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CODESPELL(1) User Commands CODESPELL(1)

NAME

codespell - detect spelling mistakes in source code

SYNOPSIS

codespell [OPTIONS] [file1 file2 ... fileN]

DESCRIPTION

codespell is designed to find and fix common misspellings in text files. It is designed primarily for checking misspelled words in source code, but it can be used with other files as well.

usage: codespell [-h] [--version] [-d] [-c] [-w] [-D DICTIONARY]

[--builtin BUILTIN-LIST] [--ignore-regex IGNORE_REGEX] [-I FILE] [-L WORDS] [-r REGEX] [-s] [--count] [-S SKIP] [-x FILE] [-i INTERACTIVE] [-q QUIET_LEVEL] [-e] [-f] [-H] [-A LINES] [-B LINES] [-C LINES] [--config CONFIG] [files ...]

positional arguments:

files or directories to check

optional arguments:

show this help message and exit
show program's version number and exit
disable colors, even when printing to terminal (always set for Windows)
enable colors, even when not printing to terminal
write changes in place if possible
custom dictionary file that contains spelling corrections. If this flag is not specified or equals "-" then the default dictionary is used. This option can be specified multiple times.
comma-separated list of builtin dictionaries to include (when "-D -" or no "-D" is passed). Current options are: - 'clear' for unambiguous errors - 'rare' for rare but valid words - 'informal' for informal words - 'usage' for recommended terms - 'code' for words common to code and/or mathematics - 'names' for valid proper names that might be typos - 'en-GB_to_en-US' for corrections from en-GB to en-US The default is 'clear,rare'.
regular expression which is used to find patterns to ignore by treating as whitespace. When writing regexes, consider ensuring there are boundary non-word chars, e.g., "\Wmatch\W". Defaults to empty/disabled.
file that contains words which will be ignored by codespell. File must contain 1 word per line. Words are case sensitive based on how they are written in the dictionary file
comma separated list of words to be ignored by codespell. Words are case sensitive based on how they are written in the dictionary file
regular expression which is used to find words. By default any alphanumeric character, the underscore, the hyphen, and the apostrophe is used to build words. This option cannot be specified together with --writechanges.
print summary of fixes
print the number of errors as the last line of stderr
comma-separated list of files to skip. It accepts globs as well. E.g.: if you want codespell to skip .eps and .txt files, you'd give "*.eps,*.txt" to this option.
FILE with lines that should not be checked for errors or changed
set interactive mode when writing changes: - 0: no interactivity. - 1: ask for confirmation. - 2: ask user to choose one fix when more than one is
- 3: both 1 and 2
bitmask that allows suppressing messages: - 0: print all messages. - 1: disable warnings about wrong encoding. - 2: disable warnings about binary files. - 4: omit warnings about automatic fixes that were
- 8: don't print anything for non-automatic fixes. - 16: don't print the list of fixed files. As usual with bitmasks, these levels can be combined; e.g. use 3 for levels 1+2, 7 for 1+2+4, 23 for 1+2+4+16, etc. The default mask is 2.
use chardet to detect the encoding of each file. This can slow down codespell, but is more reliable in detecting encodings other than utf-8, iso8859-1, and ascii.
check file names as well
check hidden files and directories (those starting with ".") as well.
print LINES of trailing context
print LINES of leading context
print LINES of surrounding context
path to config file.

AUTHOR

Lucas De Marchi <lucas.de.marchi@gmail.com>

SEE ALSO

https://github.com/codespell-project/codespell

November 2020 codespell 2.0.0