On Fri, Mar 20, 2015 at 7:54 PM, Neil Girdhar <mistersh...@gmail.com> wrote:
> If ever someone wants to clean up the repository to conform to PEP 7, I
> wrote a program that catches a couple hundred PEP 7 violations in ./Python
> alone (1400 in the whole codebase):
>
> import os
> import re
>
> def grep(path, regex):
>     reg_obj = re.compile(regex, re.M)
>     res = []
>     for root, dirs, fnames in os.walk(path):
>         for fname in fnames:
>             if fname.endswith('.c'):
>                 path = os.path.join(root, fname)
>                 with open(path) as f:
>                     data = f.read()
>                     for m in reg_obj.finditer(data):
>                         line_number = sum(c == '\n'
>                                           for c in data[:m.start()]) + 1
>                         res.append("{}: {}".format(path, line_number))
>     return res
>
> for pattern in [
>         r'^\s*\|\|',
>         r'^\s*\&\&',
>         r'} else {',
>         r'\<return\s*\(',
> ]:
>     print("Searching for", pattern)
>     print("\n".join(grep('.', pattern)))
>
> In my experience, it was hard to write PEP 7 conforming code when the
> surrounding code is inconsistent.

You can usually change surrounding code within reason if you want to
add conforming code of your own, but there's little value and high
risk in any mass change just to apply the style guidelines.
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