Metadata-Version: 1.2
Name: flake8-alfred
Version: 1.0.0
Summary: Flake8 plugin warning for unsafe functions
Home-page: UNKNOWN
Author: Alexis Pierru
Author-email: ap@datatheorem.com
License: UNKNOWN
Description: Alfred the butler
        =================
        
        [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/datatheorem/flake8-alfred.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/datatheorem/flake8-alfred)
        
        Alfred is a flake8 plugin to warn on unsafe/obsolete symbols. You can use it as
        a transition tools to eliminate functions, modules, variables you don't want in
        existing project or you want to avoid in new ones.
        
        Usage
        -----
        
        By default, this plugin does nothing, you have to configure your project to
        enable it. Also no symbols are source of warnings by default.
        
        Here's an example of configuration in your project's `setup.cfg` (also works
        with `.flake8`):
        
        ```ini
        [flake8]
        enable-extensions = B1
        warn-symbols =
            obsolete_module = Warning! This module is obsolete!
            module.obsolete_function = Warning! This function is obsolete!
            module.submodule.constant = Warning! this variable will be removed!
        ```
        
        Here enable-extensions tells flake8 to enable this plugin and warn-symbols is
        the list of symbols we want to avoid in our project, with the associated
        warning. By default, this plugin doesn't warn about any symbol.
        
        If you just want to test/run once, you can also pass the configuration directly
        to flake8:
        
        ```bash
        $ flake8 --enable-extensions=B1 --warn-symbols=$'obsolte_module=Warning!\nmodule.obsolete_function=Warning!'
        ```
        
        Cloning/Installation
        --------------------
        
        First, clone the repository:
        
        ```bash
        git clone https://github.com/datatheorem/alfred-checker.git
        ```
        
        Then, if you want to install the plugin on your user-specific directories, run
        this command:
        
        ```bash
        python3 setup.py install --user
        ```
        
        If you want to install it on your system directories and make it available to
        all the users, run this command:
        
        ```bash
        python3 setup.py install
        ```
        
        You can also use pipenv to setup a more reproductible environment, but the
        setup.py install should be sufficient most of the time:
        
        ```bash
        pipenv install
        ```
        
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 3 - Alpha
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3.6
Requires-Python: >=3.6
