typos-cli 1.0.10

Source Code Spelling Correction
Documentation

typos

Source code spell checker

Finds and corrects spelling mistakes among source code:

  • Fast enough to run on monorepos
  • Low false positives so you can run on PRs

Screenshot

Build Status codecov Documentation License Crates Status

Dual-licensed under MIT or Apache 2.0

Documentation

Install

Download a pre-built binary (installable via gh-install).

Or use rust to install:

cargo install typos-cli

Getting Started

Most commonly, you'll either want to see what typos are available with

typos

Or have them fixed

typos --write-changes
typos -w

If there is any ambiguity (multiple possible corrections), typos will just report it to the user and move on.

False-positives

Sometimes, what looks like a typo is intentional, like with people's names, acronyms, or localized content.

To mark an identifier or word as valid, add it your _typos.toml by declaring itself as the valid spelling:

[default.extend-identifiers]
# *sigh* this just isn't worth the cost of fixing
AttributeIDSupressMenu = "AttributeIDSupressMenu"

[default.extend-words]
# Don't correct the surname "Teh"
teh = "teh"

For cases like localized content, you can disable spell checking of file contents while still checking the file name:

[type.po]
extend-globs = ["*.po"]
check-file = false

(run typos --type-list to see configured file types)

If you need some more flexibility, you can completely exclude some files from consideration:

[files]
extend-exclude = ["localized/*.po"]

Integrations

Custom

typos provides several building blocks for custom native integrations

  • - reads from stdin, --write-changes will be written to stdout
  • --diff to provide a diff
  • --format json to get jsonlines with exit code 0 on no errors, code 2 on typos, anything else is an error.

Examples:

# Read file from stdin, write corrected version to stdout
typos - --write-changes
# Creates a diff of what would change
typos dir/file --diff
# Fully programmatic control
typos dir/file --format json

Debugging

You can see what the effective config looks like by running

typos --dump-config -

You can then see how typos is processing your project with

typos --files
typos --identifiers
typos --words

If you need to dig in more, you can enable debug logging with -v