- Switched from yapf to black
- Reconfigure isort for black
- Resolve black/pylint idiosyncrasies
Note: I used `--experimental-string-processing` because black was
producing "implicit string concatenation", similar to what described
here: https://github.com/psf/black/issues/1837. While currently this
feature is experimental, it will be enabled by default:
https://github.com/psf/black/issues/2188. After running black with the
new string processing so that the generated code merges these `"hello" "
world"` strings concatenations, then I removed
`--experimental-string-processing` for stability, and regenerated the
code again.
To the reviewer: don't even try to open "Files Changed" tab 😄 It's
better to review commit-by-commit, and ignore `run black and isort`.
* Add isort_code.sh to sanity tests
* Run tools/distrib/isort_code.sh
* Fine tune the import order for relative imports
* Make pylint and project generation happy
* Fix a few corner cases
* Use --check instead of --diff
* The import order impacts test result somehow
* Make isort print diff and check output at the same time
* Let tools/run_tests/python_utils be firstparty library
* Run isort against latest HEAD
This commit resolves#18331.
This commit resolves#18256.
This commit resolves... another TODO that apparently didn't have an
associated github issue.
We swap out pubref's implementation of py_proto_library with our own,
which more closely mirrors the interface of the internal
py_proto_library, taking the descriptor file output of a proto_library
rule as input.
One minor change in behavior was introduced for simplicity. When a
py_proto_library depends on a proto_library with a source proto file in
a subdirectory of the bazel package, the import module of the resultant
python library will reflect the package, *not* the full directory of the
proto file, including both the bazel package and the subdirectories, as
pubref did previously. This behavior also more closely mirrors google
internal behavior.
This commit also introduces a slightly more stringent bazel format
script. Buildifier on its own will not take care of long lines, but by
running yapf first, we end up with a more legible file. At the moment,
there is no sanity check associated with this formatter.