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Remove rules

If you want to change the behavior of styler to match your desired style, there are multiple ways:

Once you are happy with your style guide, you might want to have a look at how to distribute it, which is described in vignette("distribute_custom_style_guides").

Theory

Here are the steps required to deactivate a rule you don’t like

Practice

Lets assume you want to remove the rule that turns = into <- for assignment. That means you want

string = "hi there" 

to remain unchanged after applying styler. This is not the case if you use the default style guide of styler:

library(styler)
style_text("string = 'hi there'")
string <- "hi there"

So you need to figure out which rule is responsible for this. Let’s check the transformer categories used with the tidyverse style guide.

transformers <- tidyverse_style()
names(transformers)
#>  [1] "initialize"             "line_break"             "space"                 
#>  [4] "token"                  "indention"              "use_raw_indention"     
#>  [7] "reindention"            "style_guide_name"       "style_guide_version"   
#> [10] "more_specs_style_guide" "transformers_drop"      "indent_character"

From the aforementioned vignette:

We note that there are different types of transformer functions. initialize initializes some variables in the nested parse table (so it is not actually a transformer), and the other elements modify either spacing, line breaks or tokens. use_raw_indention is not a function, it is just an option.

Now, we can look at the names of the rules that are sub-elements of the transformer categories.

library(magrittr)
levels <- c("space", "line_break", "indention", "token")
purrr::map(
  levels,
  ~ names(transformers[[.x]])
) %>%
  purrr::set_names(levels)
#> $space
#>  [1] "remove_space_before_closing_paren"  "remove_space_before_opening_paren" 
#>  [3] "add_space_after_for_if_while"       "remove_space_before_comma"         
#>  [5] "style_space_around_math_token"      "style_space_around_tilde"          
#>  [7] "spacing_around_op"                  "remove_space_after_opening_paren"  
#>  [9] "remove_space_after_excl"            "set_space_after_bang_bang"         
#> [11] "remove_space_before_dollar"         "remove_space_after_fun_dec"        
#> [13] "remove_space_around_colons"         "start_comments_with_space"         
#> [15] "remove_space_after_unary_pm_nested" "spacing_before_comments"           
#> [17] "set_space_between_levels"           "set_space_between_eq_sub_and_comma"
#> [19] "set_space_in_curly_curly"          
#> 
#> $line_break
#>  [1] "set_line_break_around_comma_and_or"                
#>  [2] "set_line_break_after_assignment"                   
#>  [3] "set_line_break_before_curly_opening"               
#>  [4] "remove_line_break_before_round_closing_after_curly"
#>  [5] "remove_line_breaks_in_fun_dec"                     
#>  [6] "style_line_break_around_curly"                     
#>  [7] "set_line_break_around_curly_curly"                 
#>  [8] "set_line_break_before_closing_call"                
#>  [9] "set_line_break_after_opening_if_call_is_multi_line"
#> [10] "remove_line_break_in_fun_call"                     
#> [11] "add_line_break_after_pipe"                         
#> [12] "set_line_break_after_ggplot2_plus"                 
#> 
#> $indention
#> [1] "indent_braces"                "unindent_fun_dec"            
#> [3] "indent_op"                    "indent_eq_sub"               
#> [5] "indent_without_paren"         "update_indention_ref_fun_dec"
#> 
#> $token
#> [1] "fix_quotes"                                    
#> [2] "force_assignment_op"                           
#> [3] "resolve_semicolon"                             
#> [4] "add_brackets_in_pipe"                          
#> [5] "wrap_if_else_while_for_fun_multi_line_in_curly"

Spotted the rule we want to get rid of? It’s under token and it’s called force_assignment_op. I agree, we could have chosen a better name. If you are not sure if you can guess from the name of the rule what it does you can also have a look at the function declaration of this (unexported) function.

styler:::force_assignment_op
#> function (pd) 
#> {
#>     to_replace <- pd$token == "EQ_ASSIGN"
#>     pd$token[to_replace] <- "LEFT_ASSIGN"
#>     pd$text[to_replace] <- "<-"
#>     pd
#> }
#> <bytecode: 0x14b9fb4c0>
#> <environment: namespace:styler>

Next, you simply set that element to NULL.

transformers$token$force_assignment_op <- NULL

And you can use the modified transformer list as input to style_text()

style_text("string = 'hi there'", transformers = transformers)
#> string = "hi there"

If you want to use it the same way as tidyverse_style(), here’s the last step:

eq_assign_style <- function(...) {
  transformers <- tidyverse_style(...)
  transformers$token$force_assignment_op <- NULL
  transformers
}

style_text("string = 'hi there'", style = eq_assign_style)
#> string = "hi there"

That’s it. Note that the transformer functions and how they are returned by tidyverse_style() is not part of the exposed API. This means that the order, the naming etc. may change. Also, remember we did not add a rule to replace <- with =, but we only removed a rule to replace = with <-, so <- won’t be touched:

style_text("string <- 'hi there'", style = eq_assign_style)
#> string <- "hi there"

If you want to turn <- into =, you need to add a rule as described in vignette("customizing_styler").

If you have trouble identifying a rule based on rule names,

code <- "
f <- function () {

return (1)
}"

is code that will have the first empty line in the function body removed by styler.

Some other rules and their transformers

I think you get the idea. I nevertheless recommend using the tidyverse style guide as is since

If you have questions, don’t hesitate to create an issue in the GitHub repo.

These binaries (installable software) and packages are in development.
They may not be fully stable and should be used with caution. We make no claims about them.