120

In a block comment, I want to reference a URL that is over 80 characters long.

What is the preferred convention for displaying this URL?

I know bit.ly is an option, but the URL itself is descriptive. Shortening it and then having a nested comment describing the shortened URL seems like a crappy solution.

0

8 Answers 8

94

Don't break the url:

Some other good reasons to ignore a particular guideline:

  1. When applying the guideline would make the code less readable, even for someone who is used to reading code that follows this PEP. ...

Source:

# A Foolish Consistency is the Hobgoblin of Little Minds [1]
# [1]: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#a-foolish-consistency-is-the-hobgoblin-of-little-minds

You can use the # noqa at the end of the line to stop PEP8/pycodestyle/Flake8 from running that check. Should also avoid warnings in your IDE.

# [1]: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#a-foolish-consistency-is-the-hobgoblin-of-little-minds # noqa
13
  • 7
    I agree; however, PyCharm does not make it easy to ignore (without litering your code with ugly '# noinspection LongLine' (and similar) references all over the place. I think the bigger problem is that the RST format has the limitation of not being able to have a line break (that is not displayed) within the URL.
    – user4805123
    Feb 20, 2017 at 20:25
  • 11
    The answer doesn't answer how to be compliant, so if you have a linter, it remains with warnings.
    – Efren
    Feb 13, 2018 at 6:47
  • 7
    @jfs so the answer should really be: "a long line is PEP8 compliant in this case"
    – Efren
    Feb 13, 2018 at 7:48
  • 2
    @Efren it is exactly my answer:*"how should I format.. and be pep-8 compliant"* -> "don't break the url"
    – jfs
    Feb 13, 2018 at 8:17
  • 3
    I just discovered control-click!! Now THAT'S why you don't want to break a URL in a comment.
    – Bob Stein
    Apr 22, 2018 at 21:36
79

From PEP8

But most importantly: know when to be inconsistent -- sometimes the style guide just doesn't apply. When in doubt, use your best judgment. Look at other examples and decide what looks best. And don't hesitate to ask!

Two good reasons to break a particular rule:

  • When applying the rule would make the code less readable, even for someone who is used to reading code that follows the rules.

Personally, I would use that advice, and rather leave the full descriptive URL in your comment for people.

59

You can use the # noqa at the end of the line to stop PEP8/Flake8 from running that check. This is allowed by PEP8 via:

Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules.

4
  • 3
    Elegant. I use pyflakes in Vim and won't commit a change until it returns zero warnings from the agreed upon set of rules (maccabe requirement is looser in our case, but not the 80 lines limit). Shortest way to tell co-workers : I did not split multiline because it makes no sense to do so.
    – Peter Host
    Aug 25, 2014 at 4:08
  • 4
    Thanks @Sardathrion, should have more votes since it actually contributes a practical solution.
    – ezdazuzena
    Jan 14, 2016 at 11:25
  • 1
    In PyCharm # noqa is the only way I've found to disable the warning about a long line when it's a comment. Along with several other pesky warnings where # noinspection doesn't do the trick. Very helpful.
    – Bob Stein
    Aug 28, 2021 at 2:03
  • Just to be clear : should it be # very_long_url.com noqa or # very_long_url.com # noqa? Pylint seems to ignore them either way, and apparently requires # pylint: disable=line-too-long # noqa: E501. Mar 22, 2023 at 8:21
22

I'd say leave it...

PEP20:

Special cases aren't special enough to break the rules.

Although practicality beats purity.

It's more practical to be able to quickly copy/paste an url then to remove linebreaks when pasting into the browser.

21

If your are using flake8:

"""
long-url: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10739843/how-should-i-format-a-long-url-in-a-python-comment-and-still-be-pep8-compliant
"""  # noqa
1

Adding '# noqa' to the entire docstring works, but it means you lose introspection on the entire docstring, so you could miss other issues.

if you want to narrow your noqa to just the long line you can add it to the long line only, but '# noqa' shows up in the docs when built with sphinx.

In this case, you can build a custom autodoc process method. See this answer.

Here's my adapted version of that,

from sphinx.application import Sphinx
import re

def setup(app):

    noqa_regex = re.compile('^(.*)\s\s#\snoqa.*$')

    def trim_noqa(app, what_, name, obj, options):
        for i, line in enumerate(lines):
            if noqa_regex.match(line):
                new_line = noqa_regex.sub(r'\1', line)
                lines[i] = new_line

    app.connect('autodoc-process-docstring', trim_noqa)
    return app
2
  • Are you sure about your claim? stackoverflow.com/a/39768096/6419007 Mar 22, 2023 at 8:23
  • 1
    that applies noqa to the entire docstring, however this solution applies noqa only to the long line. If you apply noqa to the entire docstring you would miss other issues. Notice I said if noqa is in the docstring. I've edited my response to make this clear. Mar 27, 2023 at 11:16
-4

You use a url shortener like google's so from this:

http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/#a-foolish-consistency-is-the-hobgoblin-of-little-minds

you get:

http://goo.gl/93ZLQ

2
  • 13
    The risk of course is the link shortener disappears and we have no way of knowing the link. ArchiveTeam (led by leadership affiliated with Archive.org) has a whole effort dedicated to saving link shorteners… Apr 20, 2017 at 13:03
  • 3
    And not only that but the original URL has information pertaining to what it is. URL shorteners lose that information. Mar 20, 2019 at 21:56
-6

My option would be:

URL = ('http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10739843/'
       'how-should-i-format-a-long-url-in-a-python-'
       'comment-and-still-be-pep8-compliant')
2
  • 5
    Too painful to copy paste in a usable fashion this way.
    – Kel Solaar
    Aug 26, 2014 at 7:10
  • That's not bad at all if you're not trying to copy and paste, works great when engineering requests to APIs. Saddens me to see how a perfectly good solution that does exactly what the OP asked is being downvoted... that's what's wrong with the software industry...
    – A Campos
    Apr 14, 2022 at 16:19

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