This formatter tries to apply an opinionated consistent formatting style.
Mainly, it considers lines not separated by blank lines as blocks, such that sorting is only applied inside each blocks. It matches the practice in some big Rust repositories to separate dependencies in sections, when many other formatters don't take that into account and scramble the sections.
cargo install toml-maid
Run toml-maid <my_file.toml>
to format a file. Many files can be provided.
Use the --folder <path>
option to register a folder that toml-maid
will scan
recursively for any TOML file (except toml-maid.toml
files). Both can be used
together. If neither are used then the current folder is registered (equivalent
to toml-maid --folder .
)
The --check
option allows no modifying any file, and will instead exit with
an error code if a file is not well formatted. The --silent
options allows
not outputing unimportant messages.
Behavior of toml-maid
can be configured using a toml-maid.toml
file, which
can be located in the current path or any parent folder, the first encountered
being used and others ignored. The options are the following:
keys
: list of keys as strings that should be sorted first in non-inline tables ([section]
andkey = { ... }
entries). This can be used to keep important entries first.inline_keys
: same but for inline tablesfoo = { key1 = .., key2 = ..}
.sort-arrays
: boolean telling if arrays should be sorted. Should only be used if order is not important, for exemple is suitable to keepCargo.toml
list of features ordered.excludes
: list of patterns to ignore when scanning directories
- Improve comments formatting in multi-line arrays, mainly always move comments after the comma.
- Allow to configure ignored folder when scanning folders recursively (for
exemple in this repo the
tests/output_consistency
folder should not be formatted as it contains by design non-formatted files). - Add cute anime girl to README