Skip to main content

A flake8 plugin to help you write better list/set/dict comprehensions.

Project description

flake8-comprehensions

https://img.shields.io/pypi/v/flake8-comprehensions.svg https://img.shields.io/travis/adamchainz/flake8-comprehensions.svg https://img.shields.io/badge/code%20style-black-000000.svg

A flake8 plugin that helps you write better list/set/dict comprehensions.

Installation

Install from pip with:

pip install flake8-comprehensions

Python 3.5-3.7 supported.

When installed it will automatically be run as part of flake8; you can check it is being picked up with:

$ flake8 --version
2.4.1 (pep8: 1.7.0, pyflakes: 0.8.1, flake8-comprehensions: 1.0.0, mccabe: 0.3.1) CPython 2.7.11 on Darwin

Rules

Code

Rule

C400

Unnecessary generator - rewrite as a list comprehension.

C401

Unnecessary generator - rewrite as a set comprehension.

C402

Unnecessary generator - rewrite as a dict comprehension.

C403

Unnecessary list comprehension - rewrite as a set comprehension.

C404

Unnecessary list comprehension - rewrite as a dict comprehension.

C405

Unnecessary (list/tuple) literal - rewrite as a set literal.

C406

Unnecessary (list/tuple) literal - rewrite as a dict literal.

C407

Unnecessary list comprehension - ‘<builtin>’ can take a generator.

C408

Unnecessary (dict/list/tuple) call - rewrite as a literal.

C409

Unnecessary (list/tuple) passed to tuple() - (remove the outer call to tuple()/rewrite as a tuple literal).

C410

Unnecessary (list/tuple) passed to list() - (remove the outer call to list()/rewrite as a list literal).

C411

Unnecessary list call - remove the outer call to list().

C412

Unnecessary list comprehension - ‘in’ can take a generator.

Examples

C400-402: Unnecessary generator

It’s unnecessary to use list, set, or dict around a generator expression, since there are equivalent comprehensions for these types. For example:

  • Rewrite list(f(x) for x in foo) as [f(x) for x in foo]

  • Rewrite set(f(x) for x in foo) as {f(x) for x in foo}

  • Rewrite dict((x, f(x)) for x in foo) as {x: f(x) for x in foo}

C403-404: Unnecessary list comprehension

It’s unnecessary to use a list comprehension inside a call to set or dict, since there are equivalent comprehensions for these types. For example:

  • Rewrite set([f(x) for x in foo]) as {f(x) for x in foo}

  • Rewrite dict([(x, f(x)) for x in foo]) as {x: f(x) for x in foo}

C405-406,C409-410: Unnecessary list/tuple literal

It’s unnecessary to use a list or tuple literal within a call to tuple, list, set, or dict since there is literal syntax for these types. For example:

  • Rewrite tuple([1, 2]) or tuple((1, 2)) as (1, 2)

  • Rewrite tuple([]) as ()

  • Rewrite list([1, 2]) or list((1, 2)) as [1, 2]

  • Rewrite list([]) as []

  • Rewrite set([1, 2]) or set((1, 2)) as {1, 2}

  • Rewrite set([]) as set()

  • Rewrite dict([(1, 2)]) or dict(((1, 2),)) as {1: 2}

  • Rewrite dict([]) as {}

C407: Unnecessary list comprehension - ‘<builtin>’ can take a generator

It’s unnecessary to pass a list comprehension to some builtins that can take generators instead. For example:

  • Rewrite sum([x ** 2 for x in range(10)]) as sum(x ** 2 for x in range(10))

  • Rewrite all([foo.bar for foo in foos]) as all(foo.bar for foo in foos)

The list of builtins that are checked for are:

  • all

  • any

  • enumerate

  • frozenset

  • max

  • min

  • sorted

  • sum

  • tuple

C408: Unnecessary (dict/list/tuple) call - rewrite as a literal.

It’s slower to call e.g. dict() than using the empty literal, because the name dict must be looked up in the global scope in case it has been rebound. Same for the other two basic types here. For example:

  • Rewrite dict() as {}

  • Rewrite list() as []

  • Rewrite tuple() as ()

C411: Unnecessary list call - remove the outer call to list().

It’s unnecessary to use a list around list comprehension, since it is equivalent without it. For example:

  • Rewrite list([f(x) for x in foo]) as [f(x) for x in foo]

C412: Unnecessary list comprehension - ‘in’ can take a generator.

It’s unnecessary to pass a list comprehension to ‘in’ that can take a generator instead. For example:

  • Rewrite y in [f(x) for x in foo] as y in (f(x) for x in foo)

History

Pending Release

(Any notes for changes pending release go here.)

2.3.0 (2019-10-25)

  • Converted setuptools metadata to configuration file. This meant removing the __version__ attribute from the package. If you want to inspect the installed version, use importlib.metadata.version("flake8-comprehensions") (docs / backport).

  • Add dependencies on cached-property and importlib-metadata.

  • Fix false negatives in C407 for cases when enumerate and sum() are passed more than one argument.

2.2.0 (2019-08-12)

  • Update Python support to 3.5-3.7, as 3.4 has reached its end of life.

  • C412 rule that complains about using list comprehension with in.

2.1.0 (2019-03-01)

  • Add missing builtin enumerate to C407.

2.0.0 (2019-02-02)

  • Drop Python 2 support, only Python 3.4+ is supported now.

1.4.1 (2017-05-17)

  • Fix false positives in C408 for calls using *args or **kwargs.

1.4.0 (2017-05-14)

  • Plugin now reserves the full C4XX code space rather than just C40X

  • C408 rule that complains about using tuple(), list(), or dict() instead of a literal.

  • C409 and C410 rules that complain about an unnecessary list or tuple that could be rewritten as a literal.

  • C411 rule that complains about using list comprehension inside a list() call.

1.3.0 (2017-05-01)

  • Don’t allow installation with Flake8 3.2.0 which doesn’t enable the plugin. This bug was fixed in Flake8 3.2.1.

  • Prevent false positives of C402 from generators of expressions that aren’t two-tuples.

  • C405 and C406 now also complain about unnecessary tuple literals.

1.2.1 (2016-06-27)

  • C407 rule that complains about unnecessary list comprehensions inside builtins that can work on generators.

1.2.0 (2016-07-11)

  • Split all rule codes by type. This allows granular selection of the rules in flake8 configuration.

1.1.1 (2016-04-06)

  • Fix crash on method calls

1.1.0 (2016-04-06)

  • C401 rule that complains about unnecessary list comprehensions inside calls to set() or dict().

  • C402 rule that complains about unnecessary list literals inside calls to set() or dict().

1.0.0 (2016-04-05)

  • C400 rule that complains about an unnecessary usage of a generator when a list/set/dict comprehension would do.

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

flake8-comprehensions-2.3.0.tar.gz (6.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

flake8_comprehensions-2.3.0-py3-none-any.whl (6.3 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file flake8-comprehensions-2.3.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: flake8-comprehensions-2.3.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 6.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/2.0.0 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.22.0 setuptools/40.8.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.32.2 CPython/3.7.4

File hashes

Hashes for flake8-comprehensions-2.3.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 1d731dcccbef1f9a68b54d6846cf4e45cd2fea397cb0b71c463aab965118f594
MD5 1d685eade30f79158b3442ee7374fac8
BLAKE2b-256 470eed8ef789acbf519eda7cdc09a367b150175c669e60d01d0ebdd5faa177d1

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file flake8_comprehensions-2.3.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: flake8_comprehensions-2.3.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 6.3 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/2.0.0 pkginfo/1.5.0.1 requests/2.22.0 setuptools/40.8.0 requests-toolbelt/0.9.1 tqdm/4.32.2 CPython/3.7.4

File hashes

Hashes for flake8_comprehensions-2.3.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 5ead5962307187a13359a1f108ab7c371c8a63343fb0dfa9fc97c30612a99561
MD5 bd76fdd9bdd4337976d53530c33db0f2
BLAKE2b-256 dccd3b76abfb4f21e3c07253845fb8ad296cb3254024bf27683f60eb33ff9a48

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page