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Using stylerignore markers, you can temporarily turn off styler. Beware that
for styler > 1.2.0
, some alignment is
detected by styler,
making stylerignore redundant. See a few illustrative examples below.
Styling is on by default when you run styler.
To mark the start of a sequence where you want to turn styling off, use
# styler: off
.
To mark the end of this sequence, put # styler: on
in your code. After
that line, styler will again format your code.
To ignore an inline statement (i.e. just one line), place # styler: off
at the end of the line. Note that inline statements cannot contain other
comments apart from the marker, i.e. a line like
1 # comment # styler: off
won't be ignored.
To use something else as start and stop markers, set the R options
styler.ignore_start
and
styler.ignore_stop
using options()
. If you want these
settings to persist over multiple R sessions, consider setting them in your
R profile, e.g. with usethis::edit_rprofile()
.
# NOT RUN {
# as long as the order of the markers is correct, the lines are ignored.
style_text(
"
1+1
# styler: off
1+1
# styler: on
1+1
"
)
# if there is a stop marker before a start marker, styler won't be able
# to figure out which lines you want to ignore and won't ignore anything,
# issuing a warning.
# }
# NOT RUN {
style_text(
"
1+1
# styler: off
1+1
# styler: off
1+1
"
)
# }
# NOT RUN {
# some alignment of code is detected, so you don't need to use stylerignore
style_text(
"call(
xyz = 3,
x = 11
)"
)
# }
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