بنقرة واحدة
firebase-cpp-formatter
// Formatting workflow for C++ and Objective-C code in the Firebase C++ SDK. Use when modifying source code and ensuring compliance with the repository's clang-format rules.
// Formatting workflow for C++ and Objective-C code in the Firebase C++ SDK. Use when modifying source code and ensuring compliance with the repository's clang-format rules.
Instructions and workflows for building the Firebase C++ SDK natively. Use this skill when you need to compile the C++ SDK per-product (e.g., auth, database) across different platforms (Desktop, iOS, Android).
Workflows for locally building and running test apps for the Firebase C++ SDK across Android, iOS, and Desktop. Use when validating new features or bug fixes.
| name | firebase-cpp-formatter |
| description | Formatting workflow for C++ and Objective-C code in the Firebase C++ SDK. Use when modifying source code and ensuring compliance with the repository's clang-format rules. |
This skill provides instructions on how to properly format C++ and Objective-C
code before creating a pull request or committing changes in the
firebase-cpp-sdk repository. The primary tool is scripts/format_code.py.
Before running the formatting script, ensure that your Python environment is set up with all required dependencies:
pip install -r scripts/gha/python_requirements.txt to install the required libraries (such as attrs, absl-py, etc.).If you have made code changes locally in a git branch, the easiest way to ensure
all your changes are formatted properly is to use the -git_diff argument. This
automatically detects which files have changed compared to main and formats
them.
python3 scripts/format_code.py -git_diff
Tip: You can also append -verbose for extensive logging about formatting
changes.
If you are working on a feature within a particular Firebase SDK (e.g.,
database), you can recursively format that entire directory:
python3 scripts/format_code.py -d database -r
To target multiple directories (e.g., both database and app):
python3 scripts/format_code.py -d database -d app -r
If you are pressed for time and only want to format specific files rather than
analyzing whole directories, use the -f flag:
python3 scripts/format_code.py -f path/to/file1.cc -f path/to/file2.h
If you only want to detect the number of files that need formatting without
actually modifying them, append the --noformat_file flag:
python3 scripts/format_code.py -git_diff --noformat_file