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The git hooks will run every time you git commit to your local repository.

Note: while the sub-hooks for pre-commit are for Python, you can replace them with anything you wish. The sub-hooks are listed in the pre-commit file and can easily be edited or removed. The commit-msg hook is not Python-specific amd affects only your commit message.

Installing the hooks:

  • copy the hooks to your repo's git hooks directory (.git/hooks/)
  • make hooks executable (chmod +x .git/hooks/*)

Two types of hooks will be installed:

  • commit-msg:
    This hook ensures we follow Tim Pope's guidelines for commit messages:

    • first sentence of the message, the subject, should be at most 50 characters
    • if the message has more than one line, the second line should be blank, to separate the subject from the body of the message
    • the body of the message should be at most 72 characters wide
  • pre-commit: There are three Python-specific sub-hooks which will run in the pre-commit stage and must pass before the commit succeeds.

    • isort: sorts your import statements (will reformat and restage your files)
    • black: enforces a strict interpretation of PEP8 (will reformat and restage your files)
    • flake8: fast linting of your code

The commit-msg hook will block your commit and you will need to re-edit your message. It doesn't automatically reformat your message as that would defeat the spirit of the guidelines.

The ideal commit message explains the context of a commit. The details should be clear from the code change itself. Remember that commit messages are to help people in the future, including your future self, understand why you made the changes you did.

A short subject line is useful when scanning a lot of changes; git itself recommends a short subject line of less than 50 characters (see git help commit). For some simple changes, a short subject alone may be sufficient.

Separating the body of the message from the subject by a blank enables the optimal use of git log utilities.

If these ideas sound unfamiliar, this article is highly recommended.

The pre-commit sub-hooks like isort and black will reformat and restage your files for you, so you never have to worry about formatting your imports or whether you have extra whitespace etc.

flake8 doesn't reformat your code, so it may fail and reject your commit. In this case, you should go back and run flake8 to see what the exact violations are and fix them.

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