Utility Functions

Flake8 has a few utility functions that it uses internally.

Warning

As should be implied by where these are documented, these are all internal utility functions. Their signatures and return types may change between releases without notice.

Bugs reported about these internal functions will be closed immediately.

If functions are needed by plugin developers, they may be requested in the bug tracker and after careful consideration they may be added to the documented stable API.

flake8.utils.parse_comma_separated_list(value)

Parse a comma-separated list.

Parameters:value – String or list of strings to be parsed and normalized.
Returns:List of values with whitespace stripped.
Return type:list

parse_comma_separated_list() takes either a string like

"E121,W123,F904"
"E121,\nW123,\nF804"
"E121,\n\tW123,\n\tF804"

Or it will take a list of strings (potentially with whitespace) such as

["   E121\n", "\t\nW123   ", "\n\tF904\n    "]

And converts it to a list that looks as follows

["E121", "W123", "F904"]

This function helps normalize any kind of comma-separated input you or Flake8 might receive. This is most helpful when taking advantage of Flake8‘s additional parameters to Option.

flake8.utils.normalize_path(path, parent='.')

Normalize a single-path.

Returns:The normalized path.
Return type:str

This utility takes a string that represents a path and returns the absolute path if the string has a / in it. It also removes trailing /s.

flake8.utils.normalize_paths(paths, parent='.')

Parse a comma-separated list of paths.

Returns:The normalized paths.
Return type:[str]

This function utilizes parse_comma_separated_list() and normalize_path() to normalize it’s input to a list of strings that should be paths.

flake8.utils.stdin_get_value()

Get and cache it so plugins can use it.

This function retrieves and caches the value provided on sys.stdin. This allows plugins to use this to retrieve stdin if necessary.

flake8.utils.is_windows()

Determine if we’re running on Windows.

Returns:True if running on Windows, otherwise False
Return type:bool

This provides a convenient and explicitly named function that checks if we are currently running on a Windows (or nt) operating system.

flake8.utils.can_run_multiprocessing_on_windows()

Determine if we can use multiprocessing on Windows.

Returns:True if the version of Python is modern enough, otherwise False
Return type:bool

This provides a separate and distinct check from is_windows() that allows us to check if the version of Python we’re using can actually use multiprocessing on Windows.

flake8.utils.is_using_stdin(paths)

Determine if we’re going to read from stdin.

Parameters:paths (list) – The paths that we’re going to check.
Returns:True if stdin (-) is in the path, otherwise False
Return type:bool

Another helpful function that is named only to be explicit given it is a very trivial check, this checks if the user specified - in their arguments to Flake8 to indicate we should read from stdin.

flake8.utils.filenames_from(arg, predicate=None)

Generate filenames from an argument.

Parameters:
  • arg (str) – Parameter from the command-line.
  • predicate (callable) – Predicate to use to filter out filenames. If the predicate returns True we will exclude the filename, otherwise we will yield it. By default, we include every filename generated.
Returns:

Generator of paths

When provided an argument to Flake8, we need to be able to traverse directories in a convenient manner. For example, if someone runs

$ flake8 flake8/

Then they want us to check all of the files in the directory flake8/. This function will handle that while also handling the case where they specify a file like:

$ flake8 flake8/__init__.py
flake8.utils.fnmatch(filename, patterns, default=True)

Wrap fnmatch.fnmatch() to add some functionality.

Parameters:
  • filename (str) – Name of the file we’re trying to match.
  • patterns (list) – Patterns we’re using to try to match the filename.
  • default (bool) – The default value if patterns is empty
Returns:

True if a pattern matches the filename, False if it doesn’t. default if patterns is empty.

The standard library’s fnmatch.fnmatch() is excellent at deciding if a filename matches a single pattern. In our use case, however, we typically have a list of patterns and want to know if the filename matches any of them. This function abstracts that logic away with a little extra logic.

flake8.utils.parameters_for(plugin)

Return the parameters for the plugin.

This will inspect the plugin and return either the function parameters if the plugin is a function or the parameters for __init__ after self if the plugin is a class.

Parameters:plugin (flake8.plugins.manager.Plugin) – The internal plugin object.
Returns:A dictionary mapping the parameter name to whether or not it is required (a.k.a., is positional only/does not have a default).
Return type:dict([(str, bool)])

Flake8 analyzes the parameters to plugins to determine what input they are expecting. Plugins may expect one of the following:

  • physical_line to receive the line as it appears in the file
  • logical_line to receive the logical line (not as it appears in the file)
  • tree to receive the abstract syntax tree (AST) for the file

We also analyze the rest of the parameters to provide more detail to the plugin. This function will return the parameters in a consistent way across versions of Python and will handle both classes and functions that are used as plugins. Further, if the plugin is a class, it will strip the self argument so we can check the parameters of the plugin consistently.

flake8.utils.parse_unified_diff(diff=None)

Parse the unified diff passed on stdin.

Returns:dictionary mapping file names to sets of line numbers
Return type:dict

To handle usage of flake8 --diff, Flake8 needs to be able to parse the name of the files in the diff as well as the ranges indicated the sections that have been changed. This function either accepts the diff as an argument or reads the diff from standard-in. It then returns a dictionary with filenames as the keys and sets of line numbers as the value.