Provided by: ocp-indent_1.8.2-5_amd64 bug

NAME

       ocp-indent - Automatic indentation of OCaml source files

SYNOPSIS

       ocp-indent [OPTION]… [FILE]…

DESCRIPTION

       Indent OCaml source files according to the official conventions, with a small number of
       tunable parameters.

       Outputs the indented version of each FILE given in the command line to standard output,
       unless invoked with the `--inplace' option (see OPTIONS below). If no FILE is provided,
       reads from standard input.

CONFIGURATION

       Parameters can be defined on the command-line via the --config option, or as a
       configuration definition in one of the following, searched in order: a file named
       `.ocp-indent' in the current directory or its parents (which allows for per-project
       indentation settings), the file `$XDG_CONFIG_HOME/ocp/ocp-indent.conf', the file
       `$HOME/.ocp/ocp-indent.conf', or the environment variable $OCP_INDENT_CONFIG.

       A configuration definition is a list of bindings in the form NAME=VALUE or of PRESET,
       separated by commas or newlines

       Syntax: [PRESET,]VAR=VALUE[,VAR=VALUE...]

       base=INT (default=2)
           Indentation used when none of the following options applies.

               let foo =
               ..bar

       type=INT (default=2)
           Indentation for type definitions.

               type t =
               ..int

       in=INT (default=0)
           Indentation after `let ... in', unless followed by another `let'.

               let foo = () in
               ..bar

       with=INT (default=0)
           Indentation after `match ... with', `try ... with' or `function'.

               match foo with
               ..| _ -> bar

       match_clause=INT (default=2)
           Indentation for clauses inside a pattern-match (after arrows).

               match foo with
               | _ ->
               ..bar

       ppx_stritem_ext=INT (default=2)
           Indentation for items inside a [%%id ... ] extension node).

               [%% id.id
               ..let x = 3 ]

       max_indent=<INT|none> (default=4)
           When nesting expressions on the same line, their indentations are stacked in some
           cases so that they remain correct if you close them one per line. However, this can
           lead to large indentations in complex code, so this parameter sets a maximum
           indentation. Note that it only affects indentation after function arrows and opening
           parens at the ends of lines.

               let f = g (h (i (fun x ->
               ....x)
                 )
               )

       strict_with=<always|never|auto> (default=never)
           If `never', match bars are indented, superseding `with', whenever `match with' doesn't
           start its line. If `auto', there are exceptions for constructs like `begin match
           with'. If `always', `with' is always strictly respected, and additionally applies to
           variant types definition, for consistency.

           Example with `strict_with=never,with=0':
               begin match foo with
               ..| _ -> bar
               end

       strict_else=<always|never|auto> (default=always)
           If `always', indent after the `else' keyword normally, like after `then'. If `auto',
           indent after `else' unless in a few "unclosable" cases (`let .... in', `match', etc.).
           If `never', the `else' keyword won't indent when followed by a newline.

           Example with `strict_else=auto':
               if cond then
                 foo
               else
               let x = bar in
               baz

       strict_comments=BOOL (default=false)
           In-comment indentation is normally preserved, as long as it respects the left margin
           or the comments starts with a newline. Setting this to `true' forces alignment within
           comments. Lines starting with `*' are always aligned

       align_ops=BOOL (default=true)
           Toggles preference of column-alignment over line indentation for most of the common
           operators and after mid-line opening parentheses.

           Example with `align_ops=true':
               let f x = x
                         + y
        
           Example with `align_ops=false':
               let f x = x
                 + y

       align_params=<always|never|auto> (default=auto)
           If `never', function parameters are indented one level from the line of the function.
           If `always', they are aligned from the column of the function. if `auto', alignment is
           chosen over indentation in a few cases, e.g. after match arrows

           Example with `align_params=never':
               match foo with
               | _ -> some_fun
                 ..parameter
        
           Example with `align_params=always' or `auto':
               match foo with
               | _ -> some_fun

                      ..parameter

       Available presets are `normal', the default, `apprentice' which may make some aspects of
       the syntax more obvious for beginners, and `JaneStreet'.

OPTIONS

       -c CONFIG, --config=CONFIG
           Configure the indentation parameters. See section CONFIGURATION for more information.

       -d, --debug
           Enable debug output to stderr.

       --help[=FMT] (default=auto)
           Show this help in format FMT. The value FMT must be one of auto, pager, groff or
           plain. With auto, the format is pager or plain whenever the TERM env var is dumb or
           undefined.

       -i, --inplace
           Re-indent files in-place.

       --indent-empty
           Return indent for empty lines, too. Especially useful with --numeric.

       -l RANGE, --lines=RANGE (absent=-)
           Only re-indent the lines in RANGE (eg. 10-12), adapting to the current indentation of
           surrounding lines. Lines start at 1.

       --load-mods=VAL
           Load plugins.

       --load-pkgs=VAL
           Load plugins.

       --numeric
           Instead of re-indenting the file, output one integer per line representing the
           indentation value. When specified together with --lines, only print as many values as
           lines in the range.

       -o FILE, --output=FILE
           Output to FILE. The default is to print to stdout.

       --print-config
           Print the current parameters to stdout and exit. (See section CONFIGURATION for more
           information.)

       --syntax=VAL
           Extend the handled syntax for OCaml syntax extensions.

       --version
           Show version information.

BUGS

       Bugs are tracked on github at https://github.com/OCamlPro/ocp-indent/issues. The tests
       directory of the source distribution is a good snapshot of the current status, and can be
       checked online at
       http://htmlpreview.github.io/?https://github.com/OCamlPro/ocp-indent/blob/master/tests/failing.html

SEE ALSO

       ocaml(1), ocp-index(1)

AUTHORS

       Louis Gesbert and Thomas Gazagnaire from OCamlPro, from an original prototype by Jun
       Furuse.

LICENSE

       Copyright (C) 2013 OCamlPro.

       ocp-indent is free software, released under the terms of the GNU General Public License
       version 3, the text of which can be found in the file `LICENSE' distributed with the
       sources.