I use tabs for indentation in my python programs, but I would like to collaborate (using git) with people who use spaces instead.
Is there a way for git to automatically convert between spaces an开发者_如何学God tabs (say, 4 spaces = 1 tab) on pushing/fetching? (similar to the CR/LF conversion)
Here is the complete solution:
In your repository, add a file .git/info/attributes
which contains:
*.py filter=tabspace
Linux/Unix
Now run the commands:
git config --global filter.tabspace.smudge 'unexpand --tabs=4 --first-only'
git config --global filter.tabspace.clean 'expand --tabs=4 --initial'
OS X
First install coreutils with brew:
brew install coreutils
Now run the commands:
git config --global filter.tabspace.smudge 'gunexpand --tabs=4 --first-only'
git config --global filter.tabspace.clean 'gexpand --tabs=4 --initial'
All systems
You may now check out all the files of your project. You can do that with:
git checkout HEAD -- **
and all the python files will now have tabs instead of spaces.
Edit: changed the forced checkout command. You should commit your work first, of course.
Yes, one potential solution is to use a git attribute filter driver (see also GitPro book), to define a smudge/clean mechanism.
That way:
- each time you checkout some files of your repo, spaces can be converted in tabs,
- but when you check-in (and push and publish), those same files are stored back using only spaces.
You can declare this filter driver (named here 'tabspace
') in the .git/info/attributes
(for a filter applied to all files within the Git repo), with the following content:
*.py filter=tabspace
Now run the commands:
# local config for the current repo
git config filter.tabspace.smudge 'script_to_make_tabs'
git config filter.tabspace.clean 'script_to_make_spaces'
See Olivier's answer for a concrete working example of such a smudge/clean set of instructions.
Very useful info for everyone using GitHub (or other similar service)
~/.gitconfig
[filter "tabspace"]
smudge = unexpand --tabs=4 --first-only
clean = expand --tabs=4 --initial
[filter "tabspace2"]
smudge = unexpand --tabs=2 --first-only
clean = expand --tabs=2 --initial
Then I have two files:
attributes
*.js filter=tabspace
*.html filter=tabspace
*.css filter=tabspace
*.json filter=tabspace
and attributes2
*.js filter=tabspace2
*.html filter=tabspace2
*.css filter=tabspace2
*.json filter=tabspace2
Working on personal projects
mkdir project
cd project
git init
cp ~/path/to/attributes .git/info/
That way, when you finally push your work on github, it won't look silly in the code view with 8 space tabs
which is default behavior in all browsers.
Contributing to other projects
mkdir project
cd project
git init
cp ~/path/to/attributes2 .git/info/attributes
git remote add origin git@github.com:some/repo.git
git pull origin branch
That way you can work with normal tabs on 2 space indented
projects.
Of course you can write similar solution for converting from 4 space to 2 space
which is the case if you want to contribute to projects published by me and you tend to use 2 spaces while developing.
If you are on windows then you have a few extra steps to get @Olivier Verdier's solution to work.
- Download CoreUtils for windows
- After installing put the install location in your PATH (How to add a path variable)
- I renamed expand.exe to gexpand.exe as there is already a windows expand utility.
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