swt 3.5.0

🍬 Sweet: A blazing-fast code health and architecture analyzer.
Documentation

Sweet is a high-performance code health analyzer designed to enforce architectural integrity. It is plug-and-play: it works immediately with zero configuration using intelligent defaults, while offering the flexibility to enforce stricter standards via .swtrc files. By quantifying technical debt and identifying complex logic patterns, it helps teams adhere to core engineering principles like SRP (Single Responsibility Principle) and DRY (Don't Repeat Yourself).

🍬 Why Sweet?

Most linters focus on syntax; Sweet focuses on maintainability. It acts as a surgical tool to prevent the "Big Ball of Mud" anti-pattern by monitoring the physical and logical weight of your components.

  • Enforce SRP: Identify "God Functions" and bloated files that take on too many responsibilities.
  • Encourage Decoupling: Track dependency density to prevent tangled, hard-to-test modules.
  • Prevent Logic Bloat: Detect deep nesting and cognitive complexity before they become technical debt.
  • Eliminate Redundancy: Project-wide inspection to find duplicated logic that should be abstract or shared.

🍬 Metrics

Sweet evaluates code health through four primary lenses of maintainability:

Metric Goal Engineering Impact
Physical Weight max_lines Prevents bloated files and encourages decomposition.
Logic Density max_lines_per_function Enforces SRP by identifying "God Functions" that do too much.
Control Flow max_depth Flags excessive nesting to keep logic readable and testable.
Coupling max_imports Monitors dependency growth to prevent tangled architectures.
Repetition max_repetition Identifies violations of the DRY principle.

🍬 Features

  • Blazing Fast: Process thousands of files in milliseconds (self-analysis in <10ms).
  • Hierarchical Config: Cascading .swtrc files for directory-specific rule sets.
  • Global Inspection: Project-wide duplicate detection with detailed occurrence mapping.
  • Intelligent Defaults: Language-specific thresholds tuned for different ecosystems (e.g., higher line limits for Java/C# vs. Rust).
  • Quality Guard: Native support for pre-push hooks to block "Bitter" code from reaching production.

🍭 Supported Languages

Language Status Extension
Rust .rs
Python .py
JavaScript .js, .mjs, .cjs
TypeScript .ts, .tsx
Java .java
C# .cs
GDScript .gd
Lua .lua
Go .go
PHP .php

Don't see your favorite language? Sweet is designed to be extensible. If you want to add support for a new language (like Go, C++, or Swift), we’d love your help!

Check out our Contributing Guide to see how easy it is to implement a new language provider.

🍬 Installation

Click here to get into the releases page!

You can also install sweet from crates.io

cargo install swt

Compiling by yourself

  • Clone the project git clone https://github.com/SirCesarium/sweet.git.
  • Build using cargo: cargo build --release.
  • Check the target/release/ folder.

📖 Usage

swt # or specify the project path using `swt path/to/project`

Copy-Paste Inspector

Show exact code fragments repeated across different files:

swt . --inspect

Strip Comments

AI Agents and LLMs often generate verbose, redundant comments that clutter your codebase. Use the --uncomment flag to strip the noise and reclaim your screen real estate for what matters: the logic.

[!TIP] By default, Sweet preserves your documentation comments (e.g., //!, ///, or /** */). Use the --aggressive flag if you want a truly blank slate.

# Clean a single file while keeping documentation
swt --uncomment src/lib.rs

# Full cleanup (removes everything including docs)
swt --uncomment --aggressive src/lib.rs

🔌 Power User Integration

Sweet follows the Unix philosophy. It plays perfectly with the standard Rust toolbelt (fd, rg) to handle massive refactors in seconds.

With fd (Fast Find): Strip comments from every Rust file in your project at once.

fd -e rs -x swt --uncomment

With ripgrep (rg): Target only the files that contain a specific "Bitter" pattern or AI-generated signature.

rg "TODO:" -l | xargs swt --uncomment

🏗️ CI/CD Integration

If you are using GitHub Actions, you don't need to manually install Sweet. We've built Refinery-RS, a surgical quality gate and build pipeline for Rust projects.

Refinery-RS CI

Integrate Sweet with clippy and rustfmt in one single step:

jobs:
  quality-gate:
    runs-on: ubuntu-latest
    steps:
      - uses: actions/checkout@v5
      - uses: sircesarium/refinery-rs/ci@main
        with:
          enable-sweet: true   # Runs 'swt' maintainability analysis
          enable-clippy: true  # Runs standard Rust lints
          enable-fmt: true     # Ensures consistent formatting

Why use Refinery?

  • Zero Setup: No need to cargo install swt in every CI run; Refinery handles the caching and environment for you.
  • Fail-Fast: Automatically blocks "Bitter" code from being merged.
  • One-Stop Shop: If you need to ship, use the same suite to build multi-target binaries and push Docker images to GHCR.

⚙️ Configuration

Sweet resolves .swtrc files hierarchically, merging configurations from the file's directory up to the root.

{
  "$schema": "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/SirCesarium/sweet/main/schema.json",
  "thresholds": {
    "global": { 
      "max_lines": 400, 
      "max_depth": 6, 
      "max_repetition": 15.0,
      "max_lines_per_function": 200
    },
    "overrides": {
      "rust": { "max_imports": 30 },
      "gdscript": { "max_depth": 7 }
    }
  }
}

🍭 In-file Control

You can granularly disable specific checks for a single file using comments in the first 20 lines. This is ideal for legacy codebases or generated assets.

Add @swt-disable <rule1> <rule2>:

// @swt-disable max-lines max-repetition

Supported rules: max-lines, max-depth, max-imports, max-repetition, max-lines-per-function.

To ignore a file entirely, use the @sweetignore directive.

🤝 Contributing

Contributions are welcome! Whether it's adding support for a new language, fixing a bug, or improving the documentation, please check our Contributing Guide to get started.

📜 License

Licensed under the MIT License.