--- layout: "language" page_title: "Style Conventions - Configuration Language" sidebar_current: "docs-config-style" description: |- Recommended formatting conventions for the Terraform language. --- # Style Conventions The Terraform parser allows you some flexibility in how you lay out the elements in your configuration files, but the Terraform language also has some idiomatic style conventions which we recommend users always follow for consistency between files and modules written by different teams. Automatic source code formatting tools may apply these conventions automatically. * Indent two spaces for each nesting level. * When multiple arguments with single-line values appear on consecutive lines at the same nesting level, align their equals signs: ```hcl ami = "abc123" instance_type = "t2.micro" ``` * When both arguments and blocks appear together inside a block body, place all of the arguments together at the top and then place nested blocks below them. Use one blank line to separate the arguments from the blocks. * Use empty lines to separate logical groups of arguments within a block. * For blocks that contain both arguments and "meta-arguments" (as defined by the Terraform language semantics), list meta-arguments first and separate them from other arguments with one blank line. Place meta-argument blocks _last_ and separate them from other blocks with one blank line. ```hcl resource "aws_instance" "example" { count = 2 # meta-argument first ami = "abc123" instance_type = "t2.micro" network_interface { # ... } lifecycle { # meta-argument block last create_before_destroy = true } } ``` * Top-level blocks should always be separated from one another by one blank line. Nested blocks should also be separated by blank lines, except when grouping together related blocks of the same type (like multiple `provisioner` blocks in a resource). * Avoid separating multiple blocks of the same type with other blocks of a different type, unless the block types are defined by semantics to form a family. (For example: `root_block_device`, `ebs_block_device` and `ephemeral_block_device` on `aws_instance` form a family of block types describing AWS block devices, and can therefore be grouped together and mixed.)