From 0edfbf1478950d645ece19ced0156771ba16ebb6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: John MacFarlane Date: Sat, 4 Mar 2017 12:49:14 +0100 Subject: Added 'make refactor' using hlint, stylish-haskell. --- .stylish-haskell.yaml | 171 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 171 insertions(+) create mode 100644 .stylish-haskell.yaml (limited to '.stylish-haskell.yaml') diff --git a/.stylish-haskell.yaml b/.stylish-haskell.yaml new file mode 100644 index 000000000..496e72802 --- /dev/null +++ b/.stylish-haskell.yaml @@ -0,0 +1,171 @@ +# stylish-haskell configuration file +# ================================== + +# The stylish-haskell tool is mainly configured by specifying steps. These steps +# are a list, so they have an order, and one specific step may appear more than +# once (if needed). Each file is processed by these steps in the given order. +steps: + # Convert some ASCII sequences to their Unicode equivalents. This is disabled + # by default. + # - unicode_syntax: + # # In order to make this work, we also need to insert the UnicodeSyntax + # # language pragma. If this flag is set to true, we insert it when it's + # # not already present. You may want to disable it if you configure + # # language extensions using some other method than pragmas. Default: + # # true. + # add_language_pragma: true + + # Align the right hand side of some elements. This is quite conservative + # and only applies to statements where each element occupies a single + # line. + - simple_align: + cases: true + top_level_patterns: true + records: true + + # Import cleanup + - imports: + # There are different ways we can align names and lists. + # + # - global: Align the import names and import list throughout the entire + # file. + # + # - file: Like global, but don't add padding when there are no qualified + # imports in the file. + # + # - group: Only align the imports per group (a group is formed by adjacent + # import lines). + # + # - none: Do not perform any alignment. + # + # Default: global. + align: none + + # Folowing options affect only import list alignment. + # + # List align has following options: + # + # - after_alias: Import list is aligned with end of import including + # 'as' and 'hiding' keywords. + # + # > import qualified Data.List as List (concat, foldl, foldr, head, + # > init, last, length) + # + # - with_alias: Import list is aligned with start of alias or hiding. + # + # > import qualified Data.List as List (concat, foldl, foldr, head, + # > init, last, length) + # + # - new_line: Import list starts always on new line. + # + # > import qualified Data.List as List + # > (concat, foldl, foldr, head, init, last, length) + # + # Default: after_alias + list_align: after_alias + + # Long list align style takes effect when import is too long. This is + # determined by 'columns' setting. + # + # - inline: This option will put as much specs on same line as possible. + # + # - new_line: Import list will start on new line. + # + # - new_line_multiline: Import list will start on new line when it's + # short enough to fit to single line. Otherwise it'll be multiline. + # + # - multiline: One line per import list entry. + # Type with contructor list acts like single import. + # + # > import qualified Data.Map as M + # > ( empty + # > , singleton + # > , ... + # > , delete + # > ) + # + # Default: inline + long_list_align: inline + + # List padding determines indentation of import list on lines after import. + # This option affects 'list_align' and 'long_list_align'. + list_padding: 4 + + # Separate lists option affects formating of import list for type + # or class. The only difference is single space between type and list + # of constructors, selectors and class functions. + # + # - true: There is single space between Foldable type and list of it's + # functions. + # + # > import Data.Foldable (Foldable (fold, foldl, foldMap)) + # + # - false: There is no space between Foldable type and list of it's + # functions. + # + # > import Data.Foldable (Foldable(fold, foldl, foldMap)) + # + # Default: true + separate_lists: true + + # Language pragmas + - language_pragmas: + # We can generate different styles of language pragma lists. + # + # - vertical: Vertical-spaced language pragmas, one per line. + # + # - compact: A more compact style. + # + # - compact_line: Similar to compact, but wrap each line with + # `{-#LANGUAGE #-}'. + # + # Default: vertical. + style: vertical + + # Align affects alignment of closing pragma brackets. + # + # - true: Brackets are aligned in same collumn. + # + # - false: Brackets are not aligned together. There is only one space + # between actual import and closing bracket. + # + # Default: true + align: true + + # stylish-haskell can detect redundancy of some language pragmas. If this + # is set to true, it will remove those redundant pragmas. Default: true. + remove_redundant: true + + # Replace tabs by spaces. This is disabled by default. + # - tabs: + # # Number of spaces to use for each tab. Default: 8, as specified by the + # # Haskell report. + # spaces: 8 + + # Remove trailing whitespace + - trailing_whitespace: {} + +# A common setting is the number of columns (parts of) code will be wrapped +# to. Different steps take this into account. Default: 80. +columns: 80 + +# By default, line endings are converted according to the OS. You can override +# preferred format here. +# +# - native: Native newline format. CRLF on Windows, LF on other OSes. +# +# - lf: Convert to LF ("\n"). +# +# - crlf: Convert to CRLF ("\r\n"). +# +# Default: native. +newline: native + +# Sometimes, language extensions are specified in a cabal file or from the +# command line instead of using language pragmas in the file. stylish-haskell +# needs to be aware of these, so it can parse the file correctly. +# +# No language extensions are enabled by default. +# language_extensions: + # - TemplateHaskell + # - QuasiQuotes -- cgit v1.2.3