/Disclaimer: I started pylint with Sylvain Thénault back in 2001, but
the project has had new maintainers for a few years./
On Thu, Mar 03, 2016 at 08:06:52AM +0800, Paul Wise wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 2, 2016 at 9:23 PM, Nicolas Chauvat wrote:
>
> > Maybe add pylint?
>
> As I understand it:
>
> pylint runs code from the source tree so it isn't suitable for running
> by default as that could be a security issue for people reviewing
> potentially untrusted code.
That would be https://pypi.python.org/pypi/PyChecker
Pylint has never run code from the source tree.
> pylint isn't able to be run automatically, it needs a human to come up
> with the right command-line.
"pylint " should work fine.
Tuning pylint to a specific coding or project requires human action.
One option is to run "pylint -E " to look only for
errors. This is also faster.
> [Paul Tagliamonte] flake8 has the most mindshare
That's not what google trends says
https://www.google.fr/trends/explore#q=flake8%2C%20pylint%2C%20pyflakes&cmpt=q&tz=Etc%2FGMT-1
I included pyflakes because flake8's doc says "Flake8 is a wrapper around
PyFlakes, pep8 and Ned Batchelder’s McCabe script".
The "Design Principles" section from pyflakes' doc states:
"""Pyflakes is also faster than Pylint or Pychecker. This is largely
because Pyflakes only examines the syntax tree of each file
individually. As a consequence, Pyflakes is more limited in the types
of things it can check."""
To get the list of all the things your installed version of pylint can check
for:
pylint --list-msgs
Github stats prove the pylint project is pretty active
https://github.com/PyCQA/pylint/graphs/contributors
--
Nicolas Chauvat
logilab.fr - services en informatique scientifique et gestion de connaissances