��[style]

# Align closing bracket with visual indentation.

align_closing_bracket_with_visual_indent=True



# Allow dictionary keys to exist on multiple lines. For example:

#

#   x = {

#       ('this is the first element of a tuple',

#        'this is the second element of a tuple'):

#            value,

#   }

allow_multiline_dictionary_keys=False



# Allow lambdas to be formatted on more than one line.

allow_multiline_lambdas=False



# Allow splitting before a default / named assignment in an argument list.

allow_split_before_default_or_named_assigns=True



# Allow splits before the dictionary value.

allow_split_before_dict_value=True



#   Let spacing indicate operator precedence. For example:

#

#     a = 1 * 2 + 3 / 4

#     b = 1 / 2 - 3 * 4

#     c = (1 + 2) * (3 - 4)

#     d = (1 - 2) / (3 + 4)

#     e = 1 * 2 - 3

#     f = 1 + 2 + 3 + 4

#

# will be formatted as follows to indicate precedence:

#

#     a = 1*2 + 3/4

#     b = 1/2 - 3*4

#     c = (1+2) * (3-4)

#     d = (1-2) / (3+4)

#     e = 1*2 - 3

#     f = 1 + 2 + 3 + 4

#

arithmetic_precedence_indication=False



# Number of blank lines surrounding top-level function and class

# definitions.

blank_lines_around_top_level_definition=2



# Number of blank lines between top-level imports and variable

# definitions.

blank_lines_between_top_level_imports_and_variables=1



# Insert a blank line before a class-level docstring.

blank_line_before_class_docstring=False



# Insert a blank line before a module docstring.

blank_line_before_module_docstring=False



# Insert a blank line before a 'def' or 'class' immediately nested

# within another 'def' or 'class'. For example:

#

#   class Foo:

#                      # <------ this blank line

#     def method():

#       pass

blank_line_before_nested_class_or_def=True



# Do not split consecutive brackets. Only relevant when

# dedent_closing_brackets is set. For example:

#

#    call_func_that_takes_a_dict(

#        {

#            'key1': 'value1',

#            'key2': 'value2',

#        }

#    )

#

# would reformat to:

#

#    call_func_that_takes_a_dict({

#        'key1': 'value1',

#        'key2': 'value2',

#    })

coalesce_brackets=False



# The column limit.

column_limit=120



# The style for continuation alignment. Possible values are:

#

# - SPACE: Use spaces for continuation alignment. This is default behavior.

# - FIXED: Use fixed number (CONTINUATION_INDENT_WIDTH) of columns

#   (ie: CONTINUATION_INDENT_WIDTH/INDENT_WIDTH tabs or

#   CONTINUATION_INDENT_WIDTH spaces) for continuation alignment.

# - VALIGN-RIGHT: Vertically align continuation lines to multiple of

#   INDENT_WIDTH columns. Slightly right (one tab or a few spaces) if

#   cannot vertically align continuation lines with indent characters.

continuation_align_style=SPACE



# Indent width used for line continuations.

continuation_indent_width=4



# Put closing brackets on a separate line, dedented, if the bracketed

# expression can't fit in a single line. Applies to all kinds of brackets,

# including function definitions and calls. For example:

#

#   config = {

#       'key1': 'value1',

#       'key2': 'value2',

#   }        # <--- this bracket is dedented and on a separate line

#

#   time_series = self.remote_client.query_entity_counters(

#       entity='dev3246.region1',

#       key='dns.query_latency_tcp',

#       transform=Transformation.AVERAGE(window=timedelta(seconds=60)),

#       start_ts=now()-timedelta(days=3),

#       end_ts=now(),

#   )        # <--- this bracket is dedented and on a separate line

dedent_closing_brackets=False



# Disable the heuristic which places each list element on a separate line

# if the list is comma-terminated.

disable_ending_comma_heuristic=False



# Place each dictionary entry onto its own line.

each_dict_entry_on_separate_line=True



# Require multiline dictionary even if it would normally fit on one line.

# For example:

#

#   config = {

#       'key1': 'value1'

#   }

force_multiline_dict=False



# The regex for an i18n comment. The presence of this comment stops

# reformatting of that line, because the comments are required to be

# next to the string they translate.

i18n_comment=



# The i18n function call names. The presence of this function stops

# reformattting on that line, because the string it has cannot be moved

# away from the i18n comment.

i18n_function_call=



# Indent blank lines.

indent_blank_lines=False



# Put closing brackets on a separate line, indented, if the bracketed

# expression can't fit in a single line. Applies to all kinds of brackets,

# including function definitions and calls. For example:

#

#   config = {

#       'key1': 'value1',

#       'key2': 'value2',

#       }        # <--- this bracket is indented and on a separate line

#

#   time_series = self.remote_client.query_entity_counters(

#       entity='dev3246.region1',

#       key='dns.query_latency_tcp',

#       transform=Transformation.AVERAGE(window=timedelta(seconds=60)),

#       start_ts=now()-timedelta(days=3),

#       end_ts=now(),

#       )        # <--- this bracket is indented and on a separate line

indent_closing_brackets=False



# Indent the dictionary value if it cannot fit on the same line as the

# dictionary key. For example:

#

#   config = {

#       'key1':

#           'value1',

#       'key2': value1 +

#               value2,

#   }

indent_dictionary_value=False



# The number of columns to use for indentation.

indent_width=4



# Join short lines into one line. E.g., single line 'if' statements.

join_multiple_lines=True



# Do not include spaces around selected binary operators. For example:

#

#   1 + 2 * 3 - 4 / 5

#

# will be formatted as follows when configured with "*,/":

#

#   1 + 2*3 - 4/5

no_spaces_around_selected_binary_operators=



# Use spaces around default or named assigns.

spaces_around_default_or_named_assign=False



# Adds a space after the opening '{' and before the ending '}' dict

# delimiters.

#

#   {1: 2}

#

# will be formatted as:

#

#   { 1: 2 }

spaces_around_dict_delimiters=False



# Adds a space after the opening '[' and before the ending ']' list

# delimiters.

#

#   [1, 2]

#

# will be formatted as:

#

#   [ 1, 2 ]

spaces_around_list_delimiters=False



# Use spaces around the power operator.

spaces_around_power_operator=False



# Use spaces around the subscript / slice operator.  For example:

#

#   my_list[1 : 10 : 2]

spaces_around_subscript_colon=False



# Adds a space after the opening '(' and before the ending ')' tuple

# delimiters.

#

#   (1, 2, 3)

#

# will be formatted as:

#

#   ( 1, 2, 3 )

spaces_around_tuple_delimiters=False



# The number of spaces required before a trailing comment.

# This can be a single value (representing the number of spaces

# before each trailing comment) or list of values (representing

# alignment column values; trailing comments within a block will

# be aligned to the first column value that is greater than the maximum

# line length within the block). For example:

#

# With spaces_before_comment=5:

#

#   1 + 1 # Adding values

#

# will be formatted as:

#

#   1 + 1     # Adding values <-- 5 spaces between the end of the

#             # statement and comment

#

# With spaces_before_comment=15, 20:

#

#   1 + 1 # Adding values

#   two + two # More adding

#

#   longer_statement # This is a longer statement

#   short # This is a shorter statement

#

#   a_very_long_statement_that_extends_beyond_the_final_column # Comment

#   short # This is a shorter statement

#

# will be formatted as:

#

#   1 + 1          # Adding values <-- end of line comments in block

#                  # aligned to col 15

#   two + two      # More adding

#

#   longer_statement    # This is a longer statement <-- end of line

#                       # comments in block aligned to col 20

#   short               # This is a shorter statement

#

#   a_very_long_statement_that_extends_beyond_the_final_column  # Comment <-- the end of line comments are aligned based on the line length

#   short                                                       # This is a shorter statement

#

spaces_before_comment=2



# Insert a space between the ending comma and closing bracket of a list,

# etc.

space_between_ending_comma_and_closing_bracket=True



# Use spaces inside brackets, braces, and parentheses.  For example:

#

#   method_call( 1 )

#   my_dict[ 3 ][ 1 ][ get_index( *args, **kwargs ) ]

#   my_set = { 1, 2, 3 }

space_inside_brackets=False



# Split before arguments.

split_all_comma_separated_values=False



# Split before arguments, but do not split all subexpressions recursively

# (unless needed).

split_all_top_level_comma_separated_values=False



# Split before arguments if the argument list is terminated by a

# comma.

split_arguments_when_comma_terminated=False



# Set to True to prefer splitting before '+', '-', '*', '/', '//', or '@'

# rather than after.

split_before_arithmetic_operator=False



# Set to True to prefer splitting before '&', '|' or '^' rather than

# after.

split_before_bitwise_operator=True



# Split before the closing bracket if a list or dict literal doesn't fit on

# a single line.

split_before_closing_bracket=True



# Split before a dictionary or set generator (comp_for). For example, note

# the split before the 'for':

#

#   foo = {

#       variable: 'Hello world, have a nice day!'

#       for variable in bar if variable != 42

#   }

split_before_dict_set_generator=True



# Split before the '.' if we need to split a longer expression:

#

#   foo = ('This is a really long string: {}, {}, {}, {}'.format(a, b, c, d))

#

# would reformat to something like:

#

#   foo = ('This is a really long string: {}, {}, {}, {}'

#          .format(a, b, c, d))

split_before_dot=False



# Split after the opening paren which surrounds an expression if it doesn't

# fit on a single line.

split_before_expression_after_opening_paren=False



# If an argument / parameter list is going to be split, then split before

# the first argument.

split_before_first_argument=False



# Set to True to prefer splitting before 'and' or 'or' rather than

# after.

split_before_logical_operator=True



# Split named assignments onto individual lines.

split_before_named_assigns=True



# Set to True to split list comprehensions and generators that have

# non-trivial expressions and multiple clauses before each of these

# clauses. For example:

#

#   result = [

#       a_long_var + 100 for a_long_var in xrange(1000)

#       if a_long_var % 10]

#

# would reformat to something like:

#

#   result = [

#       a_long_var + 100

#       for a_long_var in xrange(1000)

#       if a_long_var % 10]

split_complex_comprehension=False



# The penalty for splitting right after the opening bracket.

split_penalty_after_opening_bracket=300



# The penalty for splitting the line after a unary operator.

split_penalty_after_unary_operator=10000



# The penalty of splitting the line around the '+', '-', '*', '/', '//',

# `%`, and '@' operators.

split_penalty_arithmetic_operator=300



# The penalty for splitting right before an if expression.

split_penalty_before_if_expr=0



# The penalty of splitting the line around the '&', '|', and '^' operators.

split_penalty_bitwise_operator=300



# The penalty for splitting a list comprehension or generator

# expression.

split_penalty_comprehension=80



# The penalty for characters over the column limit.

split_penalty_excess_character=7000



# The penalty incurred by adding a line split to the logical line. The

# more line splits added the higher the penalty.

split_penalty_for_added_line_split=30



# The penalty of splitting a list of "import as" names. For example:

#

#   from a_very_long_or_indented_module_name_yada_yad import (long_argument_1,

#                                                             long_argument_2,

#                                                             long_argument_3)

#

# would reformat to something like:

#

#   from a_very_long_or_indented_module_name_yada_yad import (

#       long_argument_1, long_argument_2, long_argument_3)

split_penalty_import_names=0



# The penalty of splitting the line around the 'and' and 'or' operators.

split_penalty_logical_operator=300



# Use the Tab character for indentation.

use_tabs=False