package ocamlformat

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Getting started

Installation

OCamlFormat can be installed with opam:

opam install ocamlformat

Alternatively, it can be built manually with:

# To properly set `ocamlformat --version`
dune subst
dune build @install

Formatting code!

First of all, make sure you have an .ocamlformat file at the root of your project. Setting up your project to use the default profile and the OCamlFormat version you installed (hopefully the last one) in this .ocamlformat file is considered good practice:

profile = default
version = 0.27.0

To manually invoke OCamlformat the general command is:

ocamlformat [OPTION]... [SRC]...

The most common usecase involves using the Dune build system, once your project is correctly setup (see Dune's manual) you can reformat your project using:

dune build @fmt

With this command, Dune will apply the appropriate autoformatter on each kind of file (where OCamlFormat is the one called on .ml, .mli, .mlt, .eliom and .eliomi files). All files are formatted, unless explicitly excluded (see below).

Code style

There are a number of preset code style profiles, selected using the --profile option by passing --profile=<name> on the command line or adding profile = <name> to an .ocamlformat configuration file. The available profiles are:

  • conventional (also known as default);
  • ocamlformat;
  • janestreet.

It is considered a good practice to set a profile in the .ocamlformat configuration file of a project, even if you plan on using the default profile, explicitly setting profile = default is recommended.

Each profile is a collection of settings for all options, overriding lower priority configuration of individual options. So a profile can be selected and then individual options can be overridden if desired.

The conventional (or default) profile aims to be as familiar and "conventional" appearing as the available options allow.

The ocamlformat profile aims to take advantage of the strengths of a parsetree-based auto-formatter, and to limit the consequences of the weaknesses imposed by the current implementation. This is a style which optimizes for what the formatter can do best, rather than to match the style of any existing code. Instead of familiarity, the focus is on legibility, keeping the common cases reasonably compact while attempting to avoid confusing formatting in corner cases. General guidelines that have directed the design include:

  • Legibility, in the sense of making it as hard as possible for quick visual parsing to give the wrong interpretation, is of highest priority;
  • Whenever possible the high-level structure of the code should be obvious by looking only at the left margin, in particular, it should not be necessary to visually jump from left to right hunting for critical keywords, tokens, etc;
  • All else equal compact code is preferred as reading without scrolling is easier, so indentation or white space is avoided unless it helps legibility;
  • Attention has been given to making some syntactic gotchas visually obvious.

If no profile is selected, the default one is used.

Options

The full options' documentation is available on this page or through ocamlformat --help. Options can be modified by the means of:

  • an .ocamlformat configuration file with an option = VAL line
  • using the OCAMLFORMAT environment variable: OCAMLFORMAT=option=VAL,...,option=VAL
  • an optional parameter on the command line
  • a global [@@@ocamlformat "option=VAL"] attribute in the processed file
  • an [@@ocamlformat "option=VAL"] attribute on an expression in the processed file

For more details, read about how OCamlFormat finds its root project and computes its configuration.

Version

On existing projects, it is likely an .ocamlformat file is already present, specifying a field version = A.B.C (e.g. 0.20.0).

It is the user's responsability to install the appropriate OCamlFormat binary, requesting an older version if one's project requires it:

opam install ocamlformat.0.20.0

Setting an OCamlFormat version in the configuration file is a good practice to ensure every contributor of a project gets the same formatting.

Requirements

OCamlFormat requires source code that meets the following conditions:

  • Does not trigger warning 50 (“Unexpected documentation comment.”). For code that triggers warning 50, it is unlikely that OCamlFormat will happen to preserve the documentation string attachment.
  • Parses without any preprocessing, using the version of the standard OCaml (not camlp4) parser used to build OCamlFormat. Attributes and extension points should be correctly preserved, but other mechanisms such as camlp4, cppo, etc. will not work.
  • Is either a module implementation (.ml), an interface (.mli) or a sequence of toplevel phrases (.mlt). dune files in OCaml syntax also work.

Warranty

Under those conditions, OCamlFormat is expected to produce output equivalent to the input. As a safety check in case of bugs, prior to terminating or modifying any input file, OCamlFormat enforces the following checks:

  • The parse trees obtained by parsing the original and formatted files are equal up to some minor normalization (see Normalize.equal).
  • The documentation strings, and their attachment, has been preserved (implicit in the parse tree check).
  • The set of comments in the original and formatted files is the same up to their location.
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