I have a game class and I need to pass screen width and height into pygame.display.set_mode()
in __init__ method
.
It requires a tuple, for example - pygame.display.set_mode((width, height))
.
I have also a second class named Settings from which I import width and height.
If I need to pass long name attributes inside a tuple, is it okay to write these double parentheses the way I did below not to exceed 79 chars? I'm not sure because I've never seen the double parentheses case in PEP8, only single.
def __init__(self):
"""Initialize the game, create game resources."""
pygame.init()
self.settings = Settings()
self.screen = pygame.display.set_mode((
self.settings.screen_width,
self.settings.screen_height
))
You can use pycodestyle to check that your code is PEP8 compliant.
If I copy-paste your code in a settings.py
file, I can use
pip install pycodestyle
pycodestyle --show-source --show-pep8 settings.py
which does not return anything, so you're good.
However, as mentioned by CharlesDuffy, I suggest you to use a code formatter such as black to ensure consistent and PEP8 compliant code formatting.