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clang-format Configuration

Jamie-BitFlight
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About

This Claude Skill handles all clang-format configuration tasks, triggered by mentions of the tool, requests to analyze code style, or needs to create or troubleshoot formatting rules. It provides workflows for generating .clang-format files from templates, analyzing existing code to match its style, and modifying configurations. Use it to define brace styles, indentation, spacing, and other formatting conventions while minimizing diffs.

Documentation

clang-format Configuration

Configure the clang-format code formatting tool using ready-to-use templates, integration scripts, and comprehensive reference documentation.

Purpose

This skill provides procedural workflows for clang-format configuration tasks:

  • Create new .clang-format files from proven templates
  • Analyze existing code style and generate matching configurations
  • Set up editor and git integration with bundled scripts
  • Troubleshoot formatting behavior using reference documentation

Workflow Routing by Trigger Type

Once invoked, route to appropriate workflow based on which trigger fired:

Trigger 1: Explicit clang-format mention → If user asks about specific options: Consult references/01-09.md for relevant category → If user needs complete reference: Direct to references/complete/clang-format-style-options.md → If user asks about CLI usage: Reference references/cli-usage.md

Trigger 2: Code style analysis request → Follow "Analyzing Existing Code Style" workflow below → Examine code samples systematically (braces→indentation→spacing→breaking→alignment) → Map patterns to closest template in assets/configs/ → Generate initial configuration hypothesis as a temporary configuration file "/tmp/<reponame>/hypothesis<number>.clang-format" → VERIFY IMPACT: Run clang-format --style="/tmp/<repo_name>/hypothesis_<number>.clang-format" file.cpp | diff - file.cpp on 3-5 representative samples → MEASURE IMPACT using weighted scoring: • Metric 1: Line count changes (lines added/removed) - weight 10 • Metric 2: In-line whitespace changes (spacing within existing lines) - weight 1 • Impact Score = (line_count_changes × 10) + (whitespace_changes × 1) • Lower score = lower impact to rebasing conflicts, future git-diff analysis, and merge request change reviews = better configuration → ITERATE: Adjust config options targeting highest-impact settings, re-test, compare scores → REPEAT until reaching minimal achievable score while maintaining consistent style enforcement → REPORT TO USER: Present winning configuration with: • Final impact score and breakdown (line changes vs whitespace changes) • Comparison table showing all tested hypotheses and their scores • Example diff snippets showing what will change, with commands for the user to test it themselves against files of their choice. • Rationale for selected configuration → AWAIT USER APPROVAL before finalizing configuration → Only after approval: provide final configuration file

Trigger 3: Configuration file operations → If creating new: Follow "Creating New Configuration from Template" workflow → If modifying existing: Read current config, identify changes needed, consult relevant category guide → If generating from code: Use Trigger 2 workflow (code style analysis)

Trigger 4: Formatting behavior investigation → Follow "Troubleshooting Formatting Issues" workflow below → Verify config detection with --dump-config → Identify affected category, consult relevant references/0X.md guide → Test isolated options with minimal config

Trigger 5: Style option inquiries → Map question to category: braces→03, indentation→04, spacing→05, alignment→01, breaking→02 → Reference specific category guide in references/ → Provide examples from quick-reference.md if applicable

Trigger 6: Minimal-disruption requests → Use "Analyzing Existing Code Style" workflow to match current patterns → Emphasize starting from closest template to minimize changes → Test on representative samples before project-wide application → Document which patterns were preserved vs normalized

Bundled Resources

Configuration Templates (assets/configs/)

Seven ready-to-use .clang-format templates optimized for common scenarios:

  • google-cpp-modified.clang-format - Google C++ style with 4-space indent, 120 column limit
  • linux-kernel.clang-format - Linux kernel coding standards (tabs, K&R braces)
  • microsoft-visual-studio.clang-format - Microsoft/Visual Studio conventions
  • modern-cpp17-20.clang-format - Modern C++17/20 style with contemporary idioms
  • compact-dense.clang-format - Compact style for space-constrained environments
  • readable-spacious.clang-format - Spacious style prioritizing readability
  • multi-language.clang-format - Multi-language configuration (C++, JavaScript, Java)

When to use templates: Start new projects, establish team standards, or quickly test formatting approaches.

Integration Scripts (assets/integrations/)

Three editor and git integration scripts:

  • pre-commit - Git pre-commit hook for automatic formatting of staged files
  • vimrc-clang-format.vim - Vim configuration for format-on-save
  • emacs-clang-format.el - Emacs configuration for clang-format integration

When to use integrations: Set up automatic formatting in development workflow.

Reference Documentation (references/)

Detailed documentation organized by category:

Quick Navigation:

  • index.md - Overview and documentation hub
  • quick-reference.md - Complete working configurations with explanations
  • cli-usage.md - Command-line usage, editor setup, CI/CD integration

Option Categories (01-09.md):

  1. 01-alignment.md - Vertical alignment of declarations, assignments, operators
  2. 02-breaking.md - Line breaking and wrapping rules
  3. 03-braces.md - Brace placement styles (K&R, Allman, GNU, etc.)
  4. 04-indentation.md - Indentation rules and special cases
  5. 05-spacing.md - Whitespace control around operators, keywords
  6. 06-includes.md - Include/import organization and sorting
  7. 07-languages.md - Language-specific options for C++, Java, JavaScript
  8. 08-comments.md - Comment formatting and reflow
  9. 09-advanced.md - Penalty system, raw string formatting, experimental features

Complete Reference (complete/):

  • clang-format-cli.md - Full command-line interface documentation
  • clang-format-style-options.md - All 194 style options with examples

Common Workflows

Creating New Configuration from Template

To create a new .clang-format file:

  1. Identify requirements (style guide, team preferences, language)
  2. Select closest template from assets/configs/
  3. Copy template to project root as .clang-format
  4. Test formatting: clang-format --dry-run file.cpp
  5. Customize specific options using references/01-09.md as needed
  6. Verify changes: clang-format file.cpp | diff - file.cpp

Example:

# Copy Google C++ template
cp assets/configs/google-cpp-modified.clang-format /path/to/project/.clang-format

# Test on sample file
clang-format --dry-run /path/to/project/src/main.cpp

# Apply if satisfied
clang-format -i /path/to/project/src/*.cpp

Analyzing Existing Code Style

To generate configuration matching existing code:

  1. Examine code samples for formatting patterns
  2. Identify key characteristics:
    • Brace placement → consult references/03-braces.md
    • Indentation (spaces/tabs, width) → consult references/04-indentation.md
    • Spacing (operators, keywords) → consult references/05-spacing.md
    • Line breaking (column limit, wrapping) → consult references/02-breaking.md
    • Alignment patterns → consult references/01-alignment.md
  3. Map patterns to closest base style in references/quick-reference.md
  4. Start with that template from assets/configs/
  5. Override specific options to match observed patterns
  6. Test on representative code samples
  7. Iterate until formatting matches existing style

This workflow minimizes whitespace-only changes when introducing clang-format to existing projects.

Setting Up Editor Integration

To enable format-on-save in editors:

Vim:

  1. Copy assets/integrations/vimrc-clang-format.vim content to .vimrc
  2. Restart Vim or source configuration
  3. Save any C/C++/Java file to trigger formatting

Emacs:

  1. Copy assets/integrations/emacs-clang-format.el to Emacs config
  2. Restart Emacs or evaluate configuration
  3. Save any supported file to trigger formatting

Other editors: Consult references/cli-usage.md for VS Code, CLion, and other editor setup instructions.

Setting Up Git Pre-commit Hook

To automatically format staged changes before commit:

  1. Copy assets/integrations/pre-commit to .git/hooks/pre-commit
  2. Make executable: chmod +x .git/hooks/pre-commit
  3. Test by staging and committing changes

The hook formats only staged files, preserving unstaged changes.

Troubleshooting Formatting Issues

When formatting produces unexpected results:

  1. Verify configuration detection: clang-format --dump-config file.cpp
  2. Check command options in references/cli-usage.md
  3. Identify affected formatting category (braces, spacing, breaking, etc.)
  4. Consult relevant category guide in references/01-09.md
  5. Test isolated options: create minimal config with suspect option
  6. For comprehensive option details, check references/complete/clang-format-style-options.md

Setting Up CI/CD Formatting Checks

To enforce formatting in continuous integration:

  1. Review CI examples in references/cli-usage.md
  2. Add clang-format check to pipeline:
    # Check formatting without modifying files
    clang-format --dry-run --Werror src/**/*.{cpp,h}
    
  3. Configure to fail build on formatting violations
  4. Document formatting requirements for contributors

Key Concepts

Base Styles: Predefined configurations (LLVM, Google, Chromium, Mozilla, WebKit, Microsoft, GNU) provide starting points. Set with BasedOnStyle: Google then override specific options.

Multi-Language Support: Configure different languages separately in single file using Language: key. See assets/configs/multi-language.clang-format for example.

Penalty System: clang-format uses penalties to choose between formatting alternatives. Higher penalty values discourage specific choices. See references/09-advanced.md for details.

Progressive Refinement: Start with template closest to requirements, then customize incrementally. Test frequently on representative code samples.

Testing Configurations

# Preview changes without modifying file
clang-format --dry-run file.cpp

# Show diff of proposed changes
clang-format file.cpp | diff - file.cpp

# Apply formatting to file
clang-format -i file.cpp

# Format entire project
find src include -name '*.cpp' -o -name '*.h' | xargs clang-format -i

# Check formatting in CI (fail on violations)
clang-format --dry-run --Werror src/**/*.{cpp,h}

Navigation Strategy

For most tasks, follow this progression:

  1. Start with templates: Browse assets/configs/ for ready-to-use configurations
  2. Quick reference: Check references/quick-reference.md for complete configurations with explanations
  3. Category guides: Consult references/01-09.md for specific option categories
  4. CLI usage: Reference references/cli-usage.md for command-line and integration details
  5. Complete reference: Use references/complete/ for exhaustive option documentation

When analyzing code or troubleshooting, identify the formatting aspect (braces, spacing, alignment, etc.) and jump directly to the relevant category guide in references/.

Quick Install

/plugin add https://github.com/Jamie-BitFlight/claude_skills/tree/main/clang-format

Copy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill

GitHub 仓库

Jamie-BitFlight/claude_skills
Path: clang-format

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