[yt-dev] PEP8
Matthew Turk
matthewturk at gmail.com
Wed Feb 1 07:53:44 PST 2012
On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 10:49 AM, Sam Skillman <samskillman at gmail.com> wrote:
> I'm on the fence. I think I'd be okay with this if it was done at something
> like a 3.0 release, which is what it is slated for in the issues. Doing so
> before that seems like it will cause headaches for everyone with an active
> fork. What I'm more worried about is how it is handled moving forward. Is
> it reasonable to require all contributors to run with pyflakes or flake8
> (http://pypi.python.org/pypi/flake8) with an option that all failures stop
> the commit? Or do we just ask that they do so, let Jenkins tell us if they
> screwed up, and ask them to fix it?
I'm also fine with waiting for a 3.0 release, which I would like to
have out by the end of this calendar year. An overall eyes-on-code
initiative would fit with that. Unfortunately this is the kind of
activity that fits much better with coordinated development, either
remotely through some kind of audio video chat, or in person around a
table.
As for mandating people do it, I think having Jenkins complain and
then either encouraging compliance or manually fixing minor things
would be fine. Right now we are still setting the standards for how
to develop; we can strive to set a good example and encourage those
practices by others. Mentoring during early development is a good
idea, as well. We actually have style guides which aren't commonly
read, but if we are serious about improving the code smell we can try
to make this a bigger priority when evaluating pull requests,
suggesting projects, going over diffs, etc.
-Matt
>
> Anyways, I guess I'm a +0.
>
> Sam
>
>
> On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 5:45 AM, Britton Smith <brittonsmith at gmail.com>
> wrote:
>>
>> I'm in favor of this, too. There's a good amount of code written by
>> myself that does not comply but has not gotten changed because I didn't want
>> to break old scripts. I wouldn't mind fixing it all as a part of one big
>> effort.
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Feb 1, 2012 at 7:42 AM, Matthew Turk <matthewturk at gmail.com>
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> I am broadly in favor of using PEP-8 standards. (As long as we're on
>>> the topic, Kacper also had a great suggestion that we run static
>>> analysis like pyflakes.) Our oldest open ticket, from pre-BB
>>> migration, is about PEP-8.
>>>
>>>
>>> https://bitbucket.org/yt_analysis/yt/issue/39/follow-pep8-style-conventions
>>>
>>> Fixing line length and so on I am fine with being done automatically
>>> with one of those tools. For changing method names, which I am also
>>> in favor of, we should either identify them and fix them manually or
>>> use a refactoring tool like rope or bicycle repair man.
>>>
>>> For all of this I would like to do it in one go, with a single bandaid
>>> to rip off, and beforehand consolidate all extant branches. RIght now
>>> we have a couple things under active development; we could do this
>>> relatively soon, but I think we need some kind of coordinated effort
>>> to merge relatively quickly back into those branches to make sure we
>>> don't just cause a ton of merge conflicts. Here's my proposal:
>>>
>>> * Make the change to main branch
>>> * Merge those into geometry, rockstar, volume rendering
>>> * Add pyflakes and/or pep8 checks to Jenkins
>>>
>>> Thoughts?
>>>
>>> -Matt
>>>
>>> On Tue, Jan 31, 2012 at 10:56 PM, Casey W. Stark <caseywstark at gmail.com>
>>> wrote:
>>> > Hi Stephen.
>>> >
>>> > Not sure about all of the pep8 suggestions, but I think this is
>>> > important.
>>> > Some are purely style/consistency, like whitespace before ')'. Some
>>> > would
>>> > hold yt back from Python3 in the future, like .has_key() is deprecated,
>>> > use
>>> > 'in'.
>>> >
>>> > Do you think it will be enough to autopep and run the full tests? I
>>> > have no
>>> > idea about coverage, but it would be great to fix some of these.
>>> >
>>> > Best,
>>> > Casey
>>> >
>>> >
>>> > On Tue, Jan 31, 2012 at 7:00 PM, Stephen Skory <s at skory.us> wrote:
>>> >>
>>> >> Hi all,
>>> >>
>>> >> while vegging out in front of the TV, I've been playing with a pep8
>>> >> checker (http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pep8), and I get the statistics
>>> >> below for all the *.py files in yt. How much do we care about this
>>> >> stuff? There are automatic tools
>>> >> (http://pypi.python.org/pypi/autopep8/0.3) but I don't know if we can
>>> >> trust them. Thoughts?
>>> >>
>>> >> (the first column is the number of incidents)
>>> >>
>>> >> 70 E101 indentation contains mixed spaces and tabs
>>> >> 76 E111 indentation is not a multiple of four
>>> >> 605 E201 whitespace after '['
>>> >> 68 E202 whitespace before ')'
>>> >> 94 E203 whitespace before ','
>>> >> 105 E211 whitespace before '['
>>> >> 191 E221 multiple spaces before operator
>>> >> 57 E222 multiple spaces after operator
>>> >> 3769 E225 missing whitespace around operator
>>> >> 4271 E231 missing whitespace after ','
>>> >> 1080 E251 no spaces around keyword / parameter equals
>>> >> 986 E261 at least two spaces before inline comment
>>> >> 6 E262 inline comment should start with '# '
>>> >> 414 E301 expected 1 blank line, found 0
>>> >> 2061 E302 expected 2 blank lines, found 1
>>> >> 369 E303 too many blank lines (2)
>>> >> 168 E401 multiple imports on one line
>>> >> 4644 E501 line too long (80 characters)
>>> >> 1760 E701 multiple statements on one line (colon)
>>> >> 276 E702 multiple statements on one line (semicolon)
>>> >> 70 W191 indentation contains tabs
>>> >> 1585 W291 trailing whitespace
>>> >> 3 W292 no newline at end of file
>>> >> 3163 W293 blank line contains whitespace
>>> >> 221 W391 blank line at end of file
>>> >> 197 W601 .has_key() is deprecated, use 'in'
>>> >> 17 W602 deprecated form of raising exception
>>> >>
>>> >> --
>>> >> Stephen Skory
>>> >> s at skory.us
>>> >> http://stephenskory.com/
>>> >> 510.621.3687 (google voice)
>>> >> _______________________________________________
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>>> >
>>> >
>>> >
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