## Summary This is part of the preparation for detecting syntax errors in the parser from https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/16090/. As suggested in [this comment](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff/pull/16090/#discussion_r1953084509), I started working on a `ParseOptions` struct that could be stored in the parser. For this initial refactor, I only made it hold the existing `Mode` option, but for syntax errors, we will also need it to have a `PythonVersion`. For that use case, I'm picturing something like a `ParseOptions::with_python_version` method, so you can extend the current calls to something like ```rust ParseOptions::from(mode).with_python_version(settings.target_version) ``` But I thought it was worth adding `ParseOptions` alone without changing any other behavior first. Most of the diff is just updating call sites taking `Mode` to take `ParseOptions::from(Mode)` or those taking `PySourceType`s to take `ParseOptions::from(PySourceType)`. The interesting changes are in the new `parser/options.rs` file and smaller parts of `parser/mod.rs` and `ruff_python_parser/src/lib.rs`. ## Test Plan Existing tests, this should not change any behavior.
Ruff Formatter
The Ruff formatter is an extremely fast Python code formatter that ships as part of the ruff
CLI.
Goals
The formatter is designed to be a drop-in replacement for Black, but with an excessive focus on performance and direct integration with Ruff.
Specifically, the formatter is intended to emit near-identical output when run over Black-formatted code. When run over extensive Black-formatted projects like Django and Zulip, > 99.9% of lines are formatted identically. When migrating an existing project from Black to Ruff, you should expect to see a few differences on the margins, but the vast majority of your code should be unchanged.
If you identify deviations in your project, spot-check them against the intentional deviations enumerated below, as well as the unintentional deviations filed in the issue tracker. If you've identified a new deviation, please file an issue.
When run over non-Black-formatted code, the formatter makes some different decisions than Black, and so more deviations should be expected, especially around the treatment of end-of-line comments. For details, see Style Guide.
Getting started
Head to The Ruff Formatter for usage instructions and a comparison to Black.