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OCamlFormat is already being used by several projects, but it comes with some important caveats. This FAQ should help you decide if it can work for you.
OCamlFormat is beta software, and we expect the program to change considerably before we reach version 1.0.0. In particular, upgrading the ocamlformat
package will cause your program to get reformatted. Sometimes the changes are relatively small, but sometimes upgrading can cause many changes all over the code base. This can be a hard price to pay, since this means losing the corresponding git history.
If you use a custom configuration, options you rely on might also get removed in a later release.
Moreover if you adopt OCamlFormat in one project it will not break your workflow in your other projects. Indeed OCamlFormat modifies a file only if it can find an .ocamlformat
file, so adding a save hook in your editor will only simplify your workflow in projects using OCamlFormat.
The recommended way is to use a versioned default profile, such as:
profile = default
version = 0.26.0
(or replace with the output of ocamlformat --version
)
This ensures two things:
No. It is better to see OCamlFormat as a tool to apply a style, rather than a tweakable tool to enforce your existing style. There are some knobs that you can turn, such as overriding margin
to determine the maximum line width. But it is better not to set individual options to override what the default profile is doing.
To paraphrase prettier's page on option philosophy:
OCamlFormat has a few options because of history. But we don’t want more of them. By far the biggest reason for adopting OCamlFormat is to stop all the on-going debates over styles. The more options OCamlFormat has, the further from the above goal it gets. The debates over styles just turn into debates over which OCamlFormat options to use.
No. Although OCamlFormat is influenced by and follows the same basic design as refmt
for Reason, OCamlFormat outputs OCaml instead of Reason.
OCamlFormat is not able to deal directly with Reason code (*.re
/*.rei
files), but it is possible to first convert these files to OCaml syntax using refmt -p
ml
and then running ocamlformat
on this output.
It is possible to disable OCamlFormat for the files of a directory by having an .ocamlformat
file containing disable in this directory, or listing the files to ignore in an .ocamlformat-ignore
file:
dir/**
It is also possible to add an .ocamlformat-ignore
file containing *
in every directory that needs to be ignored.
To disable the formatting of a specific toplevel item you must attach an [@@ocamlformat "disable"]
attribute to this item in the processed file, such as:
let do_not_touch
(x : t)
(y : t)
(z : t) = [
x; y; z
] [@@ocamlformat "disable"]
To disable the formatting of a specific expression you must attach an [@ocamlformat "disable"]
attribute to this expression in the processed file, such as:
let do_not_touch (x : t) (y : t) (z : t) = [
x; y; z
] [@ocamlformat "disable"]
To disable a whole file, the preferred way is to add the name of the file to a local .ocamlformat-ignore
file. An .ocamlformat-ignore
file specifies files that OCamlFormat should ignore. Each line in an .ocamlformat-ignore
file specifies a filename relative to the directory containing the .ocamlformat-ignore
file. Shell-style regular expressions are supported. Lines starting with #
are ignored and can be used as comments.
The change in the indentation of |
vs |
would indicate that there is a short body of a nested or-pattern that could be easily missed if formatted as: |
. This can be disabled using indicate-nested-or-patterns = unsafe-no
if you are happy with the risk. Alternatively, break-cases = nested
can be used to break after the ->
to avoid the risk at the cost of significantly less compact code.