- Added parameter --indent-leading-semicolon, -ils; see git #171. When
this is negated, a line with a leading semicolon does not get the extra
leading continuation indentation spaces (defined with -ci=n).
- Space around here doc delimiters follow spacing controls better. For
example, a space is now added before the closing paren here:
OLD: (without the here doc):
push( @script, <<'EOT');
NEW:
push( @script, <<'EOT' );
- Added parameter --break-at-trailing-comma-types=s, or -btct=s, where
s is a string which selects trailing commas. For example, -btct='f(b'
places a line break after all bare trailing commas in function calls.
The manual has details.
- Fix git #165, strings beginning with v before => gave an incorrect error
message.
- The parameter --add-lone-trailing-commas, -altc, is now on by default.
This will simplify input for trailing comma operations. Use
--noadd-lone-trailing-commas, or -naltc to turn it off.
- More edge cases for adding and deleting trailing commas are now handled
(git #156).
- A problem has been fixed in which the addition or deletion of trailing
commas with the -atc or -dtc flags did not occur due to early convergence
when the -conv flag was set (git #143).
- Added parameter --qw-as-function, or -qwaf, discussed in git #164.
When this parameter is set, a qw list which begins with 'qw(' is
formatted as if it were a function call with call args being a list
of comma-separated quoted items. For example, given this input:
@fields = qw( $st_dev $st_ino $st_mode $st_nlink $st_uid
$st_gid $st_rdev $st_size $st_atime $st_mtime $st_ctime
$st_blksize $st_blocks);
# perltidy -qwaf
@fields = qw(
$st_dev $st_ino $st_mode $st_nlink
$st_uid $st_gid $st_rdev $st_size
$st_atime $st_mtime $st_ctime $st_blksize
$st_blocks
);
- Add partial support for Syntax::Operator::In and Syntax::Keyword::Match
(see git #162).
- Add --timeout-in-seconds=n, or -tos=n. When the standard input supplies
the input stream, and the input has not been received within n seconds,
perltidy will end with a timeout message. The intention is to catch
a situation where perltidy is accidentally invoked without a file to
process and therefore waits for input from the system standard input
(stdin), which never arrives. The default is n=10.
This check can be turned off with -tos=0.
- Add parameter --closing-side-comment-exclusion-list=string, or
-cscxl=string, where string is a list of block types to exclude
for closing side comment operations. Also, closing side comments
now work for anonymous subs if a --closing-side-comment-list (-cscl)
is not specified, and when 'asub' is requested with -cscl=asub.
Use -cscxl=asub to prevent this.
- Include check for unused constants in --dump-unusual-variables and
--warn-variable-types (new issue type 'c'). Also expand checks to
cover variables introduced with 'use vars'.
- Include signature variables in --dump-unusual-variables and
--warn-variable-types; see git #158.
- Add logical xor operator ^^ available in perl version 5.40, as
noted in git #157.
- Keyword 'state' now has default space before a paren, like 'my'.
Previously there was no space and no control. So the default
is now "state ($x)". This space can be removed with -nsak='state'.
- Add options --add-lone-trailing-commas, -altc and
--delete-lone-trailing-commas, -dltc, to provide control over adding
and deleting the only comma in a list. See discussion in git #143
and the updated manual.
- Add options --dump-mismatched-returns (or -dmr) and
--warn-mismatched-returns (or -wmr). These options report function
calls where the number of values requested may disagree with sub
return statements. The -dump version writes the results for a single
file to standard output and exits:
perltidy -dmr somefile.pl >results.txt
The -warn version formats as normal but reports any issues as warnings in
the error file:
perltidy -wmr somefile.pl
The -warn version may be customized with the following additional
parameters if necessary to avoid needless warnings:
--warn-mismatched-return-types=s (or -wmrt=s),
--warn-mismatched-return-exclusion-list=s (or -wmrxl=s)
where 's' is a control string. These are explained in the manual.
- Updates for issue git #151:
(1) --warn-variable-types=u is now okay if a named file is processed.
(2) --warn-variable-exclusion-list=s now allows leading and/or
trailing * on variable names to allow a wildcard match. For example
-wvxl='*_unused' is okay and would match $var1_unused and $var2_unused.
(3) --dump-unusual-variables now outputs the filename.
- A option was added to filter unimplemented parameters from perltidy
configuration files, suggested in git #146. It works like this: if
a line in the config file begins with three dashes followed by a
parameter name (rather than two dashes), then the line will be removed
if the parameter is unknown. Otherwise, a dash will be removed to make
the line valid.
- Parameters --dump-mismatched-args (or -dma) and
--warn-mismatched-args (or -wma) have been updated to catch more
arg count issues.
- Fixed issue git #143, extend -add-trailing-commas to apply to a list
with just a fat comma.
- The minimum perl version is 5.8.1. Previously it was 5.8.0, which was
not correct because of the use of utf8::is_utf8.
- Fixed issue git #142, test failure installing on perl versions before
version 5.10. The error caused the new parameter
-interbracket-arrow-style=s not to work. Except for this limitation,
Version 20240511 will work on older perl versions.
- The option --valign-signed-numbers, or -vsn is now the default. It
was introduced in the previous release has been found to significantly
improve the overall appearance of columns of signed and unsigned
numbers. See the previous Change Log entry for an example.
This will change the formatting in scripts with columns
of vertically aligned signed and unsigned numbers.
Use -nvsn to turn this option off and avoid this change.
- The option --delete-repeated-commas is now the default.
It makes the following checks and changes:
- Repeated commas like ',,' are removed with a warning
- Repeated fat commas like '=> =>' are removed with a warning
- The combination '=>,' produces a warning but is not changed
These warnings are only output if --warning-output, or -w, is set.
Use --nodelete-repeated-commas, or -ndrc, to retain repeated commas.
- Previously, a line break was always made before a concatenated
quoted string, such as "\n", if the previous line had a greater
starting indentation. An exception is now made for a short concatenated
terminal quote. This keeps code a little more compact. For example:
# basic rule: break before "\n" here because '$name' has more indentation:
my $html = $this->SUPER::genObject( $query, $bindNode, $field . ":$var",
$name, "remove", "UNCHECKED" )
. "\n";
# modified rule: make an exception for a short terminal quote like "\n"
my $html = $this->SUPER::genObject( $query, $bindNode, $field . ":$var",
$name, "remove", "UNCHECKED" ) . "\n";
- The operator ``**=`` now has spaces on both sides by default. Previously,
there was no space on the left. This change makes its spacing the same
as all other assignment operators. The previous behavior can be obtained
with the parameter setting -nwls='**='.
- The option --file-size-order, or -fso is now the default. When
perltidy is given a list of multiple filenames to process, they
are sorted by size and processed in order of increasing size.
This can significantly reduce memory usage by Perl. This
option has always been used in testing, where typically several
jobs each operating on thousands of filenames are running at the
same time and competing for system resources. If this option
is not wanted for some reason, it can be deactivated with -nfso.
- In the option --dump-block-summary, the number of sub arguments indicated
for each sub now includes any leading object variable passed with
an arrow-operator call. Previously the count would have been decreased
by one in this case. This change is needed for compatibility with future
updates.
- Fix issue git #138 involving -xlp (--extended-line-up-parentheses).
When multiple-line quotes and regexes have long secondary lines, these
line lengths could influencing some spacing and indentation, but they
should not have since perltidy has no control over their indentation.
This has been fixed. This will mainly influence code which uses -xlp
and has long multi-line quotes.
- Add option --minimize-continuation-indentation, -mci (see git #137).
This flag allows perltidy to remove continuation indentation in some
special cases where it is not really unnecessary. For a simple example,
the default formatting for the following snippet is:
# perltidy -nmci
$self->blurt( "Error: No INPUT definition for type '$type', typekind '"
. $type->xstype
. "' found" );
The second and third lines are one level deep in a container, and
are also statement continuations, so they get indented by the sum
of the -i value and the -ci value. If this flag is set, the
indentation is reduced by -ci spaces, giving
# perltidy -mci
$self->blurt( "Error: No INPUT definition for type '$type', typekind '"
. $type->xstype
. "' found" );
This situation is relatively rare except in code which has long
quoted strings and the -nolq flag is also set. This flag is currently
off by default, but it could become the default in a future version.
- Add options --dump-mismatched-args (or -dma) and
--warn-mismatched-args (or -wma). These options look
for and report instances where the number of args expected by a
sub appear to differ from the number passed to the sub. The -dump
version writes the results for a single file to standard output
and exits:
perltidy -dma somefile.pl >results.txt
The -warn version formats as normal but reports any issues as warnings in
the error file:
perltidy -wma somefile.pl
The -warn version may be customized with the following additional parameters
if necessary to avoid needless warnings:
--warn-mismatched-arg-types=s (or -wmat=s),
--warn-mismatched-arg-exclusion-list=s (or -wmaxl=s), and
--warn-mismatched-arg-undercount-cutoff=n (or -wmauc=n).
--warn-mismatched-arg-overcount-cutoff=n (or -wmaoc=n).
These are explained in the manual.
- Add option --valign-wide-equals, or -vwe, for issue git #135.
Setting this parameter causes the following assignment operators
= **= += *= &= <<= &&= -= /= |= >>= ||= //= .= %= ^= x=
to be aligned vertically with the ending = all aligned. For example,
here is the default formatting of a snippet of code:
$str .= SPACE x $total_pad_count;
$str_len += $total_pad_count;
$total_pad_count = 0;
$str .= $rfields->[$j];
$str_len += $rfield_lengths->[$j];
And here is the same code formatted with -vwe:
# perltidy -vwe
$str .= SPACE x $total_pad_count;
$str_len += $total_pad_count;
$total_pad_count = 0;
$str .= $rfields->[$j];
$str_len += $rfield_lengths->[$j];
This option currently is off by default to avoid changing existing
formatting.
- Added control --delete-interbracket-arrows, or -dia, to delete optional
hash ref and array ref arrows between brackets as in the following
expression (see git #131)
return $self->{'commandline'}->{'arg_list'}->[0]->[0]->{'hostgroups'};
# perltidy -dia gives:
return $self->{'commandline'}{'arg_list'}[0][0]{'hostgroups'};
Added the opposite control --aia-interbracket-arrows, or -aia, to
add arrows. So applied to the previous line the arrows are restored:
# perltidy -aia
return $self->{'commandline'}->{'arg_list'}->[0]->[0]->{'hostgroups'};
The manual describes additional controls for adding and deleting
just selected interbracket arrows.
- Added --valign-signed-numbers, or -vsn. This improves the appearance
of columns of numbers by aligning leading algebraic signs. For example:
# perltidy -vsn
my $xyz_shield = [
[ -0.060, -0.060, 0. ],
[ 0.060, -0.060, 0. ],
[ 0.060, 0.060, 0. ],
[ -0.060, 0.060, 0. ],
[ -0.0925, -0.0925, 0.092 ],
[ 0.0925, -0.0925, 0.092 ],
[ 0.0925, 0.0925, 0.092 ],
[ -0.0925, 0.0925, 0.092 ],
];
# perltidy -nvsn (current DEFAULT)
my $xyz_shield = [
[ -0.060, -0.060, 0. ],
[ 0.060, -0.060, 0. ],
[ 0.060, 0.060, 0. ],
[ -0.060, 0.060, 0. ],
[ -0.0925, -0.0925, 0.092 ],
[ 0.0925, -0.0925, 0.092 ],
[ 0.0925, 0.0925, 0.092 ],
[ -0.0925, 0.0925, 0.092 ],
];
This new option works well but is currently OFF to allow more testing
and fine-tuning. It is expected to be activated in a future release.
- Added --dump-mixed-call-parens (-dmcp ) which will dump a list of
operators which are sometimes followed by parens and sometimes not.
This can be useful for developing a uniform style for selected operators.
Issue git #128. For example
perltidy -dmcp somefile.pl >out.txt
produces lines like this, where the first number is the count of
uses with parens, and the second number is the count without parens.
k:caller:2:1
k:chomp:3:4
k:close:7:4
- Added --want-call-parens=s (-wcp=s) and --nowant-call-parens=s (-nwcp=s)
options which will warn of paren uses which do not match a selected
style. The manual has details. But for example,
perltidy -wcp='&' somefile.pl
will format as normal but warn if any user subs are called without parens.
- Added --dump-unusual-variables (-duv) option to dump a list of
variables with certain properties of interest. For example
perltidy -duv somefile.pl >vars.txt
produces a file with lines which look something like
1778:u: my $input_file
6089:r: my $j: reused - see line 6076
The values on the line which are separated by colons are:
line number - the number of the line of the input file
issue - a single letter indicating the issue, see below
variable name - the name of the variable, preceded by a keyword
note - an optional note referring to another line
The issue is indicated by a letter which may be one of:
r: reused variable name
s: sigil change but reused bareword
p: lexical variable with scope in multiple packages
u: unused variable
This is very useful for locating problem areas and bugs in code.
- Added a related flag --warn-variable-types=string (-wvt=string) option
to warn if certain types of variables are found in a script. The types
are a space-separated string which may include 'r', 's', and 'p' but
not 'u'. For example
perltidy -wvt='r s' somefile.pl
will check for and warn if any variabls of type 'r', or 's' are seen,
but not 'p'. All possible checks may be indicated with a '*' or '1':
perltidy -wvt='*' somefile.pl
The manual has further details.
- All parameters taking integer values are now checked for
out-of-range values before processing starts. When a maximum or
maximum range is exceeded, the new default behavior is to write a
warning message, reset the value to its default setting, and continue.
This default behavior can be changed with the new parameter
--integer-range-check=n, or -irc=n, as follows:
n=0 skip check completely (for stress-testing perltidy only)
n=1 reset bad values to defaults but do not issue a warning
n=2 reset bad values to defaults and issue a warning [DEFAULT]
n=3 stop immediately if any values are out of bounds
The settings n=0 and n=1 are mainly useful for testing purposes.
- The --dump-block-summary (-dbs) option now includes the number of sub
args in the 'type' column. For example, 'sub(9)' indicates a sub
with 9 args. Subs whose arg count cannot easily be determined are
indicated as 'sub(*)'. The count does not include a leading '$self'
or '$class' arg.
- Added flag --space-signature-paren=n, or -ssp=n (issue git #125).
This flag works the same as the existing flag --space-prototype-paren=n
except that it applies to the space before the opening paren of a sub
signature instead of a sub prototype. Previously, there was no control
over this (a space always occurred). For example, given the following
line:
sub circle( $xc, $yc, $rad );
The following results can now be obtained, according to the value of n:
sub circle( $xc, $yc, $rad ); # n=0 [no space]
sub circle( $xc, $yc, $rad ); # n=1 [default; same as input]
sub circle ( $xc, $yc, $rad ); # n=2 [space]
The spacing in previous versions of perltidy corresponded to n=2 (always
a space). The new default value, n=1, will produce a space if and only
if there was a space in the input text.
- The --dump-block-summary option can report an if-elsif-elsif-.. chain
as a single line item with the notation -dbt='elsif3', for example,
where the '3' is an integer which specifies the minimum number of elsif
blocks required for a chain to be reported. The manual has details.
- Fix problem c269, in which the new -ame parameter could incorrectly
emit an else block when two elsif blocks were separated by a hanging
side comment (a very rare situation).
- When braces are detected to be unbalanced, an attempt is made to
localize the error by comparing the indentation at closing braces
with their actual nesting levels. This can be useful for files which
have previously been formatted by perltidy. To illustrate, a test was
made in which the closing brace at line 30644 was commented out in
a file with a total of over 62000 lines. The new error message is
Final nesting depth of '{'s is 1
The most recent un-matched '{' is on line 6858
...
Table of nesting level differences at closing braces.
This might help localize brace errors if the file was previously formatted.
line: (brace level) - (level expected from old indentation)
30643: 0
30645: 1
Previously, the error file only indicated that the error in this case
was somewhere after line 6858, so the new table is very helpful. Closing
brace indentation is checked because it is unambiguous and can be done
very efficiently.
- The -DEBUG option no longer automatically also writes a .LOG file.
Use --show-options if the .LOG file is needed.
- The run time of this version with all new options in use is no greater
than that of the previous version thanks to optimization work.
- Fix for git #124: remove a syntax error check which could cause
an incorrect error message when List::Gather::gather was used.
- Added new parameters -wme, or --warn-missing-else, and -ame,
or --add-missing else. The parameter -wme tells perltidy to issue
a warning if an if-elsif-... chain does not end in an else block.
The parameter -ame tells perltidy to insert an else block at the
end of such a chain if there is none.
For example, given the following snippet:
if ( $level == 3 ) { $val = $global{'section'} }
elsif ( $level == 2 ) { $val = $global{'chapter'} }
# perltidy -ame
if ( $level == 3 ) { $val = $global{'section'} }
elsif ( $level == 2 ) { $val = $global{'chapter'} }
else {
##FIXME - added with perltidy -ame
}
The resulting code should be carefully reviewed, and the ##FIXME comment
should be updated as appropriate. The text of the ##FIXME comment can be
changed with parameter -amec=s, where 's' is the comment to mark the new
else block. The man pages have more details.
- The syntax of the parameter --use-feature=class, or -uf=class, which
new in the previous release, has been changed slightly for clarity.
The default behavior, which occurs if this flag is not entered, is
to automatically try to handle both old and new uses of the keywords
'class', 'method', 'field', and 'ADJUST'.
To force these keywords to only follow the -use feature 'class' syntax,
enter --use-feature=class.
To force perltidy to ignore the -use feature 'class' syntax, enter
--use-feature=noclass.
- Issue git #122. Added parameter -lrt=n1:n2, or --line-range-tidy=n1:n2
to limit tidy operations to a limited line range. Line numbers start
with 1. This parameter is mainly of interest to editing programs which
drive perltidy. The man pages have details.
- Some fairly rare instances of incorrect spacing have been fixed. The
problem was that the tokenizer being overly conservative in marking
terms as possible filehandles or indirect objects. This causes the space
after the possible filehandle to be frozen to its input value in order not
to introduce an error in case Perl had to guess. The problem was fixed
by having the tokenizer look ahead for operators which can eliminate the
uncertainty. To illustrate, in the following line the term ``$d`` was
previously marked as a possible filehandle, so no space was added after it.
print $d== 1 ? " [ON]\n" : $d ? " [$d]\n" : "\n";
^
In the current version, the next token is seen to be an equality, so
``$d`` is marked as an ordinary identifier and normal spacing rules
can apply:
print $d == 1 ? " [ON]\n" : $d ? " [$d]\n" : "\n";
^
- This version runs 7 to 10 percent faster than the previous release on
large files, depending on options and file type. Much of the gain comes
from streamlined I/O operations.
- This version was stress-tested for many cpu hours with random
input parameters. No failures to converge, internal fault checks,
undefined variable references or other irregularities were seen.
- Issue git #121. Added parameters -xbt, or --extended-block-tightness,
and -xbtl=s, or --extended-block-tightness-list=s, to allow
certain small code blocks to have internal spacing controlled by
-bbt=n rather than -bt=n. The man pages have details.
- Issue git #118. A warning will be issued if a duplicate format-skipping
starting marker is seen within a format-skipping section. The same
applies to duplicate code-skipping starting markers within code-skipping
sections.
- Issue git #116. A new flag --valign-if-unless, -viu, was added to
allow postfix 'unless' terms to align with postfix 'if' terms. The
default remains not to do this.
- Fixed git #115. In the two most recent CPAN releases, when the
Perl::Tidy module was called with the source pointing to a file,
but no destination specified, the output went to the standard
output instead of to a file with extension ``.tdy``, as it should
have. This has been fixed.
- Fixed git #110, add missing documentation for new options
-cpb and -bfvt=n. These work in version 20230309 but the pod
documentation was missing and has been added.
- Fixed an undefined reference message when running with
--dump-block-summary on a file without any subs or other
selected block types.
- Add parameter -ipc, or --ignore-perlcritic-comments. Perltidy, by
default, will look for side comments beginning with ``## no critic`` and
ignore their lengths when making line break decisions, even if the user
has not set ``-iscl``. The reason is that an unwanted line break can
make these special comments ineffective in controlling ``perlcritic``.
The parameter -ipc can be set if, for some reason, this is not wanted.
- Some minor issues with continuation indentation have been fixed.
Most scripts will remain unchanged. The main change is that block
comments which occur just before a closing brace, bracket or paren
now have an indentation which is independent of the existence of
an optional comma or semicolon. Previously, adding or deleting
an optional trailing comma could cause their indentation to jump.
Also, indentation of comments within ternary statements has been
improved. For additional details see:
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/blob/master/docs/ci_update.md
- This version was stress-tested for many cpu hours with random
input parameters. No failures to converge, internal fault checks,
undefined variable references or other irregularities were seen.
- This version runs several percent faster than the previous release
on large files.
- No significant bugs have been found since the last release to CPAN.
Several minor issues have been fixed, and some new parameters have been
added, as follows:
- Added parameter --one-line-block-exclusion-list=s, or -olbxl=s, where
s is a list of block types which should not automatically be turned
into one-line blocks. This implements the issue raised in PR #111.
The list s may include any of the words 'sort map grep eval', or
it may be '*' to indicate all of these. So for example to prevent
multi-line 'eval' blocks from becoming one-line blocks, the command
would be -olbxl='eval'.
- For the -b (--backup-and-modify-in-place) option, the file timestamps
are changing (git #113, rt#145999). First, if there are no formatting
changes to an input file, it will keep its original modification time.
Second, any backup file will keep its original modification time. This
was previously true for --backup-method=move but not for the default
--backup-method=copy. The purpose of these changes is to avoid
triggering Makefile operations when there are no actual file changes.
If this causes a problem please open an issue for discussion on github.
- A change was made to the way line breaks are made at the '.'
operator when the user sets -wba='.' to requests breaks after a '.'
( this setting is not recommended because it can be hard to read ).
The goal of the change is to make switching from breaks before '.'s
to breaks after '.'s just move the dots from the end of
lines to the beginning of lines. For example:
# default and recommended (--want-break-before='.'):
$output_rules .=
( 'class'
. $dir
. '.stamp: $('
. $dir
. '_JAVA)' . "\n" . "\t"
. '$(CLASSPATH_ENV) $(JAVAC) -d $(JAVAROOT) '
. '$(JAVACFLAGS) $?' . "\n" . "\t"
. 'echo timestamp > class'
. $dir
. '.stamp'
. "\n" );
# perltidy --want-break-after='.'
$output_rules .=
( 'class' .
$dir .
'.stamp: $(' .
$dir .
'_JAVA)' . "\n" . "\t" .
'$(CLASSPATH_ENV) $(JAVAC) -d $(JAVAROOT) ' .
'$(JAVACFLAGS) $?' . "\n" . "\t" .
'echo timestamp > class' .
$dir .
'.stamp' .
"\n" );
For existing code formatted with -wba='.', this may cause some
changes in the formatting of code with long concatenation chains.
- Added option --use-feature=class, or -uf=class, for issue rt #145706.
This adds keywords 'class', 'method', 'field', and 'ADJUST' in support of
this feature which is being tested for future inclusion in Perl.
An effort has been made to avoid conflicts with past uses of these
words, especially 'method' and 'class'. The default setting
is --use-feature=class. If this causes a conflict, this option can
be turned off by entering -uf=' '.
In other words, perltidy should work for both old and new uses of
these keywords with the default settings, but this flag is available
if a conflict arises.
- Added option -bfvt=n, or --brace-follower-vertical-tightness=n,
for part of issue git #110. For n=2, this option looks for lines
which would otherwise be, by default,
}
or ..
and joins them into a single line
} or ..
where the or can be one of a number of logical operators or if unless.
The default is not to do this and can be indicated with n=1.
- Added option -cpb, or --cuddled-paren-brace, for issue git #110.
This option will cause perltidy to join two lines which
otherwise would be, by default,
)
{
into a single line
) {
- Some minor changes to existing formatted output may occur as a result
of fixing minor formatting issues with edge cases. This is especially
true for code which uses the -lp or -xlp styles.
- Added option -dbs, or --dump-block-summary, to dump summary
information about code blocks in a file to standard output.
The basic command is:
perltidy -dbs somefile.pl >blocks.csv
Instead of formatting ``somefile.pl``, this dumps the following
comma-separated items describing its blocks to the standard output:
filename - the name of the file
line - the line number of the opening brace of this block
line_count - the number of lines between opening and closing braces
code_lines - the number of lines excluding blanks, comments, and pod
type - the block type (sub, for, foreach, ...)
name - the block name if applicable (sub name, label, asub name)
depth - the nesting depth of the opening block brace
max_change - the change in depth to the most deeply nested code block
block_count - the total number of code blocks nested in this block
mccabe_count - the McCabe complexity measure of this code block
This can be useful for code restructuring. The man page for perltidy
has more information and describes controls for selecting block types.
- This version was stress-tested for over 100 cpu hours with random
input parameters. No failures to converge, internal fault checks,
undefined variable references or other irregularities were seen.
- This version runs a few percent faster than the previous release on
large files due to optimizations made with the help of Devel::NYTProf.
- Fix rt #145095, undef warning in Perl before 5.12. Version 20221112 is
identical to 2022111 except for this fix for older versions of Perl.
- No significant bugs have been found since the last release to CPAN.
Several minor issues have been fixed, and some new parameters have been
added, as follows:
- Fixed rare problem with irregular indentation involving --cuddled-else,
usually also with the combination -xci and -lp. Reported in rt #144979.
- Add option --weld-fat-comma (-wfc) for issue git #108. When -wfc
is set, along with -wn, perltidy is allowed to weld an opening paren
to an inner opening container when they are separated by a hash key
and fat comma (=>). For example:
# perltidy -wn
elf->call_method(
method_name_foo => {
some_arg1 => $foo,
some_other_arg3 => $bar->{'baz'},
}
);
# perltidy -wn -wfc
elf->call_method( method_name_foo => {
some_arg1 => $foo,
some_other_arg3 => $bar->{'baz'},
} );
This flag is off by default.
- Fix issue git #106. This fixes some edge cases of formatting with the
combination -xlp -pt=2, mainly for two-line lists with short function
names. One indentation space is removed to improve alignment:
# OLD: perltidy -xlp -pt=2
is($module->VERSION, $expected,
"$main_module->VERSION matches $module->VERSION ($expected)");
# NEW: perltidy -xlp -pt=2
is($module->VERSION, $expected,
"$main_module->VERSION matches $module->VERSION ($expected)");
- Fix for issue git #105, incorrect formatting with 5.36 experimental
for_list feature.
- Fix for issue git #103. For parameter -b, or --backup-and-modify-in-place,
the default backup method has been changed to preserve the inode value
of the file being formatted. If this causes a problem, the previous
method is available and can be used by setting -backup-mode='move', or
-bm='move'. The new default corresponds to -bm='copy'. The difference
between the two methods is as follows. For the older method,
-bm='move', the input file was moved to the backup, and a new file was
created for the formatted output. This caused the inode to change. For
the new default method, -bm='copy', the input is copied to the backup
and then the input file is reopened and rewritten. This preserves the
file inode. Tests have not produced any problems with this change, but
before using the --backup-and-modify-in-place parameter please verify
that it works correctly in your environment and operating system. The
initial update for this had an error which was caught and fixed
in git #109.
- Fix undefined value message when perltidy -D is used (git #104)
- Fixed an inconsistency in html colors near pointers when -html is used.
Previously, a '->' at the end of a line got the 'punctuation color', black
by default but a '->' before an identifier got the color of the following
identifier. Now all pointers get the same color, which is black by default.
Also, previously a word following a '->' was given the color of a bareword,
black by default, but now it is given the color of an identifier.
- Fixed incorrect indentation of any function named 'err'. This was
due to some old code from when "use feature 'err'" was valid.
# OLD:
my ($curr) = current();
err (@_);
# NEW:
my ($curr) = current();
err(@_);
- Added parameter --delete-repeated-commas (-drc) to delete repeated
commas. This is off by default. For example, given:
ignoreSpec( $file, "file",, \%spec, \%Rspec );
# perltidy -drc:
ignoreSpec( $file, "file", \%spec, \%Rspec );
- Add continuation indentation to long C-style 'for' terms; i.e.
# OLD
for (
$j = $i - $shell ;
$j >= 0
&& ++$ncomp
&& $array->[$j] gt $array->[ $j + $shell ] ;
$j -= $shell
)
# NEW
for (
$j = $i - $shell ;
$j >= 0
&& ++$ncomp
&& $array->[$j] gt $array->[ $j + $shell ] ;
$j -= $shell
)
This will change some existing formatting with very long 'for' terms.
- The following new parameters are available for manipulating
trailing commas of lists. They are described in the manual.
--want-trailing-commas=s, -wtc=s
--add-trailing-commas, -atc
--delete-trailing-commas, -dtc
--delete-weld-interfering-commas, -dwic
- Files with errors due to missing, extra or misplaced parens, braces,
or square brackets are now written back out verbatim, without any
attempt at formatting.
- This version runs 10 to 15 percent faster than the previous
release on large files due to optimizations made with the help of
Devel::NYTProf.
- This version was stress-tested for over 200 cpu hours with random
input parameters. No failures to converge, internal fault checks,
undefined variable references or other irregularities were seen.
- No significant bugs have been found since the last release but users
of programs which call the Perl::Tidy module should note the first
item below, which changes a default setting. The main change to
existing formatting is the second item below, which adds vertical
alignment to 'use' statements.
- The flag --encode-output-strings, or -eos, is now set 'on' by default.
This has no effect on the use of the 'perltidy' binary script, but could
change the behavior of some programs which use the Perl::Tidy module on
files encoded in UTF-8. If any problems are noticed, an emergency fix
can be made by reverting to the old default by setting -neos. For
an explanation of why this change needs to be made see:
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/issues/92
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/blob/master/docs/eos_flag.md
- Added vertical alignment for qw quotes and empty parens in 'use'
statements (see issue #git 93). This new alignment is 'on' by default
and will change formatting as shown below. If this is not wanted it can
be turned off with the parameter -vxl='q' (--valign-exclusion-list='q').
# old default, or -vxl='q'
use Getopt::Long qw(GetOptions);
use Fcntl qw(O_RDONLY O_WRONLY O_EXCL O_CREAT);
use Symbol qw(gensym);
use Exporter ();
# new default
use Getopt::Long qw(GetOptions);
use Fcntl qw(O_RDONLY O_WRONLY O_EXCL O_CREAT);
use Symbol qw(gensym);
use Exporter ();
- The parameter -kbb (--keep-break-before) now ignores a request to break
before an opening token, such as '('. Likewise, -kba (--keep-break-after)
now ignores a request to break after a closing token, such as ')'. This
change was made to avoid a rare instability discovered in random testing.
- Previously, if a -dsc command was used to delete all side comments,
then any special side comments for controlling non-indenting braces got
deleted too. Now, these control side comments are retained when -dsc is
set unless a -nnib (--nonon-indenting-braces) flag is also set to
deactivate them.
- This version runs about 10 percent faster on large files than the previous
release due to optimizations made with the help of Devel::NYTProf. Much
of the gain came from faster processing of blank tokens and comments.
- This version of perltidy was stress-tested for many cpu hours with
random input parameters. No failures to converge, internal fault checks,
undefined variable references or other irregularities were seen.
- A new flag, --encode-output-strings, or -eos, has been added to resolve
issue git #83. This issue involves the interface between Perl::Tidy and
calling programs, and Code::TidyAll (tidyall) in particular. The problem
is that perltidy by default returns decoded character strings, but
tidyall expects encoded strings. This flag provides a fix for that.
So, tidyall users who process encoded (utf8) files should update to this
version of Perl::Tidy and use -eos for tidyall. For further info see:
https://github.com/houseabsolute/perl-code-tidyall/issues/84, and
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/issues/83
If there are other applications having utf8 problems at the interface
with Perl::Tidy, this flag probably may need to be set.
- The default value of the new flag, --encode-output-strings, -eos, is currently
-neos BUT THIS MAY CHANGE in a future release because the current
default is inconvenient. So authors of programs which receive character
strings back from Perl::Tidy should set this flag, if necessary,
to avoid any problems when the default changes. For more information see the
above links and the Perl::Tidy man pages for example coding.
- The possible values of the string 's' for the flag '--character-encoding=s'
have been limited to 'utf8' (or UTF-8), 'none', or 'guess'. Previously an
arbitrary encoding could also be specified, but as a result of discussions
regarding git #83 it became clear that this could cause trouble
since the output encoding was still restricted to UTF-8. Users
who need to work in other encodings can write a short program calling
Perl::Tidy with pre- and post-processing to handle encoding/decoding.
- A new flag --break-after-labels=i, or -bal=i, was added for git #86. This
controls line breaks after labels, to provide a uniform style, as follows:
-bal=0 follows the input line breaks [DEFAULT]
-bal=1 always break after a label
-bal=2 never break after a label
For example:
# perltidy -bal=1
INIT:
{
$xx = 1.234;
}
# perltidy -bal=2
INIT: {
$xx = 1.234;
}
- Fix issue git #82, an error handling something like ${bareword} in a
possible indirect object location. Perl allows this, now perltidy does too.
- The flags -kbb=s or --keep-old-breakpoints-before=s, and its counterpart
-kba=s or --keep-old-breakpoints-after=s have expanded functionality
for the container tokens: { [ ( } ] ). The updated man pages have
details.
- Two new flags have been added to provide finer vertical alignment control,
--valign-exclusion-list=s (-vxl=s) and --valign-inclusion-list=s (-vil=s).
This has been requested several times, most recently in git #79, and it
finally got done. For example, -vil='=>' means just align on '=>'.
- A new flag -gal=s, --grep-alias-list=s, has been added as suggested in
git #77. This allows code blocks passed to list operator functions to
be formatted in the same way as a code block passed to grep, map, or sort.
By default, the following list operators in List::Util are included:
all any first none notall reduce reductions
They can be changed with the flag -gaxl=s, -grep-alias-exclusion-list=s
- A new flag -xlp has been added which can be set to avoid most of the
limitations of the -lp flag regarding side comments, blank lines, and
code blocks. See the man pages for more info. This fixes git #64 and git #74.
The older -lp flag still works.
- A new flag -lpil=s, --line-up-parentheses-inclusion-list=s, has been added
as an alternative to -lpxl=s, --line-up-parentheses-exclusion-list=s.
It supplies equivalent information but is much easier to describe and use.
It works for both the older -lp version and the newer -xlp.
- The coding for the older -lp flag has been updated to avoid some problems
and limitations. The new coding allows the -lp indentation style to
mix smoothly with the standard indentation in a single file. Some problems
where -lp and -xci flags were not working well together have been fixed, such
as happened in issue rt140025. As a result of these updates some minor
changes in existing code using the -lp style may occur.
- This version of perltidy was stress-tested for many cpu hours with
random input parameters. No failures to converge, internal fault checks,
undefined variable references or other irregularities were seen.
- Numerous minor fixes have been made, mostly very rare formatting
instabilities found in random testing.
- No significant bugs have been found since the last release, but several
minor issues have been fixed. Vertical alignment has been improved for
lists of call args which are not contained within parens (next item).
- Vertical alignment of function calls without parens has been improved with
the goal of making vertical alignment essentially the same with or
without parens around the call args. Some examples:
# OLD
mkTextConfig $c, $x, $y, -anchor => 'se', $color;
mkTextConfig $c, $x + 30, $y, -anchor => 's', $color;
mkTextConfig $c, $x + 60, $y, -anchor => 'sw', $color;
mkTextConfig $c, $x, $y + 30, -anchor => 'e', $color;
# NEW
mkTextConfig $c, $x, $y, -anchor => 'se', $color;
mkTextConfig $c, $x + 30, $y, -anchor => 's', $color;
mkTextConfig $c, $x + 60, $y, -anchor => 'sw', $color;
mkTextConfig $c, $x, $y + 30, -anchor => 'e', $color;
# OLD
is id_2obj($id), undef, "unregistered object not retrieved";
is scalar keys %$ob_reg, 0, "object registry empty";
is register($obj), $obj, "object returned by register";
is scalar keys %$ob_reg, 1, "object registry nonempty";
is id_2obj($id), $obj, "registered object retrieved";
# NEW
is id_2obj($id), undef, "unregistered object not retrieved";
is scalar keys %$ob_reg, 0, "object registry empty";
is register($obj), $obj, "object returned by register";
is scalar keys %$ob_reg, 1, "object registry nonempty";
is id_2obj($id), $obj, "registered object retrieved";
This will cause some changes in alignment, hopefully for the better,
particularly in test code which often uses numerous parenless function
calls with functions like 'ok', 'is', 'is_deeply', ....
- Two new parameters were added to control the block types to which the
-bl (--opening-brace-on-new-line) flag applies. The new parameters are
-block-left-list=s, or -bll=s, and --block-left-exclusion-list=s,
or -blxl=s. Previously the -bl flag was 'hardwired' to apply to
nearly all blocks. The default values of the new parameters
retain the the old default behavior but allow it to be changed.
- The default behavior of the -bli (-brace-left-and-indent) flag has changed
slightly. Previously, if you set -bli, then the -bl flag would also
automatically be set. Consequently, block types which were not included
in the default list for -bli would get -bl formatting. This is no longer done,
and these two styles are now controlled independently. The manual describes
the controls. If you want to recover the exact previous default behavior of
the -bli then add the -bl flag.
- A partial fix was made for issue for git #74. The -lp formatting style was
being lost when a one-line anonymous sub was followed by a closing brace.
- Fixed issue git #73, in which the -nfpva flag was not working correctly.
Some unwanted vertical alignments of spaced function perens
were being made.
- Updated the man pages to clarify the flags -valign and -novalign
for turning vertical alignment on and off (issue git #72).
Added parameters -vc -vsc -vbc for separately turning off vertical
alignment of code, side comments and block comments.
- Fixed issue git #68, where a blank line following a closing code-skipping
comment, '#>>V', could be lost.
- This version runs 10 to 15 percent faster on large files than the
previous release due to optimizations made with the help of NYTProf.
- This version of perltidy was stress-tested for many cpu hours with
random input parameters. No instabilities, internal fault checks,
undefined variable references or other irregularities were seen.
- Numerous minor fixes have been made, mostly very rare formatting instabilities
found in random testing. An effort has been made to minimize changes to
existing formatting that these fixes produce, but occasional changes
may occur. Many of these updates are listed at:
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/blob/master/local-docs/BugLog.pod
- This release is being made mainly because of the next item, in which an
error message about an uninitialized value error message could be produced
in certain cases when format-skipping is used. The error message was
annoying but harmless to formatting.
- Fixed an undefined variable message, see git #67. When a format skipping
comment '#<<' is placed before the first line of code in a script, a
message 'Use of uninitialized value $Ktoken_vars in numeric ...' can
occur.
- A warning will no longer be given if a script has an opening code-skipping
comment '#<<V' which is not terminated with a closing comment '#>>V'. This
makes code-skipping and format-skipping behave in a similar way: an
opening comment without a corresponding closing comment will cause
the rest of a file to be skipped. If there is a question about which lines
are skipped, a .LOG file can be produced with the -g flag and it will have
this information.
- Removed the limit on -ci=n when -xci is set, reference: rt #136415.
This update removes a limit in the previous two versions in which the
value of -ci=n was limited to the value of -i=n when -xci was set.
This limit had been placed to avoid some formatting instabilities,
but recent coding improvements allow the limit to be removed.
- The -wn and -bbxx=n flags were not working together correctly. This has
been fixed.
- This version may produce occasional differences in formatting compared to
previous versions, mainly for lines which are near the specified line
length limit. This is due to ongoing efforts to eliminate edge cases of
formatting instability.
- Numerous minor fixes have been made. A complete list is at:
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/blob/master/local-docs/BugLog.pod
- This release adds several new requested parameters. No significant bugs have
been found since the last release, but a number of minor problems have been
corrected.
- Added a new option '--code-skipping', requested in git #65, in which code
between comment lines '#<<V' and '#>>V' is passed verbatim to the output
stream without error checking. It is similar to --format-skipping
but there is no error checking of the skipped code. This can be useful for
skipping past code which employs an extended syntax.
- Added a new option for closing paren placement, -vtc=3, requested in rt #136417.
- Added flag -atnl, --add-terminal-newline, to help issue git #58.
This flag tells perltidy to terminate the last line of the output stream
with a newline character, regardless of whether or not the input stream
was terminated with a newline character. This is the default.
If this flag is negated, with -natnl, then perltidy will add a terminal
newline character to the the output stream only if the input
stream is terminated with a newline.
- Some nested structures formatted with the -lp indentation option may have
some changes in indentation. This is due to updates which were made to
prevent formatting instability when line lengths are limited by the maximum line
length. Most scripts will not be affected. If this causes unwanted formatting
changes, try increasing the --maximum-line-length by a few characters.
- Numerous minor fixes have been made. A complete list is at:
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/blob/master/local-docs/BugLog.pod
- This release fixes several non-critical bugs which have been found since the last
release. An effort has been made to keep existing formatting unchanged.
- Fixed issue git #57 regarding uninitialized warning flag.
- Added experimental flag -lpxl=s requested in issue git #56 to provide some
control over which containers get -lp indentation.
- Fixed issue git #55 regarding lack of coordination of the --break-before-xxx
flags and the --line-up-parens flag.
- Fixed issue git #54 regarding irregular application of the --break-before-paren
and similar --break-before-xxx flags, in which lists without commas were not
being formatted according to these flags.
- Fixed issue git #53. A flag was added to turn off alignment of spaced function
parens. If the --space-function-paren, -sfp flag is set, a side-effect is that the
spaced function parens may get vertically aligned. This can be undesirable,
so a new parameter '--function-paren-vertical-alignment', or '-fpva', has been
added to turn this vertical alignment off. The default is '-fpva', so that
existing formatting is not changed. Use '-nfpva' to turn off unwanted
vertical alignment. To illustrate the possibilities:
# perltidy [default]
myfun( $aaa, $b, $cc );
mylongfun( $a, $b, $c );
# perltidy -sfp
myfun ( $aaa, $b, $cc );
mylongfun ( $a, $b, $c );
# perltidy -sfp -nfpva
myfun ( $aaa, $b, $cc );
mylongfun ( $a, $b, $c );
- Fixed issue git #51, a closing qw bare paren was not being outdented when
the -nodelete-old-newlines flag was set.
- Fixed numerous edge cases involving unusual parameter combinations which
could cause alternating output states. Most scripts will not be
changed by these fixes.
- A more complete list of updates is at
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/blob/master/local-docs/BugLog.pod
- Fixed issue git #49, -se breaks warnings exit status behavior.
The exit status flag was not always being set when the -se flag was set.
- Some improvements have been made in the method for aligning side comments.
One of the problems that was fixed is that there was a tendency for side comment
placement to drift to the right in long scripts. Programs with side comments
may have a few changes.
- Some improvements have been made in formatting qw quoted lists. This
fixes issue git #51, in which closing qw pattern delimiters not always
following the settings specified by the --closing-token-indentation=n settings.
Now qw closing delimiters ')', '}' and ']' follow these flags, and the
delimiter '>' follows the flag for ')'. Other qw pattern delimiters remain
indented as the are now. This change will cause some small formatting changes
in some existing programs.
- Another change involving qw lists is that they get full indentation,
rather than just continuation indentation, if
(1) the closing delimiter is one of } ) ] > and is on a separate line,
(2) the opening delimiter (i.e. 'qw{' ) is also on a separate line, and
(3) the -xci flag (--extended-continuation-indentation) is set.
This improves formatting when qw lists are contained in other lists. For example,
# OLD: perltidy
foreach $color (
qw(
AntiqueWhite3 Bisque1 Bisque2 Bisque3 Bisque4
SlateBlue3 RoyalBlue1 SteelBlue2 DeepSkyBlue3
),
qw(
LightBlue1 DarkSlateGray1 Aquamarine2 DarkSeaGreen2
SeaGreen1 Yellow1 IndianRed1 IndianRed2 Tan1 Tan4
)
)
# NEW, perltidy -xci
foreach $color (
qw(
AntiqueWhite3 Bisque1 Bisque2 Bisque3 Bisque4
SlateBlue3 RoyalBlue1 SteelBlue2 DeepSkyBlue3
),
qw(
LightBlue1 DarkSlateGray1 Aquamarine2 DarkSeaGreen2
SeaGreen1 Yellow1 IndianRed1 IndianRed2 Tan1 Tan4
)
)
- Some minor improvements have been made to the rules for formatting
some edge vertical alignment cases, usually involving two dissimilar lines.
- A more complete list of updates is at
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/blob/master/local-docs/BugLog.pod
- Fixed issue git #47, incorrect welding of anonymous subs.
An incorrect weld format was being made when the --weld-nested-containers option
(-wn) was used in to format a function which returns a list of anonymous subs.
For example, the following snippet was incorrectly being welded.
$promises[$i]->then(
sub { $all->resolve(@_); () },
sub {
$results->[$i] = [@_];
$all->reject(@$results) if --$remaining <= 0;
return ();
}
);
This was due to an error introduced in v20201201 related to parsing sub
signatures. Reformatting with the current version will fix the problem.
- This release is being made primarily to make available a several new formatting
parameters, in particular -xci, -kbb=s, -kba=s, and -wnxl=s. No significant
bugs have been found since the previous release, but numerous minor issues have
been found and fixed as listed below.
- This version is about 20% faster than the previous version due to optimizations
made with the help of Devel::NYTProf.
- Added flag -wnxl=s, --weld-nested-exclusion-list=s, to provide control which containers
are welded with the --weld-nested-containers parameter. This is related to issue git #45.
- Merged pull request git #46 which fixes the docs regarding the -fse flag.
- Fixed issue git #45, -vtc=n flag was ignored when -wn was set.
- implement request RT #133649, delete-old-newlines selectively. Two parameters,
-kbb=s or --keep-old-breakpoints-before=s, and
-kba=s or --keep-old-breakpoints-after=s
were added to request that old breakpoints be kept before or after
selected token types. For example, -kbb='=>' means that newlines before
fat commas should be kept.
- Fix git #44, fix exit status for assert-tidy/untidy. The exit status was
always 0 for --assert-tidy if the user had turned off all error messages with
the -quiet flag. This has been fixed.
- Add flag -maxfs=n, --maximum-file-size-mb=n. This parameter is provided to
avoid causing system problems by accidentally attempting to format an
extremely large data file. The default is n=10. The command to increase
the limit to 20 MB for example would be -mfs=20. This only applies to
files specified by filename on the command line.
- Skip formatting if there are too many indentation level errors. This is
controlled with -maxle=n, --maximum-level-errors=n. This means that if
the ending indentation differs from the starting indentation by more than
n levels, the file will be output verbatim. The default is n=1.
To skip this check, set n=-1 or set n to a large number.
- A related new flag, --maximum-unexpected-errors=n, or -maxue=n, is available
but is off by default.
- Add flag -xci, --extended-continuation-indentation, regarding issue git #28
This flag causes continuation indentation to "extend" deeper into structures.
Since this is a fairly new flag, the default is -nxci to avoid disturbing
existing formatting. BUT you will probably see some improved formatting
in complex data structures by setting this flag if you currently use -ci=n
and -i=n with the same value of 'n' (as is the case if you use -pbp,
--perl-best-practices, where n=4).
- Fix issue git #42, clarify how --break-at-old-logical-breakpoints works.
The man page was updated to note that it does not cause all logical breakpoints
to be replicated in the output file.
- Fix issue git #41, typo in manual regarding -fsb.
- Fix issue git #40: when using the -bli option, a closing brace followed by
a semicolon was not being indented. This applies to braces which require
semicolons, such as a 'do' block.
- Added 'state' as a keyword.
- A better test for convergence has been added. When iterations are requested,
the new test will stop after the first pass if no changes in line break
locations are made. Previously, file checksums were used and required at least two
passes to verify convergence unless no formatting changes were made. With the new test,
only a single pass is needed when formatting changes are limited to adjustments of
indentation and whitespace on the lines of code. Extensive testing has been made to
verify the correctness of the new convergence test.
- Line breaks are now automatically placed after 'use overload' to
improve formatting when there are numerous overloaded operators. For
example
use overload
'+' => sub {
...
- A number of minor problems with parsing signatures and prototypes have
been corrected, particularly multi-line signatures. Some signatures
had previously been parsed as if they were prototypes, which meant the
normal spacing rules were not applied. For example
OLD:
sub echo ($message= 'Hello World!' ) {
...;
}
NEW:
sub echo ( $message = 'Hello World!' ) {
...;
}
- Numerous minor issues that the average user would not encounter were found
and fixed. They can be seen in the more complete list of updates at
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy/blob/master/local-docs/BugLog.pod
- Robustness of perltidy has been significantly improved. Updating is recommended. Continual
automated testing runs began about 1 Sep 2020 and numerous issues have been found and fixed.
Many involve references to uninitialized variables when perltidy is fed random text and random
control parameters.
- Added the token '->' to the list of alignment tokens, as suggested in git
#39, so that it can be vertically aligned if a space is placed before them with -wls='->'.
- Added parameters -bbhb=n (--break-before-hash-brace=n), -bbsb=n (--break-before-square-bracket=n),
and -bbp=n (--break-before-paren=n) suggested in git #38. These provide control over the
opening container token of a multiple-line list. Related new parameters -bbhbi=n, -bbsbi=n, -bbpi=n
control indentation of these tokens.
- Added keyword 'isa'.
- Fixed bug git #37, an error when the combination -scbb -csc was used.
It occurs in perltidy versions 20200110, 20200619, and 20200822. What happens is
that when two consecutive lines with isolated closing braces had new side
comments generated by the -csc parameter, a separating newline was missing.
The resulting script will not then run, but worse, if it is reformatted with
the same parameters then closing side comments could be overwritten and data
lost.
This problem was found during automated random testing. The parameter
-scbb is rarely used, which is probably why this has not been reported. Please
upgrade your version.
- Added parameter --non-indenting-braces, or -nib, which prevents
code from indenting one level if it follows an opening brace marked
with a special side comment, '#<<<'. For example,
{ #<<< a closure to contain lexical vars
my $var; # this line does not indent
}
# this line cannot 'see' $var;
This is on by default. If your code happens to have some
opening braces followed by '#<<<', and you
don't want this, you can use -nnib to deactivate it.
- Side comment locations reset at a line ending in a level 0 open
block, such as when a new multi-line sub begins. This is intended to
help keep side comments from drifting to far to the right.
- Fix RT #133166, encoding not set for -st. Also reported as RT #133171
and git #35.
This is a significant bug in version 20200616 which can corrupt data if
perltidy is run as a filter on encoded text.
Please upgrade
- Fix issue RT #133161, perltidy -html was not working on pod
- Fix issue git #33, allow control of space after '->'
- Vertical alignment has been improved. Numerous minor issues have
been fixed.
- Formatting with the -lp option is improved.
- Fixed issue git #32, misparse of bare 'ref' in ternary
- When --assert-tidy is used and triggers an error, the first difference
between input and output files is shown in the error output. This is
a partial response to issue git #30.
- Added support for Switch::Plain syntax, issue git #31.
- Fixed minor problem where trailing 'unless' clauses were not
getting vertically aligned.
- Added a parameter --logical-padding or -lop to allow logical padding
to be turned off. Requested by git #29. This flag is on by default.
The man pages have examples.
- Added a parameter -kpit=n to control spaces inside of parens following
certain keywords, requested in git#26. This flag is off by default.
- Added fix for git#25, improve vertical alignment for long lists with
varying numbers of items per line.
- calls to the module Perl::Tidy can now capture any output produced
by a debug flag or one of the 'tee' flags through the new 'debugfile' and
'teefile' call parameters. These output streams are rarely used but
they are now treated the same as any 'logfile' stream.
- add option --break-at-old-semicolon-breakpoints', -bos, requested
in RT#131644. This flag will keep lines beginning with a semicolon.
- Added --use-unicode-gcstring to control use of Unicode::GCString for
evaluating character widths of encoded data. The default is
not to use this (--nouse-unicode-gcstring). If this flag is set,
perltidy will look for Unicode::GCString and, if found, will use it
to evaluate character display widths. This can improve displayed
vertical alignment for files with wide characters. It is a nice
feature but it is off by default to avoid conflicting formatting
when there are multiple developers. Perltidy installation does not
require Unicode::GCString, so users wanting to use this feature need
set this flag and also to install Unicode::GCString separately.
- Added --character-encoding=guess or -guess to have perltidy guess
if a file (or other input stream) is encoded as -utf8 or some
other single-byte encoding. This is useful when processing a mixture
of file types, such as utf8 and latin-1.
Please Note: The default encoding has been set to be 'guess'
instead of 'none'. This seems like the best default, since
it allows perltidy work properly with both
utf8 files and older latin-1 files. The guess mode uses Encode::Guess,
which is included in standard perl distributions, and only tries to
guess if a file is utf8 or not, never any other encoding. If the guess is
utf8, and if the file successfully decodes as utf8, then it the encoding
is assumed to be utf8. Otherwise, no encoding is assumed.
If you do not want to use this new default guess mode, or have a
problem with it, you can set --character-encoding=none (the previous
default) or --character-encoding=utf8 (if you deal with utf8 files).
- Specific encodings of input files other than utf8 may now be given, for
example --character-encoding=euc-jp.
- Fix for git#22, Preserve function signature on a single line. An
unwanted line break was being introduced when a closing signature paren
followed a closing do brace.
- Fix RT#132059, the -dac parameter was not working and caused an error exit
- When -utf8 is used, any error output is encoded as utf8
- Fix for git#19, adjust line break around an 'xor'
- Fix for git#18, added warning for missing comma before unknown bare word.
- This release adds a flag to control the feature RT#130394 (allow short nested blocks)
introduced in the previous release. Unfortunately that feature breaks
RPerl installations, so a control flag has been introduced and that feature is now
off by default. The flag is:
--one-line-block-nesting=n, or -olbn=n, where n is an integer as follows:
-olbn=0 break nested one-line blocks into multiple lines [new DEFAULT]
-olbn=1 stable; keep existing nested-one line blocks intact [previous DEFAULT]
For example, consider this input line:
foreach (@list) { if ($_ eq $asked_for) { last } ++$found }
The new default behavior (-olbn=0), and behavior prior to version 20191203, is to break it into multiple lines:
foreach (@list) {
if ( $_ eq $asked_for ) { last }
++$found;
}
To keep nested one-line blocks such as this on a single line you can add the parameter -olbn=1.
- Fixed issue RT#131288: parse error for un-prototyped constant function without parenthesized
call parameters followed by ternary.
- Fixed issue RT#131360, installation documentation. Added a note that the binary
'perltidy' comes with the Perl::Tidy module. They can both normally be installed with
'cpanm Perl::Tidy'
- Fixed issue RT#131115: -bli option not working correctly.
Closing braces were not indented in some cases due to a glitch
introduced in version 20181120.
- Fixed issue RT#130394: Allow short nested blocks. Given the following
$factorial = sub { reduce { $a * $b } 1 .. 11 };
Previous versions would always break the sub block because it
contains another block (the reduce block). The fix keeps
short one-line blocks such as this intact.
- Implement issue RT#130640: Allow different subroutine keywords.
Added a flag --sub-alias-list=s or -sal=s, where s is a string with
one or more aliases for 'sub', separated by spaces or commas.
For example,
perltidy -sal='method fun'
will cause the perltidy to treat the words 'method' and 'fun' to be
treated the same as if they were 'sub'.
- Added flag --space-prototype-paren=i, or -spp=i, to control spacing
before the opening paren of a prototype, where i=0, 1, or 2:
i=0 no space
i=1 follow input [current and default]
i=2 always space
Previously, perltidy always followed the input.
For example, given the following input
sub usage();
The result will be:
sub usage(); # i=0 [no space]
sub usage(); # i=1 [default; follows input]
sub usage (); # i=2 [space]
- Fixed issue git#16, minor vertical alignment issue.
- Fixed issue git#10, minor conflict of -wn and -ce
- Improved some vertical alignments involving two lines.
- fixed issue RT#130344: false warning "operator in print statement"
for "use lib".
- fixed issue RT#130304: standard error output should include filename.
When perltidy error messages are directed to the standard error output
with -se or --standard-error-output, the message lines now have a prefix
'filename:' for clarification in case multiple files
are processed, where 'filename' is the name of the input file. If
input is from the standard input the displayed filename is '<stdin>',
and if it is from a data structure then displayed filename
is '<source_stream>'.
- implement issue RT#130425: check mode. A new flag '--assert-tidy'
will cause an error message if the output script is not identical to
the input script. For completeness, the opposite flag '--assert-untidy'
has also been added. The next item, RT#130297, insures that the script
will exit with a non-zero exit flag if the assertion fails.
- fixed issue RT#130297; the perltidy script now exits with a nonzero exit
status if it wrote to the standard error output. Previously only fatal
run errors produced a non-zero exit flag. Now, even non-fatal messages
requested with the -w flag will cause a non-zero exit flag. The exit
flag now has these values:
0 = no errors
1 = perltidy could not run to completion due to errors
2 = perltidy ran to completion with error messages
- added warning message for RT#130008, which warns of conflicting input
parameters -iob and -bom or -boc.
- fixed RT#129850; concerning a space between a closing block brace and
opening bracket or brace, as occurs before the '[' in this line:
my @addunix = map { File::Spec::Unix->catfile( @ROOT, @$_ ) } ['b'];
Formerly, any space was removed. Now it is optional, and the output will
follow the input.
- fixed issue git#13, needless trailing whitespace in error message
- fixed issue git#9: if the -ce (--cuddled-else) flag is used,
do not try to form new one line blocks for a block type
specified with -cbl, particularly map, sort, grep
- iteration speedup for unchanged code. Previously, when iterations were
requested, at least two formatting passes were made. Now just a single pass
is made if the formatted code is identical to the input code.
- some improved vertical alignments
- rt #128477: Prevent inconsistent owner/group and setuid/setgid bits.
In the -b (--backup-and-modify-in-place) mode, an attempt is made to set ownership
of the output file equal to the input file, if they differ.
In all cases, if the final output file ownership differs from input file, any setuid/setgid bits are cleared.
- Added option -bom (--break-at-old-method-breakpoints) by
merrillymeredith which preserves breakpoints of method chains. Modified to also handle a cuddled call style.
- Merged patch to fix Windows EOL translation error with UTF-8 written by
Ron Ivy. This update prevents automatic conversion to 'DOS' CRLF line
endings. Also, Windows system testing at the appveyor site is working again.
- RT #128280, added flag --one-line-block-semicolons=n (-olbs=n)
to control semicolons in one-line blocks. The values of n are:
n=0 means no semicolons termininating simple one-line blocks
n=1 means stable; do not change from input file [DEFAULT and current]
n=2 means always add semicolons in one-line blocks
The current behavior corresponds to the default n=1.
- RT #128216, Minor update to prevent inserting unwanted blank line at
indentation level change. This should not change existing scripts.
- RT #81852: Improved indentation when quoted word (qw) lists are
nested within other containers using the --weld-nested (-wn) flag.
The example given previously (below) is now closer to what it would
be with a simple list instead of qw:
# perltidy -wn
use_all_ok( qw{
PPI
PPI::Tokenizer
PPI::Lexer
PPI::Dumper
PPI::Find
PPI::Normal
PPI::Util
PPI::Cache
} );
- RT#12764, introduced new feature allowing placement of blanks around
sequences of selected keywords. This can be activated with the -kgb*
series of parameters described in the manual.
- Rewrote vertical algnment module. It is better at finding
patterns in complex code. For example,
OLD:
/^-std$/ && do { $std = 1; next; };
/^--$/ && do { @link_args = @argv; last; };
/^-I(.*)/ && do { $path = $1 || shift @argv; next; };
NEW:
/^-std$/ && do { $std = 1; next; };
/^--$/ && do { @link_args = @argv; last; };
/^-I(.*)/ && do { $path = $1 || shift @argv; next; };
- Add repository URLs to META files
- RT #118553, "leave only one newline at end of file". This option was not
added because of undesirable side effects, but a new filter script
was added which can do this, "examples/delete_ending_blank_lines.pl".
- fix RT#127736 Perl-Tidy-20181119 has the EXE_FILES entry commented out in
Makefile.PL so it doesn't install the perltidy script or its manpage.
- Removed test case 'filter_example.t' which was causing a failure on a
Windows installation for unknown reasons, possibly due to an unexpected
perltidyrc being read by the test script. Added VERSION numbers to all
new modules.
- Fixed RT #126965, in which a ternary operator was misparsed if immediately
following a function call without arguments, such as:
my $restrict_customer = shift ? 1 : 0;
- Fixed RT #125012: bug in -mangle --delete-all-comments
A needed blank space before bareword tokens was being removed when comments
were deleted
- Fixed RT #81852: Stacked containers and quoting operators. Quoted words
(qw) delimited by container tokens ('{', '[', '(', '<') are now included in
the --weld-nested (-wn) flag:
# perltidy -wn
use_all_ok( qw{
PPI
PPI::Tokenizer
PPI::Lexer
PPI::Dumper
PPI::Find
PPI::Normal
PPI::Util
PPI::Cache
} );
- The cuddled-else (-ce) coding was merged with the new cuddled-block (-cb)
coding. The change is backward compatible and simplifies input.
The --cuddled-block-option=n (-cbo=n) flag now applies to both -ce and -cb
formatting. In fact the -cb flag is just an alias for -ce now.
- Fixed RT #124594, license text desc. changed from 'GPL-2.0+' to 'gpl_2'
- Fixed bug in which a warning about a possible code bug was issued in a
script with brace errors.
- added option --notimestamp or -nts to eliminate any time stamps in output
files. This is used to prevent differences in test scripts from causing
failure at installation. For example, the -cscw option will put a date
stamp on certain closing side comments. We need to avoid this in order
to test this feature in an installation test.
- Fixed bug with the entab option, -et=8, in which the leading space of
some lines was was not entabbed. This happened in code which was adjusted
for vertical alignment and in hanging side comments. Thanks to Glenn.
- Fixed RT #127633, undesirable line break after return when -baao flag is set
- Fixed RT #127035, vertical alignment. Vertical alignment has been improved
in several ways. Thanks especially to Michael Wardman and Glenn for sending
helpful snippets.
- Alignment of the =~ operators has been reactivated.
OLD:
$service_profile =~ s/^\s+|\s+$//g;
$host_profile =~ s/^\s+|\s+$//g;
NEW:
$service_profile =~ s/^\s+|\s+$//g;
$host_profile =~ s/^\s+|\s+$//g;
- Alignment of the // operator has been reactivated.
OLD:
is( pop // 7, 7, 'pop // ... works' );
is( pop() // 7, 0, 'pop() // ... works' );
is( pop @ARGV // 7, 3, 'pop @array // ... works' );
NEW:
is( pop // 7, 7, 'pop // ... works' );
is( pop() // 7, 0, 'pop() // ... works' );
is( pop @ARGV // 7, 3, 'pop @array // ... works' );
- The rules for alignment of just two lines have been adjusted,
hopefully to be a little better overall. In some cases, two
lines which were previously unaligned are now aligned, and vice-versa.
OLD:
$expect = "1$expect" if $expect =~ /^e/i;
$p = "1$p" if defined $p and $p =~ /^e/i;
NEW:
$expect = "1$expect" if $expect =~ /^e/i;
$p = "1$p" if defined $p and $p =~ /^e/i;
- RT #106493; source code repository location has been added to docs; it is
https://github.com/perltidy/perltidy
- The packaging for this version has changed. The Tidy.pm module is much
smaller. Supporting modules have been split out from it and placed below
it in the path Perl/Tidy/*.
- A number of new installation test cases have been added. Updates are now
continuously tested at Travis CI against versions back to Perl 5.08.
- RT #124469, #124494, perltidy often making empty files. The previous had
an index error causing it to fail, particularly in version 5.18 of Perl.
Please avoid version 20180219.
- RT #79947, cuddled-else generalization. A new flag -cb provides
'cuddled-else' type formatting for an arbitrary type of block chain. The
default is try-catch-finally, but this can be modified with the
parameter -cbl.
- Fixed RT #124298: add space after ! operator without breaking !! secret
operator
- RT #123749: numerous minor improvements to the -wn flag were made.
- Fixed a problem with convergence tests in which iterations were stopping
prematurely.
- Here doc targets for <<~ type here-docs may now have leading whitespace.
- Fixed RT #124354. The '-indent-only' flag was not working correctly in the
previous release. A bug in version 20180101 caused extra blank lines
to be output.
- Issue RT #124114. Some improvements were made in vertical alignment
involving 'fat commas'.
- Added new flag -wn (--weld-nested-containers) which addresses these issues:
RT #123749: Problem with promises;
RT #119970: opening token stacking strange behavior;
RT #81853: Can't stack block braces
This option causes closely nested pairs of opening and closing containers
to be "welded" together and essentially be formatted as a single unit,
with just one level of indentation.
Since this is a new flag it is set to be "off" by default but it has given
excellent results in testing.
EXAMPLE 1, multiple blocks, default formatting:
do {
{
next if $x == $y; # do something here
}
} until $x++ > $z;
perltidy -wn
do { {
next if $x == $y;
} } until $x++ > $z;
EXAMPLE 2, three levels of wrapped function calls, default formatting:
p(
em(
conjug(
translate( param('verb') ), param('tense'),
param('person')
)
)
);
# perltidy -wn
p( em( conjug(
translate( param('verb') ),
param('tense'), param('person')
) ) );
# EXAMPLE 3, chained method calls, default formatting:
get('http://mojolicious.org')->then(
sub {
my $mojo = shift;
say $mojo->res->code;
return get('http://metacpan.org');
}
)->then(
sub {
my $cpan = shift;
say $cpan->res->code;
}
)->catch(
sub {
my $err = shift;
warn "Something went wrong: $err";
}
)->wait;
# perltidy -wn
get('http://mojolicious.org')->then( sub {
my $mojo = shift;
say $mojo->res->code;
return get('http://metacpan.org');
} )->then( sub {
my $cpan = shift;
say $cpan->res->code;
} )->catch( sub {
my $err = shift;
warn "Something went wrong: $err";
} )->wait;
- Fixed RT #114359: Missparsing of "print $x ** 0.5;
- Deactivated the --check-syntax flag for better security. It will be
ignored if set.
- Corrected minimum perl version from 5.004 to 5.008 based on perlver
report. The change is required for coding involving wide characters.
- For certain severe errors, the source file will be copied directly to the
output without formatting. These include ending in a quote, ending in a
here doc, and encountering an unidentified character.
- RT #123749, partial fix. "Continuation indentation" is removed from lines
with leading closing parens which are part of a call chain.
For example, the call to pack() is is now outdented to the starting
indentation in the following expression:
# OLD
$mw->Button(
-text => "New Document",
-command => \&new_document
)->pack(
-side => 'bottom',
-anchor => 'e'
);
# NEW
$mw->Button(
-text => "New Document",
-command => \&new_document
)->pack(
-side => 'bottom',
-anchor => 'e'
);
This modification improves readability of complex expressions, especially
when the user uses the same value for continuation indentation (-ci=n) and
normal indentation (-i=n). Perltidy was already programmed to
do this but a minor bug was preventing it.
- RT #123774, added flag to control space between a backslash and a single or
double quote, requested by Robert Rothenberg. The issue is that lines like
$str1=\"string1";
$str2=\'string2';
confuse syntax highlighters unless a space is left between the backslash and
the quote.
The new flag to control this is -sbq=n (--space-backslash-quote=n),
where n=0 means no space, n=1 means follow existing code, n=2 means always
space. The default is n=1, meaning that a space will be retained if there
is one in the source code.
- Fixed RT #123492, support added for indented here doc operator <<~ added
in v5.26. Thanks to Chris Weyl for the report.
- Fixed docs; --closing-side-comment-list-string should have been just
--closing-side-comment-list. Thanks to F.Li.
- Added patch RT #122030] Perl::Tidy sometimes does not call binmode.
Thanks to Irilis Aelae.
- Fixed RT #121959, PERLTIDY doesn't honor the 'three dot' notation for
locating a config file using environment variables. Thanks to John
Wittkowski.
- Minor improvements to formatting, in which some additional vertical
aligmnemt is done. Thanks to Keith Neargarder.
- RT #119588. Vertical alignment is no longer done for // operator.
- Fixed debian #862667: failure to check for perltidy.ERR deletion can lead
to overwriting arbitrary files by symlink attack. Perltidy was continuing
to write files after an unlink failure. Thanks to Don Armstrong
for a patch.
- Fixed RT #116344, perltidy fails on certain anonymous hash references:
in the following code snippet the '?' was misparsed as a pattern
delimiter rather than a ternary operator.
return ref {} ? 1 : 0;
- Fixed RT #113792: misparsing of a fat comma (=>) right after
the __END__ or __DATA__ tokens. These keywords were getting
incorrectly quoted by the following => operator.
- Fixed RT #118558. Custom Getopt::Long configuration breaks parsing
of perltidyrc. Perltidy was resetting the users configuration too soon.
- Fixed RT #119140, failure to parse double diamond operator. Code to
handle this new operator has been added.
- Fixed RT #120968. Fixed problem where -enc=utf8 didn't work
with --backup-and-modify-in-place. Thanks to Heinz Knutzen for this patch.
- Fixed minor formatting issue where one-line blocks for subs with signatures
were unnecessarily broken
- RT #32905, patch to fix utf-8 error when output was STDOUT.
- RT #79947, improved spacing of try/catch/finally blocks. Thanks to qsimpleq
for a patch.
- Fixed #114909, Anonymous subs with signatures and prototypes misparsed as
broken ternaries, in which a statement such as this was not being parsed
correctly:
return sub ( $fh, $out ) : prototype(*$) { ... }
- Implemented RT #113689, option to introduces spaces after an opening block
brace and before a closing block brace. Four new optional controls are
added. The first two define the minimum number of blank lines to be
inserted
-blao=i or --blank-lines-after-opening-block=i
-blbc=i or --blank-lines-before-closing-block=i
where i is an integer, the number of lines (the default is 0).
The second two define the types of blocks to which the first two apply
-blaol=s or --blank-lines-after-opening-block-list=s
-blbcl=s or --blank-lines-before-closing-block-list=s
where s is a string of possible block keywords (default is just 'sub',
meaning a named subroutine).
For more information please see the documentation.
- The method for specifying block types for certain input parameters has
been generalized to distinguish between normal named subroutines and
anonymous subs. The keyword for normal subroutines remains 'sub', and
the new keyword for anonymous subs is 'asub'.
- Minor documentation changes. The BUGS sections now have a link
to CPAN where most open bugs and issues can be reviewed and bug reports
can be submitted. The information in the AUTHOR and CREDITS sections of
the man pages have been removed from the man pages to streamline the
documentation. This information is still in the source code.
- RT #112534. Corrected a minor problem in which an unwanted newline
was placed before the closing brace of an anonymous sub with
a signature, if it was in a list. Thanks to Dmytro Zagashev.
- Corrected a minor problem in which occasional extra indentation was
given to the closing brace of an anonymous sub in a list when the -lp
parameter was set.
- RT #104427. Added support for signatures.
- RT #111512. Changed global warning flag $^W = 1 to use warnings;
Thanks to Dmytro Zagashev.
- RT #110297, added support for new regexp modifier /n
Thanks to Dmytro Zagashev.
- RT #111519. The -io (--indent-only) and -dac (--delete-all-comments)
can now both be used in one pass. Thanks to Dmitry Veltishev.
- Patch to avoid error message with 'catch' used by TryCatch, as in
catch($err){
# do something
}
Thanks to Nick Tonkin.
- RT #32905, UTF-8 coding is now more robust. Thanks to qsimpleq
and Dmytro for patches.
- RT #106885. Added string bitwise operators ^. &. |. ~. ^.= &.= |.=
- Fixed RT #107832 and #106492, lack of vertical alignment of two lines
when -boc flag (break at old commas) is set. This bug was
inadvertently introduced in previous bug fix RT #98902.
- Some common extensions to Perl syntax are handled better.
In particular, the following snippet is now foratted cleanly:
method deposit( Num $amount) {
$self->balance( $self->balance + $amount );
}
A new flag -xs (--extended-syntax) was added to enable this, and the default
is to use -xs.
In previous versions, and now only when -nxs is set, this snippet of code
generates the following error message:
"syntax error at ') {', didn't see one of: case elsif for foreach given if switch unless until when while"
- Fixed RT# 105484, Invalid warning about 'else' in 'switch' statement. The
warning happened if a 'case' statement did not use parens.
- Fixed RT# 101547, misparse of // caused error message. Also..
- Fixed RT# 102371, misparse of // caused unwated space in //=
- Fixed RT# 100871, "silent failure of HTML Output on Windows".
Changed calls to tempfile() from:
my ( $fh_tmp, $tmpfile ) = tempfile();
to have the full path name:
my ( $fh_tmp, $tmpfile ) = File::Temp::tempfile()
because of problems in the Windows version reported by Dean Pearce.
- Fixed RT# 99514, calling the perltidy module multiple times with
a .perltidyrc file containing the parameter --output-line-ending
caused a crash. This was a glitch in the memoization logic.
- Fixed RT#99961, multiple lines inside a cast block caused unwanted
continuation indentation.
- RT# 32905, broken handling of UTF-8 strings.
A new flag -utf8 causes perltidy assume UTF-8 encoding for input and
output of an io stream. Thanks to Sebastian Podjasek for a patch.
This feature may not work correctly in older versions of Perl.
It worked in a linux version 5.10.1 but not in a Windows version 5.8.3 (but
otherwise perltidy ran correctly).
- Warning files now report perltidy VERSION. Suggested by John Karr.
- Fixed long flag --nostack-closing-tokens (-nsct has always worked though).
This was due to a typo. This also fixed --nostack-opening-tokens to
behave correctly. Thanks to Rob Dixon.
- Fixed RT #94902: abbreviation parsing in .perltidyrc files was not
working for multi-line abbreviations. Thanks to Eric Fung for
supplying a patch.
- Fixed RT #95708, misparsing of a hash when the first key was a perl
keyword, causing a semicolon to be incorrectly added.
- Fixed RT #94338 for-loop in a parenthesized block-map. A code block within
parentheses of a map, sort, or grep function was being mistokenized. In
rare cases this could produce in an incorrect error message. The fix will
produce some minor formatting changes. Thanks to Daniel Trizen
discovering and documenting this.
- Fixed RT #94354, excess indentation for stacked tokens. Thanks to
Colin Williams for supplying a patch.
- Added support for experimental postfix dereferencing notation introduced in
perl 5.20. RT #96021.
- Updated documentation to clarify the behavior of the -io flag
in response to RT #95709. You can add -noll or -l=0 to prevent
long comments from being outdented when -io is used.
- Added a check to prevent a problem reported in RT #81866, where large
scripts which had been compressed to a single line could not be formatted
because of a check for VERSION for MakeMaker. The workaround was to
use -nvpl, but this shouldn't be necessary now.
- Fixed RT #96101; Closing brace of anonymous sub in a list was being
indented. For example, the closing brace of the anonymous sub below
will now be lined up with the word 'callback'. This problem
occurred if there was no comma after the closing brace of the anonymous sub.
This update may cause minor changes to formatting of code with lists
of anonymous subs, especially TK code.
# OLD
my @menu_items = (
#...
{
path => '/_Operate/Transcode and split',
callback => sub {
return 1 if not $self->project_opened;
$self->comp('project')->transcode( split => 1 );
}
}
);
# NEW
my @menu_items = (
#...
{
path => '/_Operate/Transcode and split',
callback => sub {
return 1 if not $self->project_opened;
$self->comp('project')->transcode( split => 1 );
}
}
);
- Fixed RT #94190 and debian Bug #742004: perltidy.LOG file left behind.
Thanks to George Hartzell for debugging this. The problem was
caused by the memoization speedup patch in version 20121207. An
unwanted flag was being set which caused a LOG to be written if
perltidy was called multiple times.
- New default behavior for LOG files: If the source is from an array or
string (through a call to the perltidy module) then a LOG output is only
possible if a logfile stream is specified. This is to prevent
unexpected perltidy.LOG files.
- Fixed debian Bug #740670, insecure temporary file usage. File::Temp is now
used to get a temporary file. Thanks to Don Anderson for a patch.
- Any -b (--backup-and-modify-in-place) flag is silently ignored when a
source stream, destination stream, or standard output is used.
This is because the -b flag may have been in a .perltidyrc file and
warnings break Test::NoWarnings. Thanks to Marijn Brand.
- Fixed RT #88020. --converge was not working with wide characters.
- Fixed RT #78156. package NAMESPACE VERSION syntax not accepted.
- First attempt to fix RT #88588. INDEX END tag change in pod2html breaks
perltidy -html. I put in a patch which should work but I don't yet have
a way of testing it.
- Fixed RT #87107, spelling
- Fixed RT #87502, incorrect of parsing of smartmatch before hash brace
- Added feature request RT #87330, trim whitespace after POD.
The flag -trp (--trim-pod) will trim trailing whitespace from lines of POD
- Fixed RT #86929, #86930, missing lhs of assignment.
- Fixed RT #84922, moved pod from Tidy.pm into Tidy.pod
- The flag -cab=n or --comma-arrow-breakpoints=n has been generalized
to give better control over breaking open short containers. The
possible values are now:
n=0 break at all commas after =>
n=1 stable: break at all commas after => if container is open,
EXCEPT FOR one-line containers
n=2 break at all commas after =>, BUT try to form the maximum
maximum one-line container lengths
n=3 do not treat commas after => specially at all
n=4 break everything: like n=0 but also break a short container with
a => not followed by a comma
n=5 stable: like n=1 but ALSO break at open one-line containers (default)
New values n=4 and n=5 have been added to allow short blocks to be
broken open. The new default is n=5, stable. It should more closely
follow the breaks in the input file, and previously formatted code
should remain unchanged. If this causes problems use -cab=1 to recover
the former behavior. Thanks to Tony Maszeroski for the suggestion.
To illustrate the need for the new options, if perltidy is given
the following code, then the old default (-cab=1) was to close up
the 'index' container even if it was open in the source. The new
default (-cab=5) will keep it open if it was open in the source.
our $fancypkg = {
'ALL' => {
'index' => {
'key' => 'value',
},
'alpine' => {
'one' => '+',
'two' => '+',
'three' => '+',
},
}
};
- New debug flag --memoize (-mem). This version contains a
patch supplied by Jonathan Swartz which can significantly speed up
repeated calls to Perl::Tidy::perltidy in a single process by caching
the result of parsing the formatting parameters. A factor of up to 10
speedup was achieved for masontidy (https://metacpan.org/module/masontidy).
The memoization patch is on by default but can be deactivated for
testing with -nmem (or --no-memoize).
- New flag -tso (--tight-secret-operators) causes certain perl operator
sequences (secret operators) to be formatted "tightly" (without spaces).
The most common of these are 0 + and + 0 which become 0+ and +0. The
operators currently modified by this flag are:
=( )= 0+ +0 ()x!! ~~<> ,=>
Suggested by by Philippe Bruhat. See https://metacpan.org/module/perlsecret
This flag is off by default.
- New flag -vmll (--variable-maximum-line-length) makes the maximum
line length increase with the nesting depth of a line of code.
Basically, it causes the length of leading whitespace to be ignored when
setting line breaks, so the formatting of a block of code is independent
of its nesting depth. Try this option if you have deeply nested
code or data structures, perhaps in conjunction with the -wc flag
described next. The default is not todo this.
- New flag -wc=n (--whitespace-cycle=n) also addresses problems with
very deeply nested code and data structures. When this parameter is
used and the nesting depth exceeds the value n, the leading whitespace
will be reduced and start at 1 again. The result is that deeply
nested blocks of code will shift back to the left. This occurs cyclically
to any nesting depth. This flag may be used either with or without -vmll.
The default is not to use this (-wc=0).
- Fixed RT #78764, error parsing smartmatch operator followed by anonymous
hash or array and then a ternary operator; two examples:
qr/3/ ~~ ['1234'] ? 1 : 0;
map { $_ ~~ [ '0', '1' ] ? 'x' : 'o' } @a;
- Fixed problem with specifying spaces around arrows using -wls='->'
and -wrs='->'. Thanks to Alain Valleton for documenting this problem.
- Implemented RT #53183, wishlist, lines of code with the same indentation
level which are contained with multiple stacked opening and closing tokens
(requested with flags -sot -sct) now have reduced indentation.
# Default
$sender->MailMsg(
{
to => $addr,
subject => $subject,
msg => $body
}
);
# OLD: perltidy -sot -sct
$sender->MailMsg( {
to => $addr,
subject => $subject,
msg => $body
} );
# NEW: perltidy -sot -sct
$sender->MailMsg( {
to => $addr,
subject => $subject,
msg => $body
} );
- New flag -act=n (--all-containers-tightness=n) is an abbreviation for
-pt=n -sbt=n -bt=n -bbt=n, where n=0,1, or 2. It simplifies input when all
containers have the same tightness. Using the same example:
# NEW: perltidy -sot -sct -act=2
$sender->MailMsg({
to => $addr,
subject => $subject,
msg => $body
});
- New flag -sac (--stack-all-containers) is an abbreviation for -sot -sct
This is part of wishlist item RT #53183. Using the same example again:
# NEW: perltidy -sac -act=2
$sender->MailMsg({
to => $addr,
subject => $subject,
msg => $body
});
- new flag -scbb (--stack-closing-block-brace) causes isolated closing
block braces to stack as in the following example. (Wishlist item RT#73788)
DEFAULT:
for $w1 (@w1) {
for $w2 (@w2) {
for $w3 (@w3) {
for $w4 (@w4) {
push( @lines, "$w1 $w2 $w3 $w4\n" );
}
}
}
}
perltidy -scbb:
for $w1 (@w1) {
for $w2 (@w2) {
for $w3 (@w3) {
for $w4 (@w4) {
push( @lines, "$w1 $w2 $w3 $w4\n" );
} } } }
There is, at present, no flag to place these closing braces at the end
of the previous line. It seems difficult to develop good rules for
doing this for a wide variety of code and data structures.
- Parameters defining block types may use a wildcard '*' to indicate
all block types. Previously it was not possible to include bare blocks.
- A flag -sobb (--stack-opening-block-brace) has been introduced as an
alias for -bbvt=2 -bbvtl='*'. So for example the following test code:
{{{{{{{ $testing }}}}}}}
cannot be formatted as above but can at least be kept vertically compact
using perltidy -sobb -scbb
{ { { { { { { $testing
} } } } } } }
Or even, perltidy -sobb -scbb -i=1 -bbt=2
{{{{{{{$testing
}}}}}}}
- Error message improved for conflicts due to -pbp; thanks to Djun Kim.
- Fixed RT #80645, error parsing special array name '@$' when used as
@{$} or $#{$}
- Eliminated the -chk debug flag which was included in version 20010406 to
do a one-time check for a bug with multi-line quotes. It has not been
needed since then.
- Numerous other minor formatting improvements.
- Added flag -iscl (--ignore-side-comment-lengths) which causes perltidy
to ignore the length of side comments when setting line breaks,
RT #71848. The default is to include the length of side comments when
breaking lines to stay within the length prescribed by the -l=n
maximum line length parameter. For example,
Default behavior on a single line with long side comment:
$vmsfile =~ s/;[\d\-]*$//
; # Clip off version number; we can use a newer version as well
perltidy -iscl leaves the line intact:
$vmsfile =~ s/;[\d\-]*$//; # Clip off version number; we can use a newer version as well
- Fixed RT #78182, side effects with STDERR. Error handling has been
revised and the documentation has been updated. STDERR can now be
redirected to a string reference, and perltidy now returns an
error flag instead of calling die when input errors are detected.
If the error flag is set then no tidied output was produced.
See man Perl::Tidy for an example.
- Fixed RT #78156, erroneous warning message for package VERSION syntax.
- Added abbreviations -conv (--converge) to simplify iteration control.
-conv is equivalent to -it=4 and will insure that the tidied code is
converged to its final state with the minimum number of iterations.
- Minor formatting modifications have been made to insure convergence.
- Simplified and hopefully improved the method for guessing the starting
indentation level of entabbed code. Added flag -dt=n (--default_tabsize=n)
which might be helpful if the guessing method does not work well for
some editors.
- Added support for stacked labels, upper case X/B in hex and binary, and
CORE:: namespace.
- Eliminated warning messages for using keyword names as constants.
- Corrected problem introduced by using a chomp on scalar references, RT #77978
- Added support for Perl 5.14 package block syntax, RT #78114.
- A convergence test is made if three or more iterations are requested with
the -it=n parameter to avoid wasting computer time. Several hundred Mb of
code gleaned from the internet were searched with the results that:
- It is unusual for two iterations to be required unless a major
style change is being made.
- Only one case has been found where three iterations were required.
- No cases requiring four iterations have been found with this version.
For the previous version several cases where found the results could
oscillate between two semi-stable states. This version corrects this.
So if it is important that the code be converged it is okay to set -it=4
with this version and it will probably stop after the second iteration.
- Improved ability to identify and retain good line break points in the
input stream, such as at commas and equals. You can always tell
perltidy to ignore old breakpoints with -iob.
- Fixed glitch in which a terminal closing hash brace followed by semicolon
was not outdented back to the leading line depth like other closing
tokens. Thanks to Keith Neargarder for noting this.
OLD:
my ( $pre, $post ) = @{
{
"pp_anonlist" => [ "[", "]" ],
"pp_anonhash" => [ "{", "}" ]
}->{ $kid->ppaddr }
}; # terminal brace
NEW:
my ( $pre, $post ) = @{
{
"pp_anonlist" => [ "[", "]" ],
"pp_anonhash" => [ "{", "}" ]
}->{ $kid->ppaddr }
}; # terminal brace
- Removed extra indentation given to trailing 'if' and 'unless' clauses
without parentheses because this occasionally produced undesirable
results. This only applies where parens are not used after the if or
unless.
OLD:
return undef
unless my ( $who, $actions ) =
$clause =~ /^($who_re)((?:$action_re)+)$/o;
NEW:
return undef
unless my ( $who, $actions ) =
$clause =~ /^($who_re)((?:$action_re)+)$/o;
- Updated perltidy to handle all quote modifiers defined for perl 5 version 16.
- Side comment text in perltidyrc configuration files must now begin with
at least one space before the #. Thus:
OK:
-l=78 # Max line width is 78 cols
BAD:
-l=78# Max line width is 78 cols
This is probably true of almost all existing perltidyrc files,
but if you get an error message about bad parameters
involving a '#' the first time you run this version, please check the side
comments in your perltidyrc file, and add a space before the # if necessary.
You can quickly see the contents your perltidyrc file, if any, with the
command:
perltidy -dpro
The reason for this change is that some parameters naturally involve
the # symbol, and this can get interpreted as a side comment unless the
parameter is quoted. For example, to define -sphb=# it used to be necessary
to write
-sbcp='#'
to keep the # from becoming part of a comment. This was causing
trouble for new users. Now it can also be written without quotes:
-sbcp=#
- Fixed bug in processing some .perltidyrc files containing parameters with
an opening brace character, '{'. For example the following was
incorrectly processed:
--static-block-comment-prefix="^#{2,}[^\s#]"
Thanks to pdagosto.
- Added flag -boa (--break-at-old-attribute-breakpoints) which retains
any existing line breaks at attribute separation ':'. This is now the
default, use -nboa to deactivate. Thanks to Daphne Phister for the patch.
For example, given the following code, the line breaks at the ':'s will be
retained:
my @field
: field
: Default(1)
: Get('Name' => 'foo') : Set('Name');
whereas the previous version would have output a single line. If
the attributes are on a single line then they will remain on a single line.
- Added new flags --blank-lines-before-subs=n (-blbs=n) and
--blank-lines-before-packages=n (-blbp=n) to put n blank lines before
subs and packages. The old flag -bbs is now equivalent to -blbs=1 -blbp=1.
and -nbbs is equivalent to -blbs=0 -blbp=0. Requested by M. Schwern and
several others.
- Added feature -nsak='*' meaning no space between any keyword and opening
paren. This avoids listing entering a long list of keywords. Requested
by M. Schwern.
- Added option to delete a backup of original file with in-place-modify (-b)
if there were no errors. This can be requested with the flag -bext='/'.
See documentation for details. Requested by M. Schwern and others.
- Fixed bug where the module postfilter parameter was not applied when -b
flag was used. This was discovered during testing.
- Fixed in-place-modify (-b) to work with symbolic links to source files.
Thanks to Ted Johnson.
- Fixed bug where the Perl::Tidy module did not allow -b to be used
in some cases.
- No extra blank line is added before a comment which follows
a short line ending in an opening token, for example like this:
OLD:
if (
# unless we follow a blank or comment line
$last_line_leading_type !~ /^[#b]$/
...
NEW:
if (
# unless we follow a blank or comment line
$last_line_leading_type !~ /^[#b]$/
...
The blank is not needed for readability in these cases because there
already is already space above the comment. If a blank already
exists there it will not be removed, so this change should not
change code which has previously been formatted with perltidy.
Thanks to R.W.Stauner.
- Likewise, no extra blank line is added above a comment consisting of a
single #, since nothing is gained in readability.
- Fixed error in which a blank line was removed after a #>>> directive.
Thanks to Ricky Morse.
- Unnecessary semicolons after given/when/default blocks are now removed.
- Fixed bug where an unwanted blank line could be added before
pod text in __DATA__ or __END__ section. Thanks to jidani.
- Changed exit flags from 1 to 0 to indicate success for -help, -version,
and all -dump commands. Also added -? as another way to dump the help.
Requested by Keith Neargarder.
- Fixed bug where .ERR and .LOG files were not written except for -it=2 or more
- Fixed bug where trailing blank lines at the end of a file were dropped when
-it>1.
- Fixed bug where a line occasionally ended with an extra space. This reduces
the number of instances where a second iteration gives a result different
from the first.
- Updated documentation to note that the Tidy.pm module <stderr> parameter may
not be a reference to SCALAR or ARRAY; it must be a file.
- Syntax check with perl now work when the Tidy.pm module is processing
references to arrays and strings. Thanks to Charles Alderman.
- Zero-length files are no longer processed due to concerns for data loss
due to side effects in some scenarios.
- block labels, if any, are now included in closing side comment text
when the -csc flag is used. Suggested by Aaron. For example,
the label L102 in the following block is now included in the -csc text:
L102: for my $i ( 1 .. 10 ) {
...
} ## end L102: for my $i ( 1 .. 10 )
- added new flag -it=n or --iterations=n
This flag causes perltidy to do n complete iterations.
For most purposes the default of n=1 should be satisfactory. However n=2
can be useful when a major style change is being made, or when code is being
beautified on check-in to a source code control system. The run time will be
approximately proportional to n, and it should seldom be necessary to use a
value greater than n=2. Thanks to Jonathan Swartz
- A configuration file pathname begins with three dots, e.g.
".../.perltidyrc", indicates that the file should be searched for starting
in the current directory and working upwards. This makes it easier to have
multiple projects each with their own .perltidyrc in their root directories.
Thanks to Jonathan Swartz for this patch.
- Added flag --notidy which disables all formatting and causes the input to be
copied unchanged. This can be useful in conjunction with hierarchical
F<.perltidyrc> files to prevent unwanted tidying.
Thanks to Jonathan Swartz for this patch.
- Added prefilters and postfilters in the call to the Tidy.pm module.
Prefilters and postfilters. The prefilter is a code reference that
will be applied to the source before tidying, and the postfilter
is a code reference to the result before outputting.
Thanks to Jonathan Swartz for this patch. He writes:
This is useful for all manner of customizations. For example, I use
it to convert the 'method' keyword to 'sub' so that perltidy will work for
Method::Signature::Simple code:
Perl::Tidy::perltidy(
prefilter => sub { $_ = $_[0]; s/^method (.*)/sub $1 \#__METHOD/gm; return $_ },
postfilter => sub { $_ = $_[0]; s/^sub (.*?)\s* \#__METHOD/method $1/gm; return $_ }
);
- The starting indentation level of sections of code entabbed with -et=n
is correctly guessed if it was also produced with the same -et=n flag. This
keeps the indentation stable on repeated formatting passes within an editor.
Thanks to Sam Kington and Glenn.
- Functions with prototype '&' had a space between the function and opening
peren. This space now only occurs if the flag --space-function-paren (-sfp)
is set. Thanks to Zrajm Akfohg.
- Patch to never put spaces around a bare word in braces beginning with ^ as in:
my $before = ${^PREMATCH};
even if requested with the -bt=0 flag because any spaces cause a syntax error in perl.
Thanks to Fabrice Dulanoy.
- Allow configuration file to be 'perltidy.ini' for Windows systems.
i.e. C:\Documents and Settings\User\perltidy.ini
and added documentation for setting configuration file under Windows in man
page. Thanks to Stuart Clark.
- Corrected problem of unwanted semicolons in hash ref within given/when code.
Thanks to Nelo Onyiah.
- added new flag -cscb or --closing-side-comments-balanced
When using closing-side-comments, and the closing-side-comment-maximum-text
limit is exceeded, then the comment text must be truncated. Previous
versions of perltidy terminate with three dots, and this can still be
achieved with -ncscb:
perltidy -csc -ncscb
} ## end foreach my $foo (sort { $b cmp $a ...
However this causes a problem with older editors which cannot recognize
comments or are not configured to doso because they cannot "bounce" around in
the text correctly. The B<-cscb> flag tries to help them by
appending appropriate terminal balancing structure:
perltidy -csc -cscb
} ## end foreach my $foo (sort { $b cmp $a ... })
Since there is much to be gained and little to be lost by doing this,
the default is B<-cscb>. Use B<-ncscb> if you do not want this.
Thanks to Daniel Becker for suggesting this option.
- After an isolated closing eval block the continuation indentation will be
removed so that the braces line up more like other blocks. Thanks to Yves Orton.
OLD:
eval {
#STUFF;
1; # return true
}
or do {
#handle error
};
NEW:
eval {
#STUFF;
1; # return true
} or do {
#handle error
};
-A new flag -asbl (or --opening-anonymous-sub-brace-on-new-line) has
been added to put the opening brace of anonymous sub's on a new line,
as in the following snippet:
my $code = sub
{
my $arg = shift;
return $arg->(@_);
};
This was not possible before because the -sbl flag only applies to named
subs. Thanks to Benjamin Krupp.
-Fix tokenization bug with the following snippet
print 'hi' if { x => 1, }->{x};
which resulted in a semicolon being added after the comma. The workaround
was to use -nasc, but this is no longer necessary. Thanks to Brian Duggan.
-Fixed problem in which an incorrect error message could be triggered
by the (unusual) combination of parameters -lp -i=0 -l=2 -ci=0 for
example. Thanks to Richard Jelinek.
-A new flag --keep-old-blank-lines=n has been added to
give more control over the treatment of old blank lines in
a script. The manual has been revised to discuss the new
flag and clarify the treatment of old blank lines. Thanks
to Oliver Schaefer.
-Improved support for perl 5.10: New quote modifier 'p', new block type UNITCHECK,
new keyword break, improved formatting of given/when.
-Corrected tokenization bug of something like $var{-q}.
-Numerous minor formatting improvements.
-Corrected list of operators controlled by -baao -bbao to include
. : ? && || and or err xor
-Corrected very minor error in log file involving incorrect comment
regarding need for upper case of labels.
-Fixed problem where perltidy could run for a very long time
when given certain non-perl text files.
-Line breaks in un-parenthesized lists now try to follow
line breaks in the input file rather than trying to fill
lines. This usually works better, but if this causes
trouble you can use -iob to ignore any old line breaks.
Example for the following input snippet:
print
"conformability (Not the same dimension)\n",
"\t", $have, " is ", text_unit($hu), "\n",
"\t", $want, " is ", text_unit($wu), "\n",
;
OLD:
print "conformability (Not the same dimension)\n", "\t", $have, " is ",
text_unit($hu), "\n", "\t", $want, " is ", text_unit($wu), "\n",;
NEW:
print "conformability (Not the same dimension)\n",
"\t", $have, " is ", text_unit($hu), "\n",
"\t", $want, " is ", text_unit($wu), "\n",
;
-Added -fpsc option (--fixed-position-side-comment). Thanks to Ueli Hugenschmidt.
For example -fpsc=40 tells perltidy to put side comments in column 40
if possible.
-Added -bbao and -baao options (--break-before-all-operators and
--break-after-all-operators) to simplify command lines and configuration
files. These define an initial preference for breaking at operators which can
be modified with -wba and -wbb flags. For example to break before all operators
except an = one could use --bbao -wba='=' rather than listing every
single perl operator (except =) on a -wbb flag.
-Added -kis option (--keep-interior-semicolons). Use the B<-kis> flag
to prevent breaking at a semicolon if there was no break there in the
input file. To illustrate, consider the following input lines:
dbmclose(%verb_delim); undef %verb_delim;
dbmclose(%expanded); undef %expanded;
dbmclose(%global); undef %global;
Normally these would be broken into six lines, but
perltidy -kis gives:
dbmclose(%verb_delim); undef %verb_delim;
dbmclose(%expanded); undef %expanded;
dbmclose(%global); undef %global;
-Improved formatting of complex ternary statements, with indentation
of nested statements.
OLD:
return defined( $cw->{Selected} )
? (wantarray)
? @{ $cw->{Selected} }
: $cw->{Selected}[0]
: undef;
NEW:
return defined( $cw->{Selected} )
? (wantarray)
? @{ $cw->{Selected} }
: $cw->{Selected}[0]
: undef;
-Text following un-parenthesized if/unless/while/until statements get a
full level of indentation. Suggested by Jeff Armstrong and others.
OLD:
return $ship->chargeWeapons("phaser-canon")
if $encounter->description eq 'klingon'
and $ship->firepower >= $encounter->firepower
and $location->status ne 'neutral';
NEW:
return $ship->chargeWeapons("phaser-canon")
if $encounter->description eq 'klingon'
and $ship->firepower >= $encounter->firepower
and $location->status ne 'neutral';
-Fixed bug where #line directives were being indented. Thanks to
Philippe Bruhat.
-Fixed problem where an extra blank line was added after an =cut when either
(a) the =cut started (not stopped) a POD section, or (b) -mbl > 1.
Thanks to J. Robert Ray and Bill Moseley.
-ole (--output-line-ending) and -ple (--preserve-line-endings) should
now work on all systems rather than just unix systems. Thanks to Dan
Tyrell.
-Fixed problem of a warning issued for multiple subs for BEGIN subs
and other control subs. Thanks to Heiko Eissfeldt.
-Fixed problem where no space was introduced between a keyword or
bareword and a colon, such as:
( ref($result) eq 'HASH' && !%$result ) ? undef: $result;
Thanks to Niek.
-Added a utility program 'break_long_quotes.pl' to the examples directory of
the distribution. It breaks long quoted strings into a chain of concatenated
sub strings no longer than a selected length. Suggested by Michael Renner as
a perltidy feature but was judged to be best done in a separate program.
-Updated docs to remove extra < and >= from list of tokens
after which breaks are made by default. Thanks to Bob Kleemann.
-Removed improper uses of $_ to avoid conflicts with external calls, giving
error message similar to:
Modification of a read-only value attempted at
/usr/share/perl5/Perl/Tidy.pm line 6907.
Thanks to Michael Renner.
-Fixed problem when errorfile was not a plain filename or filehandle
in a call to Tidy.pm. The call
perltidy(source => \$input, destination => \$output, errorfile => \$err);
gave the following error message:
Not a GLOB reference at /usr/share/perl5/Perl/Tidy.pm line 3827.
Thanks to Michael Renner and Phillipe Bruhat.
-Fixed problem where -sot would not stack an opening token followed by
a side comment. Thanks to Jens Schicke.
-improved breakpoints in complex math and other long statements. Example:
OLD:
return
log($n) + 0.577215664901532 + ( 1 / ( 2 * $n ) ) -
( 1 / ( 12 * ( $n**2 ) ) ) + ( 1 / ( 120 * ( $n**4 ) ) );
NEW:
return
log($n) + 0.577215664901532 +
( 1 / ( 2 * $n ) ) -
( 1 / ( 12 * ( $n**2 ) ) ) +
( 1 / ( 120 * ( $n**4 ) ) );
-more robust vertical alignment of complex terminal else blocks and ternary
statements.
-Eliminated bug where a here-doc invoked through an 'e' modifier on a pattern
replacement text was not recognized. The tokenizer now recursively scans
replacement text (but does not reformat it).
-improved vertical alignment of terminal else blocks and ternary statements.
Thanks to Chris for the suggestion.
OLD:
if ( IsBitmap() ) { return GetBitmap(); }
elsif ( IsFiles() ) { return GetFiles(); }
else { return GetText(); }
NEW:
if ( IsBitmap() ) { return GetBitmap(); }
elsif ( IsFiles() ) { return GetFiles(); }
else { return GetText(); }
OLD:
$which_search =
$opts{"t"} ? 'title'
: $opts{"s"} ? 'subject'
: $opts{"a"} ? 'author'
: 'title';
NEW:
$which_search =
$opts{"t"} ? 'title'
: $opts{"s"} ? 'subject'
: $opts{"a"} ? 'author'
: 'title';
-improved indentation of try/catch blocks and other externally defined
functions accepting a block argument. Thanks to jae.
-Added support for Perl 5.10 features say and smartmatch.
-Added flag -pbp (--perl-best-practices) as an abbreviation for parameters
suggested in Damian Conway's "Perl Best Practices". -pbp is the same as:
-l=78 -i=4 -ci=4 -st -se -vt=2 -cti=0 -pt=1 -bt=1 -sbt=1 -bbt=1 -nsfs -nolq
-wbb="% + - * / x != == >= <= =~ !~ < > | & >= < =
**= += *= &= <<= &&= -= /= |= >>= ||= .= %= ^= x="
Please note that the -st here restricts input to standard input; use
-nst if necessary to override.
-Eliminated some needless breaks at equals signs in -lp indentation.
OLD:
$c =
Math::Complex->make(LEFT + $x * (RIGHT - LEFT) / SIZE,
TOP + $y * (BOTTOM - TOP) / SIZE);
NEW:
$c = Math::Complex->make(LEFT + $x * (RIGHT - LEFT) / SIZE,
TOP + $y * (BOTTOM - TOP) / SIZE);
A break at an equals is sometimes useful for preventing complex statements
from hitting the line length limit. The decision to do this was
over-eager in some cases and has been improved. Thanks to Royce Reece.
-qw quotes contained in braces, square brackets, and parens are being
treated more like those containers as far as stacking of tokens. Also
stack of closing tokens ending ');' will outdent to where the ');' would
have outdented if the closing stack is matched with a similar opening stack.
OLD: perltidy -soc -sct
__PACKAGE__->load_components(
qw(
PK::Auto
Core
)
);
NEW: perltidy -soc -sct
__PACKAGE__->load_components( qw(
PK::Auto
Core
) );
Thanks to Aran Deltac
-Eliminated some undesirable or marginally desirable vertical alignments.
These include terminal colons, opening braces, and equals, and particularly
when just two lines would be aligned.
OLD:
my $accurate_timestamps = $Stamps{lnk};
my $has_link =
...
NEW:
my $accurate_timestamps = $Stamps{lnk};
my $has_link =
-Corrected a problem with -mangle in which a space would be removed
between a keyword and variable beginning with ::.
-Attribute argument lists are now correctly treated as quoted strings
and not formatted. This is the most important update in this version.
Thanks to Borris Zentner, Greg Ferguson, Steve Kirkup.
-Updated to recognize the defined or operator, //, to be released in Perl 10.
Thanks to Sebastien Aperghis-Tramoni.
-A useful utility perltidyrc_dump.pl is included in the examples section. It
will read any perltidyrc file and write it back out in a standard format
(though comments are lost).
-Added option to have perltidy read and return a hash with the contents of a
perltidyrc file. This may be used by Leif Eriksen's tidyview code. This
feature is used by the demonstration program 'perltidyrc_dump.pl' in the
examples directory.
-Improved error checking in perltidyrc files. Unknown bare words were not
being caught.
-The --dump-options parameter now dumps parameters in the format required by a
perltidyrc file.
-V-Strings with underscores are now recognized.
For example: $v = v1.2_3;
-cti=3 option added which gives one extra indentation level to closing
tokens always. This provides more predictable closing token placement
than cti=2. If you are using cti=2 you might want to try cti=3.
-To identify all left-adjusted comments as static block comments, use C<-sbcp='^#'>.
-New parameters -fs, -fsb, -fse added to allow sections of code between #<<<
and #>>> to be passed through verbatim. This is enabled by default and turned
off by -nfs. Flags -fsb and -fse allow other beginning and ending markers.
Thanks to Wolfgang Werner and Marion Berryman for suggesting this.
-added flag -skp to put a space between all Perl keywords and following paren.
The default is to only do this for certain keywords. Suggested by
H.Merijn Brand.
-added flag -sfp to put a space between a function name and following paren.
The default is not to do this. Suggested by H.Merijn Brand.
-Added patch to avoid breaking GetOpt::Long::Configure set by calling program.
Thanks to Philippe Bruhat.
-An error was fixed in which certain parameters in a .perltidyrc file given
without the equals sign were not recognized. That is,
'--brace-tightness 0' gave an error but '--brace-tightness=0' worked
ok. Thanks to Zac Hansen.
-An error preventing the -nwrs flag from working was corrected. Thanks to
Greg Ferguson.
-Corrected some alignment problems with entab option.
-A bug with the combination of -lp and -extrude was fixed (though this
combination doesn't really make sense). The bug was that a line with
a single zero would be dropped. Thanks to Cameron Hayne.
-Updated Windows detection code to avoid an undefined variable.
Thanks to Joe Yates and Russ Jones.
-Improved formatting for short trailing statements following a closing paren.
Thanks to Joe Matarazzo.
-The handling of the -icb (indent closing block braces) flag has been changed
slightly to provide more consistent and predictable formatting of complex
structures. Instead of giving a closing block brace the indentation of the
previous line, it is now given one extra indentation level. The two methods
give the same result if the previous line was a complete statement, as in this
example:
if ($task) {
yyy();
} # -icb
else {
zzz();
}
The change also fixes a problem with empty blocks such as:
OLD, -icb:
elsif ($debug) {
}
NEW, -icb:
elsif ($debug) {
}
-A problem with -icb was fixed in which a closing brace was misplaced when
it followed a quote which spanned multiple lines.
-Some improved breakpoints for -wba='&& || and or'
-Fixed problem with misaligned cuddled else in complex statements
when the -bar flag was also used. Thanks to Alex and Royce Reese.
-Corrected documentation to show that --outdent-long-comments is the default.
Thanks to Mario Lia.
-New flag -otr (opening-token-right) is similar to -bar (braces-always-right)
but applies to non-structural opening tokens.
-new flags -sot (stack-opening-token), -sct (stack-closing-token).
Suggested by Tony.
-The default has been changed to not do syntax checking with perl.
Use -syn if you want it. Perltidy is very robust now, and the -syn
flag now causes more problems than it's worth because of BEGIN blocks
(which get executed with perl -c). For example, perltidy will never
return when trying to beautify this code if -syn is used:
BEGIN { 1 while { }; }
Although this is an obvious error, perltidy is often run on untested
code which is more likely to have this sort of problem. A more subtle
example is:
BEGIN { use FindBin; }
which may hang on some systems using -syn if a shared file system is
unavailable.
-Changed style -gnu to use -cti=1 instead of -cti=2 (see next item).
In most cases it looks better. To recover the previous format, use
'-gnu -cti=2'
-Added flags -cti=n for finer control of closing token indentation.
-cti = 0 no extra indentation (default; same as -nicp)
-cti = 1 enough indentation so that the closing token
aligns with its opening token.
-cti = 2 one extra indentation level if the line has the form
); ]; or }; (same as -icp).
The new option -cti=1 works well with -lp:
EXAMPLES:
# perltidy -lp -cti=1
@month_of_year = (
'Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun',
'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec'
);
# perltidy -lp -cti=2
@month_of_year = (
'Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun',
'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec'
);
This is backwards compatible with -icp. See revised manual for
details. Suggested by Mike Pennington.
-Added flag '--preserve-line-endings' or '-ple' to cause the output
line ending to be the same as in the input file, for unix, dos,
or mac line endings. Only works under unix. Suggested by
Rainer Hochschild.
-Added flag '--output-line-ending=s' or '-ole=s' where s=dos or win,
unix, or mac. Only works under unix.
-Files with Mac line endings should now be handled properly under unix
and dos without being passed through a converter.
-You may now include 'and', 'or', and 'xor' in the list following
'--want-break-after' to get line breaks after those keywords rather than
before them. Suggested by Rainer Hochschild.
-Corrected problem with command line option for -vtc=n and -vt=n. The
equals sign was being eaten up by the Windows shell so perltidy didn't
see it.
-Corrected cause of warning message with recent versions of Perl:
"Possible precedence problem on bitwise & operator at ..."
Thanks to Jim Files.
-fixed bug with -html with '=for pod2html' sections, in which code/pod
output order was incorrect. Thanks to Tassilo von Parseval.
-fixed bug when the -html flag is used, in which the following error
message, plus others, appear:
did not see <body> in pod2html output
This was caused by a change in the format of html output by pod2html
VERSION 1.04 (included with perl 5.8). Thanks to Tassilo von Parseval.
-Fixed bug where an __END__ statement would be mistaken for a label
if it is immediately followed by a line with a leading colon. Thanks
to John Bayes.
-Implemented guessing logic for brace types when it is ambiguous. This
has been on the TODO list a long time. Thanks to Boris Zentner for
an example.
-Long options may now be negated either as '--nolong-option'
or '--no-long-option'. Thanks to Philip Newton for the suggestion.
-added flag --html-entities or -hent which controls the use of
Html::Entities for html formatting. Use --nohtml-entities or -nhent to
prevent the use of Html::Entities to encode special symbols. The
default is -hent. Html::Entities when formatting perl text to escape
special symbols. This may or may not be the right thing to do,
depending on browser/language combinations. Thanks to Burak Gursoy for
this suggestion.
-Bareword strings with leading '-', like, '-foo' now count as 1 token
for horizontal tightness. This way $a{'-foo'}, $a{foo}, and $a{-foo}
are now all treated similarly. Thus, by default, OLD: $a{ -foo } will
now be NEW: $a{-foo}. Suggested by Mark Olesen.
-added 2 new flags to control spaces between keywords and opening parens:
-sak=s or --space-after-keyword=s, and
-nsak=s or --nospace-after-keyword=s, where 's' is a list of keywords.
The new default list of keywords which get a space is:
"my local our and or eq ne if else elsif until unless while for foreach
return switch case given when"
Use -sak=s and -nsak=s to add and remove keywords from this list,
respectively.
Explanation: Stephen Hildrey noted that perltidy was being inconsistent
in placing spaces between keywords and opening parens, and sent a patch
to give user control over this. The above list was selected as being
a reasonable default keyword list. Previously, perltidy
had a hardwired list which also included these keywords:
push pop shift unshift join split die
but did not have 'our'. Example: if you prefer to make perltidy behave
exactly as before, you can include the following two lines in your
.perltidyrc file:
-sak="push pop local shift unshift join split die"
-nsak="our"
-Corrected html error in .toc file when -frm -html is used (extra ");
browsers were tolerant of it.
-Improved alignment of chains of binary and ?/: operators. Example:
OLD:
$leapyear =
$year % 4 ? 0
: $year % 100 ? 1
: $year % 400 ? 0
: 1;
NEW:
$leapyear =
$year % 4 ? 0
: $year % 100 ? 1
: $year % 400 ? 0
: 1;
-improved breakpoint choices involving '->'
-Corrected tokenization of things like ${#}. For example,
${#} is valid, but ${# } is a syntax error.
-Corrected minor tokenization errors with indirect object notation.
For example, 'new A::()' works now.
-Minor tokenization improvements; all perl code distributed with perl 5.8
seems to be parsed correctly except for one instance (lextest.t)
of the known bug.
-Implemented scalar attributes. Thanks to Sean Tobin for noting this.
-Fixed glitch introduced in previous release where -pre option
was not outputting a leading html <pre> tag.
-Numerous minor improvements in vertical alignment, including the following:
-Improved alignment of opening braces in many cases. Needed for improved
switch/case formatting, and also suggested by Mark Olesen for sort/map/grep
formatting. For example:
OLD:
@modified =
map { $_->[0] }
sort { $a->[1] <=> $b->[1] }
map { [ $_, -M ] } @filenames;
NEW:
@modified =
map { $_->[0] }
sort { $a->[1] <=> $b->[1] }
map { [ $_, -M ] } @filenames;
-Eliminated alignments across unrelated statements. Example:
OLD:
$borrowerinfo->configure( -state => 'disabled' );
$borrowerinfo->grid( -col => 1, -row => 0, -sticky => 'w' );
NEW:
$borrowerinfo->configure( -state => 'disabled' );
$borrowerinfo->grid( -col => 1, -row => 0, -sticky => 'w' );
Thanks to Mark Olesen for suggesting this.
-Improved alignment of '='s in certain cases.
Thanks to Norbert Gruener for sending an example.
-Outdent-long-comments (-olc) has been re-instated as a default, since
it works much better now. Use -nolc if you want to prevent it.
-Added check for 'perltidy file.pl -o file.pl', which causes file.pl
to be lost. (The -b option should be used instead). Thanks to mreister
for reporting this problem.
-Switch/case or given/when syntax is now recognized. Its vertical alignment
is not great yet, but it parses ok. The words 'switch', 'case', 'given',
and 'when' are now treated as keywords. If this causes trouble with older
code, we could introduce a switch to deactivate it. Thanks to Stan Brown
and Jochen Schneider for recommending this.
-Corrected error parsing sub attributes with call parameters.
Thanks to Marc Kerr for catching this.
-Sub prototypes no longer need to be on the same line as sub names.
-a new flag -frm or --frames will cause html output to be in a
frame, with table of contents in the left panel and formatted source
in the right panel. Try 'perltidy -html -frm somemodule.pm' for example.
-The new default for -html formatting is to pass the pod through Pod::Html.
The result is syntax colored code within your pod documents. This can be
deactivated with -npod. Thanks to those who have written to discuss this,
particularly Mark Olesen and Hugh Myers.
-the -olc (--outdent-long-comments) option works much better. It now outdents
groups of consecutive comments together, and by just the amount needed to
avoid having any one line exceeding the maximum line length.
-block comments are now trimmed of trailing whitespace.
-if a directory specified with -opath does not exist, it will be created.
-a table of contents to packages and subs is output when -html is used.
Use -ntoc to prevent this.
-fixed an unusual bug in which a 'for' statement following a 'format'
statement was not correctly tokenized. Thanks to Boris Zentner for
catching this.
-Tidy.pm is no longer dependent on modules IO::Scalar and IO::ScalarArray.
There were some speed issues. Suggested by Joerg Walter.
-The treatment of quoted wildcards (file globs) is now system-independent.
For example
perltidy 'b*x.p[lm]'
would match box.pl, box.pm, brinx.pm under any operating system. Of
course, anything unquoted will be subject to expansion by any shell.
-default color for keywords under -html changed from
SaddleBrown (#8B4513) to magenta4 (#8B008B).
-fixed an arg parsing glitch in which something like:
perltidy quick-help
would trigger the help message and exit, rather than operate on the
file 'quick-help'.
-New option '-b' or '--backup-and-modify-in-place' will cause perltidy to
overwrite the original file with the tidied output file. The original
file will be saved with a '.bak' extension (which can be changed with
-bext=s). Thanks to Rudi Farkas for the suggestion.
-An index to all subs is included at the top of -html output, unless
only the <pre> section is written.
-Anchor lines of the form <a name="mysub"></a> are now inserted at key points
in html output, such as before sub definitions, for the convenience of
postprocessing scripts. Suggested by Howard Owen.
-The cuddled-else (-ce) flag now also makes cuddled continues, like
this:
while ( ( $pack, $file, $line ) = caller( $i++ ) ) {
# bla bla
} continue {
$prevpack = $pack;
}
Suggested by Simon Perreault.
-Fixed bug in which an extra blank line was added before an =head or
similar pod line after an __END__ or __DATA__ line each time
perltidy was run. Also, an extra blank was being added after
a terminal =cut. Thanks to Mike Birdsall for reporting this.
-Fixed bug in which space was inserted in a hyphenated hash key:
my $val = $myhash{USER-NAME};
was converted to:
my $val = $myhash{USER -NAME};
Thanks to an anonymous bug reporter at sourceforge.
-Fixed problem with the '-io' ('--indent-only') where all lines
were double spaced. Thanks to Nick Andrew for reporting this bug.
-Fixed tokenization error in which something like '-e1' was
parsed as a number.
-Corrected a rare problem involving older perl versions, in which
a line break before a bareword caused problems with 'use strict'.
Thanks to Wolfgang Weisselberg for noting this.
-More syntax error checking added.
-Outdenting labels (-ola) has been made the default, in order to follow the
perlstyle guidelines better. It's probably a good idea in general, but
if you do not want this, use -nola in your .perltidyrc file.
-Updated rules for padding logical expressions to include more cases.
Thanks to Wolfgang Weisselberg for helpful discussions.
-Added new flag -osbc (--outdent-static-block-comments) which will
outdent static block comments by 2 spaces (or whatever -ci equals).
Requested by Jon Robison.
-Corrected a bug, introduced in the previous release, in which some
closing side comments (-csc) could have incorrect text. This is
annoying but will be correct the next time perltidy is run with -csc.
-Fixed bug where whitespace was being removed between 'Bar' and '()'
in a use statement like:
use Foo::Bar ();
-Whenever possible, if a logical expression is broken with leading
'&&', '||', 'and', or 'or', then the leading line will be padded
with additional space to produce alignment. This has been on the
todo list for a long time; thanks to Frank Steinhauer for reminding
me to do it. Notice the first line after the open parens here:
OLD: perltidy -lp
if (
!param("rules.to.$linecount")
&& !param("rules.from.$linecount")
&& !param("rules.subject.$linecount")
&& !(
param("rules.fieldname.$linecount")
&& param("rules.fieldval.$linecount")
)
&& !param("rules.size.$linecount")
&& !param("rules.custom.$linecount")
)
NEW: perltidy -lp
if (
!param("rules.to.$linecount")
&& !param("rules.from.$linecount")
&& !param("rules.subject.$linecount")
&& !(
param("rules.fieldname.$linecount")
&& param("rules.fieldval.$linecount")
)
&& !param("rules.size.$linecount")
&& !param("rules.custom.$linecount")
)
-Corrected a mistokenization of variables for a package with a name
equal to a perl keyword. For example:
my::qx();
package my;
sub qx{print "Hello from my::qx\n";}
In this case, the leading 'my' was mistokenized as a keyword, and a
space was being place between 'my' and '::'. This has been
corrected. Thanks to Martin Sluka for discovering this.
-A new flag -bol (--break-at-old-logic-breakpoints)
has been added to control whether containers with logical expressions
should be broken open. This is the default.
-A new flag -bok (--break-at-old-keyword-breakpoints)
has been added to follow breaks at old keywords which return lists,
such as sort and map. This is the default.
-A new flag -bot (--break-at-old-trinary-breakpoints) has been added to
follow breaks at trinary (conditional) operators. This is the default.
-A new flag -cab=n has been added to control breaks at commas after
'=>' tokens. The default is n=1, meaning break unless this breaks
open an existing on-line container.
-A new flag -boc has been added to allow existing list formatting
to be retained. (--break-at-old-comma-breakpoints). See updated manual.
-A new flag -iob (--ignore-old-breakpoints) has been added to
prevent the locations of old breakpoints from influencing the output
format.
-Corrected problem where nested parentheses were not getting full
indentation. This has been on the todo list for some time; thanks
to Axel Rose for a snippet demonstrating this issue.
OLD: inner list is not indented
$this->sendnumeric(
$this->server,
(
$ret->name, $user->username, $user->host,
$user->server->name, $user->nick, "H"
),
);
NEW:
$this->sendnumeric(
$this->server,
(
$ret->name, $user->username, $user->host,
$user->server->name, $user->nick, "H"
),
);
-Code cleaned up by removing the following unused, undocumented flags.
They should not be in any .perltidyrc files because they were just
experimental flags which were never documented. Most of them placed
artificial limits on spaces, and Wolfgang Weisselberg convinced me that
most of them they do more harm than good by causing unexpected results.
--maximum-continuation-indentation (-mci)
--maximum-whitespace-columns
--maximum-space-to-comment (-xsc)
--big-space-jump (-bsj)
-Pod file 'perltidy.pod' has been appended to the script 'perltidy', and
Tidy.pod has been append to the module 'Tidy.pm'. Older MakeMaker's
were having trouble.
-A new flag -isbc has been added for more control on comments. This flag
has the effect that if there is no leading space on the line, then the
comment will not be indented, and otherwise it may be. If both -ibc and
-isbc are set, then -isbc takes priority. Thanks to Frank Steinhauer
for suggesting this.
-A new document 'stylekey.pod' has been created to quickly guide new users
through the maze of perltidy style parameters. An html version is
on the perltidy web page. Take a look! It should be very helpful.
-Parameters for controlling 'vertical tightness' have been added:
-vt and -vtc are the main controls, but finer control is provided
with -pvt, -pcvt, -bvt, -bcvt, -sbvt, -sbcvt. Block brace vertical
tightness controls have also been added.
See updated manual and also see 'stylekey.pod'. Simple examples:
# perltidy -lp -vt=1 -vtc=1
@month_of_year = ( 'Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun',
'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec' );
# perltidy -lp -vt=1 -vtc=0
@month_of_year = ( 'Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun',
'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct', 'Nov', 'Dec'
);
-Lists which do not format well in uniform columns are now better
identified and formatted.
OLD:
return $c->create( 'polygon', $x, $y, $x + $ruler_info{'size'},
$y + $ruler_info{'size'}, $x - $ruler_info{'size'},
$y + $ruler_info{'size'} );
NEW:
return $c->create(
'polygon', $x, $y,
$x + $ruler_info{'size'},
$y + $ruler_info{'size'},
$x - $ruler_info{'size'},
$y + $ruler_info{'size'}
);
OLD:
radlablist($f1, pad('Initial', $p), $b->{Init}->get_panel_ref, 'None ',
'None', 'Default', 'Default', 'Simple', 'Simple');
NEW:
radlablist($f1,
pad('Initial', $p),
$b->{Init}->get_panel_ref,
'None ', 'None', 'Default', 'Default', 'Simple', 'Simple');
-Corrected problem where an incorrect html filename was generated for
external calls to Tidy.pm module. Fixed incorrect html title when
Tidy.pm is called with IO::Scalar or IO::Array source.
-Output file permissions are now set as follows. An output script file
gets the same permission as the input file, except that owner
read/write permission is added (otherwise, perltidy could not be
rerun). Html output files use system defaults. Previously chmod 0755
was used in all cases. Thanks to Mark Olesen for bringing this up.
-Missing semicolons will not be added in multi-line blocks of type
sort, map, or grep. This brings perltidy into closer agreement
with common practice. Of course, you can still put semicolons
there if you like. Thanks to Simon Perreault for a discussion of this.
-Most instances of extra semicolons are now deleted. This is
particularly important if the -csc option is used. Thanks to Wolfgang
Weisselberg for noting this. For example, the following line
(produced by 'h2xs' :) has an extra semicolon which will now be
removed:
BEGIN { plan tests => 1 };
-New parameter -csce (--closing-side-comment-else-flag) can be used
to control what text is appended to 'else' and 'elsif' blocks.
Default is to just add leading 'if' text to an 'else'. See manual.
-The -csc option now labels 'else' blocks with additional information
from the opening if statement and elsif statements, if space.
Thanks to Wolfgang Weisselberg for suggesting this.
-The -csc option will now remove any old closing side comments
below the line interval threshold. Thanks to Wolfgang Weisselberg for
suggesting this.
-The abbreviation feature, which was broken in the previous version,
is now fixed. Thanks to Michael Cartmell for noting this.
-Vertical alignment is now done for '||=' .. somehow this was
overlooked.
-This version uses modules for the first time, and a standard perl
Makefile.PL has been supplied. However, perltidy may still be
installed as a single script, without modules. See INSTALL for
details.
-The man page 'perl2web' has been merged back into the main 'perltidy'
man page to simplify installation. So you may remove that man page
if you have an older installation.
-Added patch from Axel Rose for MacPerl. The patch prompts the user
for command line arguments before calling the module
Perl::Tidy::perltidy.
-Corrected bug with '-bar' which was introduced in the previous
version. A closing block brace was being indented. Thanks to
Alexandros M Manoussakis for reporting this.
-New parameter '--entab-leading-whitespace=n', or '-et=n', has been
added for those who prefer tabs. This behaves different from the
existing '-t' parameter; see updated man page. Suggested by Mark
Olesen.
-New parameter '--perl-syntax-check-flags=s' or '-pcsf=s' can be
used to change the flags passed to perltidy in a syntax check.
See updated man page. Suggested by Mark Olesen.
-New parameter '--output-path=s' or '-opath=s' will cause output
files to be placed in directory s. See updated man page. Thanks for
Mark Olesen for suggesting this.
-New parameter --dump-profile (or -dpro) will dump to
standard output information about the search for a
configuration file, the name of whatever configuration file
is selected, and its contents. This should help debugging
config files, especially on different Windows systems.
-The -w parameter now notes possible errors of the form:
$comment = s/^\s*(\S+)\..*/$1/; # trim whitespace
-Corrections added for a leading ':' and for leaving a leading 'tcsh'
line untouched. Mark Olesen reported that lines of this form were
accepted by perl but not by perltidy:
: # use -*- perl -*-
eval 'exec perl -wS $0 "$@"' # shell should exec 'perl'
unless 1; # but Perl should skip this one
Perl will silently swallow a leading colon on line 1 of a
script, and now perltidy will do likewise. For example,
this is a valid script, provided that it is the first line,
but not otherwise:
: print "Hello World\n";
Also, perltidy will now mark a first line with leading ':' followed by
'#' as type SYSTEM (just as a #! line), not to be formatted.
-List formatting improved for certain lists with special
initial terms, such as occur with 'printf', 'sprintf',
'push', 'pack', 'join', 'chmod'. The special initial term is
now placed on a line by itself. For example, perltidy -gnu
OLD:
$Addr = pack(
"C4", hex($SourceAddr[0]),
hex($SourceAddr[1]), hex($SourceAddr[2]),
hex($SourceAddr[3])
);
NEW:
$Addr = pack("C4",
hex($SourceAddr[0]), hex($SourceAddr[1]),
hex($SourceAddr[2]), hex($SourceAddr[3]));
OLD:
push (
@{$$self{states}}, '64', '66', '68',
'70', '72', '74', '76',
'78', '80', '82', '84',
'86', '88', '90', '92',
'94', '96', '98', '100',
'102', '104'
);
NEW:
push (
@{$$self{states}},
'64', '66', '68', '70', '72', '74', '76',
'78', '80', '82', '84', '86', '88', '90',
'92', '94', '96', '98', '100', '102', '104'
);
-Lists of complex items, such as matrices, are now detected
and displayed with just one item per row:
OLD:
$this->{'CURRENT'}{'gfx'}{'MatrixSkew'} = Text::PDF::API::Matrix->new(
[ 1, tan( deg2rad($a) ), 0 ], [ tan( deg2rad($b) ), 1, 0 ],
[ 0, 0, 1 ]
);
NEW:
$this->{'CURRENT'}{'gfx'}{'MatrixSkew'} = Text::PDF::API::Matrix->new(
[ 1, tan( deg2rad($a) ), 0 ],
[ tan( deg2rad($b) ), 1, 0 ],
[ 0, 0, 1 ]
);
-The perl syntax check will be turned off for now when input is from
standard input or standard output. The reason is that this requires
temporary files, which has produced far too many problems during
Windows testing. For example, the POSIX module under Windows XP/2000
creates temporary names in the root directory, to which only the
administrator should have permission to write.
-Merged patch sent by Yves Orton to handle appropriate
configuration file locations for different Windows varieties
(2000, NT, Me, XP, 95, 98).
-Added patch to properly handle a for/foreach loop without
parens around a list represented as a qw. I didn't know this
was possible until Wolfgang Weisselberg pointed it out:
foreach my $key qw\Uno Due Tres Quadro\ {
print "Set $key\n";
}
But Perl will give a syntax error without the $ variable; ie this will
not work:
foreach qw\Uno Due Tres Quadro\ {
print "Set $_\n";
}
-Merged Windows version detection code sent by Yves Orton. Perltidy
now automatically turns off syntax checking for Win 9x/ME versions,
and this has solved a lot of robustness problems. These systems
cannot reliably handle backtick operators. See man page for
details.
-Merged VMS filename handling patch sent by Michael Cartmell. (Invalid
output filenames were being created in some cases).
-Numerous minor improvements have been made for -lp style indentation.
-Long C-style 'for' expressions will be broken after each ';'.
'perltidy -gnu' gives:
OLD:
for ($status = $db->seq($key, $value, R_CURSOR()) ; $status == 0
and $key eq $origkey ; $status = $db->seq($key, $value, R_NEXT()))
NEW:
for ($status = $db->seq($key, $value, R_CURSOR()) ;
$status == 0 and $key eq $origkey ;
$status = $db->seq($key, $value, R_NEXT()))
-For the -lp option, a single long term within parens
(without commas) now has better alignment. For example,
perltidy -gnu
OLD:
$self->throw("Must specify a known host, not $location,"
. " possible values ("
. join (",", sort keys %hosts) . ")");
NEW:
$self->throw("Must specify a known host, not $location,"
. " possible values ("
. join (",", sort keys %hosts) . ")");
-This version is about 20 percent faster than the previous
version as a result of optimization work. The largest gain
came from switching to a dispatch hash table in the
tokenizer.
-perltidy -html will check to see if HTML::Entities is
installed, and if so, it will use it to encode unsafe
characters.
-Added flag -oext=ext to change the output file extension to
be different from the default ('tdy' or 'html'). For
example:
perltidy -html -oext=htm filename
will produce filename.htm
-Added flag -cscw to issue warnings if a closing side comment would replace
an existing, different side comments. See the man page for details.
Thanks to Peter Masiar for helpful discussions.
-Corrected tokenization error of signed hex/octal/binary numbers. For
example, the first hex number below would have been parsed correctly
but the second one was not:
if ( ( $tmp >= 0x80_00_00 ) || ( $tmp < -0x80_00_00 ) ) { }
-'**=' was incorrectly tokenized as '**' and '='. This only
caused a problem with the -extrude option.
-Corrected a divide by zero when -extrude option is used
-The flag -w will now contain all errors reported by 'perl -c' on the
input file, but otherwise they are not reported. The reason is that
perl will report lots of problems and syntax errors which are not of
interest when only a small snippet is being formatted (such as missing
modules and unknown bare words). Perltidy will always report all
significant syntax errors that it finds, such as unbalanced braces,
unless the -q (quiet) flag is set.
-Merged modifications created by Hugh Myers into perltidy.
These include a 'streamhandle' routine which allows perltidy
as a module to operate on input and output arrays and strings
in addition to files. Documentation and new packaging as a
module should be ready early next year; This is an elegant,
powerful update; many thanks to Hugh for contributing it.
-added a tentative patch which tries to keep any existing breakpoints
at lines with leading keywords map,sort,eval,grep. The idea is to
improve formatting of sequences of list operations, as in a schwartzian
transform. Example:
INPUT:
my @sorted = map { $_->[0] }
sort { $a->[1] <=> $b->[1] }
map { [ $_, rand ] } @list;
OLD:
my @sorted =
map { $_->[0] } sort { $a->[1] <=> $b->[1] } map { [ $_, rand ] } @list;
NEW:
my @sorted = map { $_->[0] }
sort { $a->[1] <=> $b->[1] }
map { [ $_, rand ] } @list;
The new alignment is not as nice as the input, but this is an improvement.
Thanks to Yves Orton for this suggestion.
-modified indentation logic so that a line with leading opening paren,
brace, or square bracket will never have less indentation than the
line with the corresponding opening token. Here's a simple example:
OLD:
$mw->Button(
-text => "New Document",
-command => \&new_document
)->pack(
-side => 'bottom',
-anchor => 'e'
);
Note how the closing ');' is lined up with the first line, even
though it closes a paren in the 'pack' line. That seems wrong.
NEW:
$mw->Button(
-text => "New Document",
-command => \&new_document
)->pack(
-side => 'bottom',
-anchor => 'e'
);
This seems nicer: you can up-arrow with an editor and arrive at the
opening 'pack' line.
-corrected minor glitch in which cuddled else (-ce) did not get applied
to an 'unless' block, which should look like this:
unless ($test) {
} else {
}
Thanks to Jeremy Mates for reporting this.
-The man page has been reorganized to parameters easier to find.
-Added check for multiple definitions of same subroutine. It is easy
to introduce this problem when cutting and pasting. Perl does not
complain about it, but it can lead to disaster.
-The command -pro=filename or -profile=filename may be used to specify a
configuration file which will override the default name of .perltidyrc.
There must not be a space on either side of the '=' sign. I needed
this to be able to easily test perltidy with a variety of different
configuration files.
-Side comment alignment has been improved somewhat across frequent level
changes, as in short if/else blocks. Thanks to Wolfgang Weisselberg
for pointing out this problem. For example:
OLD:
if ( ref $self ) { # Called as a method
$format = shift;
}
else { # Regular procedure call
$format = $self;
undef $self;
}
NEW:
if ( ref $self ) { # Called as a method
$format = shift;
}
else { # Regular procedure call
$format = $self;
undef $self;
}
-New command -ssc (--static-side-comment) and related command allows
side comments to be spaced close to preceding character. This is
useful for displaying commented code as side comments.
-New command -csc (--closing-side-comment) and several related
commands allow comments to be added to (and deleted from) any or all
closing block braces. This can be useful if you have to maintain large
programs, especially those that you didn't write. See updated man page.
Thanks to Peter Masiar for this suggestion. For a simple example:
perltidy -csc
sub foo {
if ( !defined( $_[0] ) ) {
print("Hello, World\n");
}
else {
print( $_[0], "\n" );
}
} ## end sub foo
This added '## end sub foo' to the closing brace.
To remove it, perltidy -ncsc.
-New commands -ola, for outdenting labels, and -okw, for outdenting
selected control keywords, were implemented. See the perltidy man
page for details. Thanks to Peter Masiar for this suggestion.
-Hanging side comment change: a comment will not be considered to be a
hanging side comment if there is no leading whitespace on the line.
This should improve the reliability of identifying hanging side comments.
Thanks to Peter Masiar for this suggestion.
-Two new commands for outdenting, -olq (outdent-long-quotes) and -olc
(outdent-long-comments), have been added. The original -oll
(outdent-long-lines) remains, and now is an abbreviation for -olq and -olc.
The new default is just -olq. This was necessary to avoid inconsistency with
the new static block comment option.
-Static block comments: to provide a way to display commented code
better, the convention is used that comments with a leading '##' should
not be formatted as usual. Please see '-sbc' (or '--static-block-comment')
for documentation. It can be deactivated with with -nsbc, but
should not normally be necessary. Thanks to Peter Masiar for this
suggestion.
-Two changes were made to help show structure of complex lists:
(1) breakpoints are forced after every ',' in a list where any of
the list items spans multiple lines, and
(2) List items which span multiple lines now get continuation indentation.
The following example illustrates both of these points. Many thanks to
Wolfgang Weisselberg for this snippet and a discussion of it; this is a
significant formatting improvement. Note how it is easier to see the call
parameters in the NEW version:
OLD:
assert( __LINE__, ( not defined $check )
or ref $check
or $check eq "new"
or $check eq "old", "Error in parameters",
defined $old_new ? ( ref $old_new ? ref $old_new : $old_new ) : "undef",
defined $db_new ? ( ref $db_new ? ref $db_new : $db_new ) : "undef",
defined $old_db ? ( ref $old_db ? ref $old_db : $old_db ) : "undef" );
NEW:
assert(
__LINE__,
( not defined $check )
or ref $check
or $check eq "new"
or $check eq "old",
"Error in parameters",
defined $old_new ? ( ref $old_new ? ref $old_new : $old_new ) : "undef",
defined $db_new ? ( ref $db_new ? ref $db_new : $db_new ) : "undef",
defined $old_db ? ( ref $old_db ? ref $old_db : $old_db ) : "undef"
);
Another example shows how this helps displaying lists:
OLD:
%{ $self->{COMPONENTS} } = (
fname =>
{ type => 'name', adj => 'yes', font => 'Helvetica', 'index' => 0 },
street =>
{ type => 'road', adj => 'yes', font => 'Helvetica', 'index' => 2 },
);
The structure is clearer with the added indentation:
NEW:
%{ $self->{COMPONENTS} } = (
fname =>
{ type => 'name', adj => 'yes', font => 'Helvetica', 'index' => 0 },
street =>
{ type => 'road', adj => 'yes', font => 'Helvetica', 'index' => 2 },
);
-The structure of nested logical expressions is now displayed better.
Thanks to Wolfgang Weisselberg for helpful discussions. For example,
note how the status of the final 'or' is displayed in the following:
OLD:
return ( !null($op)
and null( $op->sibling )
and $op->ppaddr eq "pp_null"
and class($op) eq "UNOP"
and ( ( $op->first->ppaddr =~ /^pp_(and|or)$/
and $op->first->first->sibling->ppaddr eq "pp_lineseq" )
or ( $op->first->ppaddr eq "pp_lineseq"
and not null $op->first->first->sibling
and $op->first->first->sibling->ppaddr eq "pp_unstack" ) ) );
NEW:
return (
!null($op)
and null( $op->sibling )
and $op->ppaddr eq "pp_null"
and class($op) eq "UNOP"
and (
(
$op->first->ppaddr =~ /^pp_(and|or)$/
and $op->first->first->sibling->ppaddr eq "pp_lineseq"
)
or ( $op->first->ppaddr eq "pp_lineseq"
and not null $op->first->first->sibling
and $op->first->first->sibling->ppaddr eq "pp_unstack" )
)
);
-A break will always be put before a list item containing a comma-arrow.
This will improve formatting of mixed lists of this form:
OLD:
$c->create(
'text', 225, 20, -text => 'A Simple Plot',
-font => $font,
-fill => 'brown'
);
NEW:
$c->create(
'text', 225, 20,
-text => 'A Simple Plot',
-font => $font,
-fill => 'brown'
);
-For convenience, the command -dac (--delete-all-comments) now also
deletes pod. Likewise, -tac (--tee-all-comments) now also sends pod
to a '.TEE' file. Complete control over the treatment of pod and
comments is still possible, as described in the updated help message
and man page.
-The logic which breaks open 'containers' has been rewritten to be completely
symmetric in the following sense: if a line break is placed after an opening
{, [, or (, then a break will be placed before the corresponding closing
token. Thus, a container either remains closed or is completely cracked
open.
-Improved indentation of parenthesized lists. For example,
OLD:
$GPSCompCourse =
int(
atan2( $GPSTempCompLong - $GPSLongitude,
$GPSLatitude - $GPSTempCompLat ) * 180 / 3.14159265 );
NEW:
$GPSCompCourse = int(
atan2(
$GPSTempCompLong - $GPSLongitude,
$GPSLatitude - $GPSTempCompLat
) * 180 / 3.14159265
);
Further improvements will be made in future releases.
-Some improvements were made in formatting small lists.
-Correspondence between Input and Output line numbers reported in a
.LOG file should now be exact. They were sometimes off due to the size
of intermediate buffers.
-Corrected minor tokenization error in which a ';' in a foreach loop
control was tokenized as a statement termination, which forced a
line break:
OLD:
foreach ( $i = 0;
$i <= 10;
$i += 2
)
{
print "$i ";
}
NEW:
foreach ( $i = 0 ; $i <= 10 ; $i += 2 ) {
print "$i ";
}
-Corrected a problem with reading config files, in which quote marks were not
stripped. As a result, something like -wba="&& . || " would have the leading
quote attached to the && and not work correctly. A workaround for older
versions is to place a space around all tokens within the quotes, like this:
-wba=" && . || "
-Removed any existing space between a label and its ':'
OLD : { }
NEW: { }
This was necessary because the label and its colon are a single token.
-Corrected tokenization error for the following (highly non-recommended)
construct:
$user = @vars[1] / 100;
-Resolved cause of a difference between perltidy under perl v5.6.1 and
5.005_03; the problem was different behavior of \G regex position
marker(!)
-Corrected a bug in which a break was not being made after a full-line
comment within a short eval/sort/map/grep block. A flag was not being
zeroed. The syntax error check catches this. Here is a snippet which
illustrates the bug:
eval {
#open Socket to Dispatcher
$sock = &OpenSocket;
};
The formatter mistakenly thought that it had found the following
one-line block:
eval {#open Socket to Dispatcher$sock = &OpenSocket; };
The patch fixes this. Many thanks to Henry Story for reporting this bug.
-Changes were made to help diagnose and resolve problems in a
.perltidyrc file:
(1) processing of command parameters has been into two separate
batches so that any errors in a .perltidyrc file can be localized.
(2) commands --help, --version, and as many of the --dump-xxx
commands are handled immediately, without any command line processing
at all.
(3) Perltidy will ignore any commands in the .perltidyrc file which
cause immediate exit. These are: -h -v -ddf -dln -dop -dsn -dtt
-dwls -dwrs -ss. Thanks to Wolfgang Weisselberg for helpful
suggestions regarding these updates.
-Syntax check has been reinstated as default for MSWin32 systems. This
way Windows 2000 users will get syntax check by default, which seems
like a better idea, since the number of Win 95/98 systems will be
decreasing over time. Documentation revised to warn Windows 95/98
users about the problem with empty '&1'. Too bad these systems
all report themselves as MSWin32.
-Fixed tokenization error in which a method call of the form
Module::->new();
got a space before the '::' like this:
Module ::->new();
Thanks to David Holden for reporting this.
-Added -html control over pod text, using a new abbreviation 'pd'. See
updated perl2web man page. The default is to use the color of a comment,
but italicized. Old .css style sheets will need a new line for
.pd to use this. The old color was the color of a string, and there
was no control.
-.css lines are now printed in sorted order.
-Fixed interpolation problem where html files had '$input_file' as title
instead of actual input file name. Thanks to Simon Perreault for finding
this and sending a patch, and also to Tobias Weber.
-Breaks will now have the ':' placed at the start of a line,
one per line by default because this shows logical structure
more clearly. This coding has been completely redone. Some
examples of new ?/: formatting:
OLD:
wantarray ? map( $dir::cwd->lookup($_)->path, @_ ) :
$dir::cwd->lookup( $_[0] )->path;
NEW:
wantarray
? map( $dir::cwd->lookup($_)->path, @_ )
: $dir::cwd->lookup( $_[0] )->path;
OLD:
$a = ( $b > 0 ) ? {
a => 1,
b => 2
} : { a => 6, b => 8 };
NEW:
$a = ( $b > 0 )
? {
a => 1,
b => 2
}
: { a => 6, b => 8 };
OLD: (-gnu):
$self->note($self->{skip} ? "Hunk #$self->{hunk} ignored at 1.\n" :
"Hunk #$self->{hunk} failed--$@");
NEW: (-gnu):
$self->note($self->{skip}
? "Hunk #$self->{hunk} ignored at 1.\n"
: "Hunk #$self->{hunk} failed--$@");
OLD:
$which_search =
$opts{"t"} ? 'title' :
$opts{"s"} ? 'subject' : $opts{"a"} ? 'author' : 'title';
NEW:
$which_search =
$opts{"t"} ? 'title'
: $opts{"s"} ? 'subject'
: $opts{"a"} ? 'author'
: 'title';
You can use -wba=':' to recover the previous default which placed ':'
at the end of a line. Thanks to Michael Cartmell for helpful
discussions and examples.
-Tokenizer updated to do syntax checking for matched ?/: pairs. Also,
the tokenizer now outputs a unique serial number for every balanced
pair of brace types and ?/: pairs. This greatly simplifies the
formatter.
-Long lines with repeated 'and', 'or', '&&', '||' will now have
one such item per line. For example:
OLD:
if ( $opt_d || $opt_m || $opt_p || $opt_t || $opt_x
|| ( -e $archive && $opt_r ) )
{
( $pAr, $pNames ) = readAr($archive);
}
NEW:
if ( $opt_d
|| $opt_m
|| $opt_p
|| $opt_t
|| $opt_x
|| ( -e $archive && $opt_r ) )
{
( $pAr, $pNames ) = readAr($archive);
}
OLD:
if ( $vp->{X0} + 4 <= $x && $vp->{X0} + $vp->{W} - 4 >= $x
&& $vp->{Y0} + 4 <= $y && $vp->{Y0} + $vp->{H} - 4 >= $y )
NEW:
if ( $vp->{X0} + 4 <= $x
&& $vp->{X0} + $vp->{W} - 4 >= $x
&& $vp->{Y0} + 4 <= $y
&& $vp->{Y0} + $vp->{H} - 4 >= $y )
-Long lines with multiple concatenated tokens will have concatenated
terms (see below) placed one per line, except for short items. For
example:
OLD:
$report .=
"Device type:" . $ib->family . " ID:" . $ib->serial . " CRC:"
. $ib->crc . ": " . $ib->model() . "\n";
NEW:
$report .= "Device type:"
. $ib->family . " ID:"
. $ib->serial . " CRC:"
. $ib->model()
. $ib->crc . ": " . "\n";
NOTE: at present 'short' means 8 characters or less. There is a
tentative flag to change this (-scl), but it is undocumented and
is likely to be changed or removed later, so only use it for testing.
In the above example, the tokens " ID:", " CRC:", and "\n" are below
this limit.
-If a line which is short enough to fit on a single line was
nevertheless broken in the input file at a 'good' location (see below),
perltidy will try to retain a break. For example, the following line
will be formatted as:
open SUM, "<$file"
or die "Cannot open $file ($!)";
if it was broken in the input file, and like this if not:
open SUM, "<$file" or die "Cannot open $file ($!)";
GOOD: 'good' location means before 'and','or','if','unless','&&','||'
The reason perltidy does not just always break at these points is that if
there are multiple, similar statements, this would preclude alignment. So
rather than check for this, perltidy just tries to follow the input style,
in the hopes that the author made a good choice. Here is an example where
we might not want to break before each 'if':
($Locale, @Locale) = ($English, @English) if (@English > @Locale);
($Locale, @Locale) = ($German, @German) if (@German > @Locale);
($Locale, @Locale) = ($French, @French) if (@French > @Locale);
($Locale, @Locale) = ($Spanish, @Spanish) if (@Spanish > @Locale);
-Added wildcard file expansion for systems with shells which lack this.
Now 'perltidy *.pl' should work under MSDOS/Windows. Thanks to Hugh Myers
for suggesting this. This uses builtin glob() for now; I may change that.
-Added new flag -sbl which, if specified, overrides the value of -bl
for opening sub braces. This allows formatting of this type:
perltidy -sbl
sub foo
{
if (!defined($_[0])) {
print("Hello, World\n");
}
else {
print($_[0], "\n");
}
}
Requested by Don Alexander.
-Fixed minor parsing error which prevented a space after a $$ variable
(pid) in some cases. Thanks to Michael Cartmell for noting this.
For example,
old: $$< 700
new: $$ < 700
-Improved line break choices 'and' and 'or' to display logic better.
For example:
OLD:
exists $self->{'build_dir'} and push @e,
"Unwrapped into directory $self->{'build_dir'}";
NEW:
exists $self->{'build_dir'}
and push @e, "Unwrapped into directory $self->{'build_dir'}";
-Fixed error of multiple use of abbreviatioin '-dsc'. -dsc remains
abbreviation for delete-side-comments; -dsm is new abbreviation for
delete-semicolons.
-Corrected and updated 'usage' help routine. Thanks to Slaven Rezic for
noting an error.
-The default for Windows is, for now, not to do a 'perl -c' syntax
check (but -syn will activate it). This is because of problems with
command.com. James Freeman sent me a patch which tries to get around
the problems, and it works in many cases, but testing revealed several
issues that still need to be resolved. So for now, the default is no
syntax check for Windows.
-I added a -T flag when doing perl -c syntax check.
This is because I test it on a large number of scripts from sources
unknown, and who knows what might be hidden in initialization blocks?
Also, deactivated the syntax check if perltidy is run as root. As a
benign example, running the previous version of perltidy on the
following file would cause it to disappear:
BEGIN{
print "Bye, bye baby!\n";
unlink $0;
}
The new version will not let that happen.
-I am contemplating (but have not yet implemented) making '-lp' the
default indentation, because it is stable now and may be closer to how
perl is commonly formatted. This could be in the next release. The
reason that '-lp' was not the original default is that the coding for
it was complex and not ready for the initial release of perltidy. If
anyone has any strong feelings about this, I'd like to hear. The
current default could always be recovered with the '-nlp' flag.
-html updates:
- sub definition names are now specially colored, red by default.
The letter 'm' is used to identify them.
- keyword 'sub' now has color of other keywords.
- restored html keyword color to __END__ and __DATA__, which was
accidentally removed in the previous version.
-A new -se (--standard-error-output) flag has been implemented and
documented which causes all errors to be written to standard output
instead of a .ERR file.
-A new -w (--warning-output) flag has been implemented and documented
which causes perltidy to output certain non-critical messages to the
error output file, .ERR. These include complaints about pod usage,
for example. The default is to not include these.
NOTE: This replaces an undocumented -w=0 or --warning-level flag
which was tentatively introduced in the previous version to avoid some
unwanted messages. The new default is the same as the old -w=0, so
that is no longer needed.
-Improved syntax checking and corrected tokenization of functions such
as rand, srand, sqrt, ... These can accept either an operator or a term
to their right. This has been corrected.
-Corrected tokenization of semicolon: testing of the previous update showed
that the semicolon in the following statement was being mis-tokenized. That
did no harm, other than adding an extra blank space, but has been corrected.
for (sort {strcoll($a,$b);} keys %investments) {
...
}
-New syntax check: after wasting 5 minutes trying to resolve a syntax
error in which I had an extra terminal ';' in a complex for (;;) statement,
I spent a few more minutes adding a check for this in perltidy so it won't
happen again.
-The behavior of --break-before-subs (-bbs) and --break-before-blocks
(-bbb) has been modified. Also, a new control parameter,
--long-block-line-count=n (-lbl=n) has been introduced to give more
control on -bbb. This was previously a hardwired value. The reason
for the change is to reduce the number of unwanted blank lines that
perltidy introduces, and make it less erratic. It's annoying to remove
an unwanted blank line and have perltidy put it back. The goal is to
be able to sprinkle a few blank lines in that dense script you
inherited from Bubba. I did a lot of experimenting with different
schemes for introducing blank lines before and after code blocks, and
decided that there is no really good way to do it. But I think the new
scheme is an improvement. You can always deactivate this with -nbbb.
I've been meaning to work on this; thanks to Erik Thaysen for bringing
it to my attention.
-The .LOG file is seldom needed, and I get tired of deleting them, so
they will now only be automatically saved if perltidy thinks that it
made an error, which is almost never. You can still force the logfile
to be saved with -log or -g.
-Improved method for computing number of columns in a table. The old
method always tried for an even number. The new method allows odd
numbers when it is obvious that a list is not a hash initialization
list.
old: my (
$name, $xsargs, $parobjs, $optypes,
$hasp2child, $pmcode, $hdrcode, $inplacecode,
$globalnew, $callcopy
)
= @_;
new: my (
$name, $xsargs, $parobjs, $optypes, $hasp2child,
$pmcode, $hdrcode, $inplacecode, $globalnew, $callcopy
)
= @_;
-I fiddled with the list threshold adjustment, and some small lists
look better now. Here is the change for one of the lists in test file
'sparse.t':
old:
%units =
("in", "in", "pt", "pt", "pc", "pi", "mm", "mm", "cm", "cm", "\\hsize", "%",
"\\vsize", "%", "\\textwidth", "%", "\\textheight", "%");
new:
%units = (
"in", "in", "pt", "pt", "pc", "pi",
"mm", "mm", "cm", "cm", "\\hsize", "%",
"\\vsize", "%", "\\textwidth", "%", "\\textheight", "%"
);
-Improved -lp formatting at '=' sign. A break was always being added after
the '=' sign in a statement such as this, (to be sure there was enough room
for the parameters):
old: my $fee =
CalcReserveFee(
$env, $borrnum,
$biblionumber, $constraint,
$bibitems
);
The updated version doesn't do this unless the space is really needed:
new: my $fee = CalcReserveFee(
$env, $borrnum,
$biblionumber, $constraint,
$bibitems
);
-I updated the tokenizer to allow $#+ and $#-, which seem to be new to
Perl 5.6. Some experimenting with a recent version of Perl indicated
that it allows these non-alphanumeric '$#' array maximum index
variables: $#: $#- $#+ so I updated the parser accordingly. Only $#:
seems to be valid in older versions of Perl.
-Fixed a rare formatting problem with -lp (and -gnu) which caused
excessive indentation.
-Many additional syntax checks have been added.
-Revised method for testing here-doc target strings; the following
was causing trouble with a regex test because of the '*' characters:
print <<"*EOF*";
bla bla
*EOF*
Perl seems to allow almost anything to be a here doc target, so an
exact string comparison is now used.
-Made update to allow underscores in binary numbers, like '0b1100_0000'.
-Corrected problem with scanning certain module names; a blank space was
being inserted after 'warnings' in the following:
use warnings::register;
The problem was that warnings (and a couple of other key modules) were
being tokenized as keywords. They should have just been identifiers.
-Corrected tokenization of indirect objects after sort, system, and exec,
after testing produced an incorrect error message for the following
line of code:
print sort $sortsubref @list;
-Corrected minor problem where a line after a format had unwanted
extra continuation indentation.
-Delete-block-comments (and -dac) now retain any leading hash-bang line
-Update for -lp (and -gnu) to not align the leading '=' of a list
with a previous '=', since this interferes with alignment of parameters.
old: my $hireDay = new Date;
my $self = {
firstName => undef,
lastName => undef,
hireDay => $hireDay
};
new: my $hireDay = new Date;
my $self = {
firstName => undef,
lastName => undef,
hireDay => $hireDay
};
-Modifications made to display tables more compactly when possible,
without adding lines. For example,
old:
'1', "I", '2', "II", '3', "III", '4', "IV",
'5', "V", '6', "VI", '7', "VII", '8', "VIII",
'9', "IX"
new:
'1', "I", '2', "II", '3', "III",
'4', "IV", '5', "V", '6', "VI",
'7', "VII", '8', "VIII", '9', "IX"
-Corrected minor bug in which -pt=2 did not keep the right paren tight
around a '++' or '--' token, like this:
for ($i = 0 ; $i < length $key ; $i++ )
The formatting for this should be, and now is:
for ($i = 0 ; $i < length $key ; $i++)
Thanks to Erik Thaysen for noting this.
-Discovered a new bug involving here-docs during testing! See BUGS.html.
-Finally fixed parsing of subroutine attributes (A Perl 5.6 feature).
However, the attributes and prototypes must still be on the same line
as the sub name.
-Corrected minor, uncommon bug found during routine testing, in which a
blank got inserted between a function name and its opening paren after
a file test operator, but only in the case that the function had not
been previously seen. Perl uses the existence (or lack thereof) of
the blank to guess if it is a function call. That is,
if (-l pid_filename()) {
became
if (-l pid_filename ()) {
which is a syntax error if pid_filename has not been seen by perl.
-If the AutoLoader module is used, perltidy will continue formatting
code after seeing an __END__ line. Use -nlal to deactivate this feature.
Likewise, if the SelfLoader module is used, perltidy will continue
formatting code after seeing a __DATA__ line. Use -nlsl to
deactivate this feature. Thanks to Slaven Rezic for this suggestion.
-pod text after __END__ and __DATA__ is now identified by perltidy
so that -dp works correctly. Thanks to Slaven Rezic for this suggestion.
-The first $VERSION line which might be eval'd by MakeMaker
is now passed through unchanged. Use -npvl to deactivate this feature.
Thanks to Manfred Winter for this suggestion.
-Improved indentation of nested parenthesized expressions. Tests have
given favorable results. Thanks to Wolfgang Weisselberg for helpful
examples.
-Fixed a very rare problem in which an unwanted semicolon was inserted
due to misidentification of anonymous hash reference curly as a code
block curly. (No instances of this have been reported; I discovered it
during testing). A workaround for older versions of perltidy is to use
-nasc.
-Added -icb (-indent-closing-brace) parameter to indent a brace which
terminates a code block to the same level as the previous line.
Suggested by Andrew Cutler. For example,
if ($task) {
yyy();
} # -icb
else {
zzz();
}
-Rewrote error message triggered by an unknown bareword in a print or
printf filehandle position, and added flag -w=0 to prevent issuing this
error message. Suggested by Byron Jones.
-Added modification to align a one-line 'if' block with similar
following 'elsif' one-line blocks, like this:
if ( $something eq "simple" ) { &handle_simple }
elsif ( $something eq "hard" ) { &handle_hard }
(Suggested by Wolfgang Weisselberg).
-Eliminated all constants with leading underscores because perl 5.005_03
does not support that. For example, _SPACES changed to XX_SPACES.
Thanks to kromJx for this update.
-the directory of test files has been moved to a separate distribution
file because it is getting large but is of little interest to most users.
For the current distribution:
perltidy-20010701.tgz contains the source and docs for perltidy
perltidy-20010701-test.tgz contains the test files
-fixed bug where temporary file perltidy.TMPI was not being deleted
when input was from stdin.
-adjusted line break logic to not break after closing brace of an
eval block (suggested by Boris Zentner).
-added flag -gnu (--gnu-style) to give an approximation to the GNU
style as sometimes applied to perl. The programming style in GNU
'automake' was used as a guide in setting the parameters; these
parameters will probably be adjusted over time.
-an empty code block now has one space for emphasis:
if ( $cmd eq "bg_untested" ) {} # old
if ( $cmd eq "bg_untested" ) { } # new
If this bothers anyone, we could create a parameter.
-the -bt (--brace-tightness) parameter has been split into two
parameters to give more control. -bt now applies only to non-BLOCK
braces, while a new parameter -bbt (block-brace-tightness) applies to
curly braces which contain code BLOCKS. The default value is -bbt=0.
-added flag -icp (--indent-closing-paren) which leaves a statement
termination of the form );, };, or ]; indented with the same
indentation as the previous line. For example,
@month_of_year = ( # default, or -nicp
'Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun', 'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct',
'Nov', 'Dec'
);
@month_of_year = ( # -icp
'Jan', 'Feb', 'Mar', 'Apr', 'May', 'Jun', 'Jul', 'Aug', 'Sep', 'Oct',
'Nov', 'Dec'
);
-Vertical alignment updated to synchronize with tokens &&, ||,
and, or, if, unless. Allowable space before forcing
resynchronization has been increased. (Suggested by Wolfgang
Weisselberg).
-html corrected to use -nohtml-bold-xxxxxxx or -nhbx to negate bold,
and likewise -nohtml-italic-xxxxxxx or -nhbi to negate italic. There
was no way to negate these previously. html documentation updated and
corrected. (Suggested by Wolfgang Weisselberg).
-Some modifications have been made which improve the -lp formatting in
a few cases.
-Perltidy now retains or creates a blank line after an =cut to keep
podchecker happy (Suggested by Manfred H. Winter). This appears to be
a glitch in podchecker, but it was annoying.
-Added -bli flag to give continuation indentation to braces, like this
if ($bli_flag)
{
extra_indentation();
}
-Corrected an error with the tab (-t) option which caused the last line
of a multi-line quote to receive a leading tab. This error was in
version 2001 06 08 but not 2001 04 06. If you formatted a script
with -t with this version, please check it by running once with the
-chk flag and perltidy will scan for this possible error.
-Corrected an invalid pattern (\R should have been just R), changed
$^W =1 to BEGIN {$^W=1} to use warnings in compile phase, and corrected
several unnecessary 'my' declarations. Many thanks to Wolfgang Weisselberg,
2001-06-12, for catching these errors.
-A '-bar' flag has been added to require braces to always be on the
right, even for multi-line if and foreach statements. For example,
the default formatting of a long if statement would be:
if ($bigwasteofspace1 && $bigwasteofspace2
|| $bigwasteofspace3 && $bigwasteofspace4)
{
bigwastoftime();
}
With -bar, the formatting is:
if ($bigwasteofspace1 && $bigwasteofspace2
|| $bigwasteofspace3 && $bigwasteofspace4) {
bigwastoftime();
}
Suggested by Eli Fidler 2001-06-11.
-Uploaded perltidy to sourceforge cvs 2001-06-10.
-An '-lp' flag (--line-up-parentheses) has been added which causes lists
to be indented with extra indentation in the manner sometimes
associated with emacs or the GNU suggestions. Thanks to Ian Stuart for
this suggestion and for extensive help in testing it.
-Subroutine call parameter lists are now formatted as other lists.
This should improve formatting of tables being passed via subroutine
calls. This will also cause full indentation ('-i=n, default n= 4) of
continued parameter list lines rather than just the number of spaces
given with -ci=n, default n=2.
-Added support for hanging side comments. Perltidy identifies a hanging
side comment as a comment immediately following a line with a side
comment or another hanging side comment. This should work in most
cases. It can be deactivated with --no-hanging-side-comments (-nhsc).
The manual has been updated to discuss this. Suggested by Brad
Eisenberg some time ago, and finally implemented.
-fixed problem with parsing command parameters containing quoted
strings in .perltidyrc files. (Reported by Roger Espel Llima 2001-06-07).
-added two command line flags, --want-break-after and
--want-break-before, which allow changing whether perltidy
breaks lines before or after any operators. Please see the revised
man pages for details.
-added system-wide configuration file capability.
If perltidy does not find a .perltidyrc command line file in
the current directory, nor in the home directory, it now looks
for '/usr/local/etc/perltidyrc' and then for '/etc/perltidyrc'.
(Suggested by Roger Espel Llima 2001-05-31).
-fixed problem in which spaces were trimmed from lines of a multi-line
quote. (Reported by Roger Espel Llima 2001-05-30). This is an
uncommon situation, but serious, because it could conceivably change
the proper function of a script.
-fixed problem in which a semicolon was incorrectly added within
an anonymous hash. (Reported by A.C. Yardley, 2001-5-23).
(You would know if this happened, because perl would give a syntax
error for the resulting script).
-fixed problem in which an incorrect error message was produced
after a version number on a 'use' line, like this ( Reported
by Andres Kroonmaa, 2001-5-14):
use CGI 2.42 qw(fatalsToBrowser);
Other than the extraneous error message, this bug was harmless.
-fixed serious bug in which the last line of some multi-line quotes or
patterns was given continuation indentation spaces. This may make
a pattern incorrect unless it uses the /x modifier. To find
instances of this error in scripts which have been formatted with
earlier versions of perltidy, run with the -chk flag, which has
been added for this purpose (SLH, 2001-04-05).
** So, please check previously formatted scripts by running with -chk
at least once **
-continuation indentation has been reprogrammed to be hierarchical,
which improves deeply nested structures.
-fixed problem with undefined value in list formatting (reported by Michael
Langner 2001-04-05)
-Switched to graphical display of nesting in .LOG files. If an
old format string was "(1 [0 {2", the new string is "{{(". This
is easier to read and also shows the order of nesting.
-added outdenting of cuddled paren structures, like ")->pack(".
-added line break and outdenting of ')->' so that instead of
$mw->Label(
-text => "perltidy",
-relief => 'ridge')->pack;
the current default is:
$mw->Label(
-text => "perltidy",
-relief => 'ridge'
)->pack;
(requested by Michael Langner 2001-03-31; in the future this could
be controlled by a command-line parameter).
-revised list indentation logic, so that lists following an assignment
operator get one full indentation level, rather than just continuation
indentation. Also corrected some minor glitches in the continuation
indentation logic.
-Fixed problem with unwanted continuation indentation after a blank line
(reported by Erik Thaysen 2001-03-28):
-minor update to avoid stranding a single '(' on one line
-corrected serious error tokenizing filehandles, in which a sub call
after a print or printf, like this:
print usage() and exit;
became this:
print usage () and exit;
Unfortunately, this converts 'usage' to a filehandle. To fix this, rerun
perltidy; it will look for this situation and issue a warning.
-fixed another cuddled-else formatting bug (Reported by Craig Bourne)
-added several diagnostic --dump routines
-added token-level whitespace controls (suggested by Hans Ecke)
-added support for special variables of the form ${^WANT_BITS}
-space added between scalar and left paren in 'for' and 'foreach' loops,
(suggestion by Michael Cartmell):
for $i( 1 .. 20 ) # old
for $i ( 1 .. 20 ) # new
-html now outputs cascading style sheets (thanks to suggestion from
Hans Ecke)
-flags -o and -st now work with -html
-added missing -html documentation for comments (noted by Alex Izvorski)
-support for VMS added (thanks to Michael Cartmell for code patches and
testing)
-v-strings implemented (noted by Hans Ecke and Michael Cartmell; extensive
testing by Michael Cartmell)
-fixed problem where operand may be empty at line 3970
(\b should be just b in lines 3970, 3973) (Thanks to Erik Thaysen,
Keith Marshall for bug reports)
-fixed -ce bug (cuddled else), where lines like '} else {' were indented
(Thanks to Shawn Stepper and Rick Measham for reporting this)
-fixed undefined value in line 153 (only worked with -I set)
(Thanks to Mike Stok, Phantom of the Opcodes, Ian Ehrenwald, and others)
-fixed undefined value in line 1069 (filehandle problem with perl versions <
5.6) (Thanks to Yuri Leikind, Mike Stok, Michael Holve, Jeff Kolber)
-Initial announcement at freshmeat.net; started Change Log
(Unfortunately this version was DOA, but it was fixed the next day)