## Does Black have an API?
Not yet. _Black_ is fundamentally a command line tool. Many
-[integrations](integrations/index.rst) are provided, but a Python interface is not one
+[integrations](/integrations/index.md) are provided, but a Python interface is not one
of them. A simple API is being [planned](https://github.com/psf/black/issues/779)
though.
## How stable is Black's style?
Stable. _Black_ aims to enforce one style and one style only, with some room for
-pragmatism. See [The Black Code Style](the_black_code_style/index.rst) for more details.
+pragmatism. See [The Black Code Style](the_black_code_style/index.md) for more details.
Starting in 2022, the formatting output will be stable for the releases made in the same
year (other than unintentional bugs). It is possible to opt-in to the latest formatting
following will not be formatted:
- automagics (e.g. `pip install black`)
-- non-Python cell magics (e.g. `%%writeline`). These can be added with the flag
- `--python-cell-magics`, e.g. `black --python-cell-magics writeline hello.ipynb`.
+- non-Python cell magics (e.g. `%%writefile`). These can be added with the flag
+ `--python-cell-magics`, e.g. `black --python-cell-magics writefile hello.ipynb`.
- multiline magics, e.g.:
```python
## Which Python versions does Black support?
-Currently the runtime requires Python 3.6-3.10. Formatting is supported for files
-containing syntax from Python 3.3 to 3.10. We promise to support at least all Python
+Currently the runtime requires Python 3.7-3.11. Formatting is supported for files
+containing syntax from Python 3.3 to 3.11. We promise to support at least all Python
versions that have not reached their end of life. This is the case for both running
_Black_ and formatting code.
plans to stop supporting older Python 3 minor versions immediately, their support might
also be removed some time in the future without a deprecation period.
+Runtime support for 3.6 was removed in version 22.10.0.
+
## Why does my linter or typechecker complain after I format my code?
Some linters and other tools use magical comments (e.g., `# noqa`, `# type: ignore`) to