16
Any advice on picking a Python language server for emacs?
(programming.dev)
Welcome to the Python community on the programming.dev Lemmy instance!
Past
November 2023
October 2023
July 2023
August 2023
September 2023
Ruff.
MS LSP is also deprecated in favor of Microsoft's pylance AFAIK. I've never used Jedi much, but it's one of the older ones and not very comprehensive to my knowledge. Ruff is relatively new but they already have >800 rules and increasing. Ruff is by far the fastest too.
No thoughts on py-lsp.
Ah, just be sure to enable most (or all) rules with ruff, as the default rule sets are pretty relaxed.
That seems like a weird dichotomy between ruff and Jedi. One does linting & formatting, the other code completion, goto-definition, refactoring. With pylsp you can have both: it uses Jedi (in the default config), and has a plugin to call ruff for linting and formatting (according to the doc; I don't actually use ruff).
Sounds like things are going very wrong in lsp land. The point of a language server is to support lots of types of tools through an abstracted server. Not to have one server per tool.
Otherwise, just use fly-checker. It can even get information from multiple tools at once.
what do you mean by one server per tool?
Op was listing different Lsp servers for things like jedi, pyright, etc. All of those things should really integrate with a single server.
insert standards xkcd
I forgot pyright: it might be a good choice, but since you like strict mode, see basedpyright instead. I don't know about integrating it with emacs though.
I'd pick between Ruff and (based)pyright - maybe both if that works in emacs.