}
.
See INDENTS.md for a complete explanation. This will replace
the default indents.
:extra-indents
-
the same as :indents
, except that this will append to the
default indents.
:alias-map
-
a map of namespace alias strings to fully qualified namespace
names. This option is unnecessary in most cases, because cljfmt
will parse the ns
declaration in each file. See INDENTS.md.
:remove-surrounding-whitespace?
-
true if cljfmt should remove whitespace surrounding inner
forms. This will convert ( foo )
to (foo)
.
Defaults to true.
:remove-trailing-whitespace?
-
true if cljfmt should remove trailing whitespace in lines. This will
convert (foo) \n
to (foo)\n
. Defaults to true.
:insert-missing-whitespace?
-
true if cljfmt should insert whitespace missing from between
elements. This will convert (foo(bar))
to (foo (bar))
.
Defaults to true.
:remove-consecutive-blank-lines?
-
true if cljfmt should collapse consecutive blank lines. This will
convert (foo)\n\n\n(bar)
to (foo)\n\n(bar)
. Defaults to true.
:remove-multiple-non-indenting-spaces?
-
true if cljfmt should remove multiple non indenting spaces. For
example, this will convert {:a 1 :b 2}
to {:a 1 :b 2}
. Defaults to false.
:split-keypairs-over-multiple-lines?
-
true if cljfmt should break hashmaps onto multiple lines. This will
convert {:a 1 :b 2}
to {:a 1\n:b 2}
. Defaults to false.
:sort-ns-references?
-
true if cljfmt should alphanumerically sort the requires, imports and
other references in the ns
forms at the top of your namespaces.
Defaults to false.
:function-arguments-indentation
-
:community
if cljfmt should follow the community style recommendation
to indent function/macro arguments by a single space when there
are no arguments on the same line as the function name.:cursive
if two spaces should be used instead, unless the first
thing in the list (not counting metadata) is a data structure
literal. This should replicate Cursive's default behaviour.:zprint
if two spaces should be used instead if the first thing
in the list is a symbol or keyword. This should replicate zprint's
default behaviour.Defaults to :community
:file-pattern
-
a regular expression to decide which files to scan. Defaults to
#”\.clj[csx]?$”
.
:parallel?
-
true if cljfmt should process files in parallel. Defaults to false.
:paths
-
determines which files and directories to recursively search for
Clojure files. Defaults to checking src
and test
, except in
Leiningen where the :source-paths
and :test-paths
keys are used
instead.
Paths can also be passed as command line arguments. If the path is
-
, then the input is STDIN, and the output STDOUT.
Copyright © 2024 James Reeves
Distributed under the Eclipse Public License either version 1.0 or (at your option) any later version.