0.11.5 • Published 1 month ago

prettier-plugin-sql-cst v0.11.5

Weekly downloads
-
License
GPL-3.0-or-later
Repository
github
Last release
1 month ago

Prettier plugin SQL-CST npm version build status

A Prettier plugin for SQL that uses sql-parser-cst and the actual Prettier formatting algorithm.

Try it live!

Like Prettier for JavaScript, this plugin formats SQL expressions differently depending on their length. A short SQL query will be formatted on a single line:

SELECT a, b, c FROM tbl WHERE x > 10;

A longer query, will get each clause printed on a separate line:

SELECT id, client.name, client.priority
FROM client
WHERE client.id IN (12, 18, 121);

An even longer one gets the contents of each clause indented:

SELECT
  client.id,
  client.name AS client_name,
  organization.name AS org_name,
  count(orders.id) AS nr_of_orders
FROM
  client
  LEFT JOIN organization ON client.organization_id = organization.id
  LEFT JOIN orders ON orders.client_id = client.id
WHERE
  client.status = 'active'
  AND client.id IN (28, 214, 457)
  AND orders.status IN ('active', 'pending', 'processing')
GROUP BY client.id
ORDER BY client.name
LIMIT 100;

Formatting philosophy

  • Adapt formatting based on expression length.
  • Stick to one style and avoid configuration options.
  • Format embedded languages (like JSON data and JavaScript programs).
  • When unsure, preserve existing syntax.

Currently this plugin preserves most of the syntax elements and concentrates mainly on the layout of whitespace.

See STYLE_GUIDE for overview of the SQL formatting style used.

Getting started

Install it as any other Prettier plugin:

npm install --save-dev prettier prettier-plugin-sql-cst

Then use it on SQL files through Prettier command line tool or Prettier extension for your editor of choice.

Choosing an SQL dialect

By default the plugin will determine SQL dialect based on file extension:

  • .sql or .sqlite - SQLite
  • .bigquery - BigQuery

You can override this behavior with a prettier configuration:

{
  "overrides": [
    {
      "files": ["*.sql"],
      "options": { "parser": "bigquery" }
    }
  ]
}

The plugin provides the following parsers:

  • sqlite
  • bigquery
  • postgresql (experimental! expect crashes)
  • mysql (experimental! expect crashes)
  • mariadb (experimental! expect crashes)

Configuration

The standard Prettier options printWidth, tabWidth, useTabs apply. There are also some SQL-specific options:

API OptionDefaultDescription
sqlKeywordCaseupperConverts SQL keywords to upper or lower case, or preserve existing. Note that for now preserve is somewhat incompatible with sqlCanonicalSyntax: true (e.g. the added AS keywords will always be in uppercase).
sqlParamTypes[]Array of bound parameter types: ?, ?nr, $nr, :name, @name, $name.
sqlCanonicalSyntaxtrueWhen enabled, performs some opinionated changes of keywords and operators, like enforcing the use of AS in aliases and replacing <> comparisons with !=. See STYLE_GUIDE for more details. (Since 0.11.0)

FAQ

The SQL dialect I'm using is not supported. Can you add support for it?

Support for new SQL dialects depends on these dialects being supported by sql-parser-cst. If you really want to, you can open a new issue for that in the parser repo. But be aware that implementing parser support for new dialects takes a lot of work. As long as the ongoing implementation of PostgreSQL, MySQL and MariaDB is not finished, it's unlikely that work on any other dialect will start.

How can I format SQL strings inside JavaScript files?

Use prettier-plugin-embed together with prettier-plugin-sql-cst.

Limitations and development status

Currently this plugin supports two SQL dialects:

  • SQLite - full support.
  • BigQuery - full support.

It also has experimental support for the following dialects:

  • PostgreSQL
  • MySQL
  • MariaDB

The main limitation is that the parser does not support full syntax of these dialects. One should expect the parser to crash for syntax that's more specific to these dialects. But as long as the parsing succeeds, the formatting should also succeed. Mainly one can expect the formatting of SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE statements to work. But beyond that you should keep your expectations low. You have been warned.

The specifics of the SQL formatting style are still very much subject to change. Though the general principles should be mostly in place by now.

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