From 6055bc250fb393cf621f6c7e63a2d89b880fe3a6 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: chriseth Date: Tue, 6 Mar 2018 10:32:58 +0100 Subject: Use coding style. --- CODING_STYLE.md | 254 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 254 insertions(+) create mode 100644 CODING_STYLE.md (limited to 'CODING_STYLE.md') diff --git a/CODING_STYLE.md b/CODING_STYLE.md new file mode 100644 index 00000000..ee924e72 --- /dev/null +++ b/CODING_STYLE.md @@ -0,0 +1,254 @@ +0. Formatting + +GOLDEN RULE: Follow the style of the existing code when you make changes. + +a. Use tabs for leading indentation +- tab stops are every 4 characters. +- One indentation level -> exactly one byte (i.e. a tab character) in the source file. +- If you have run-on lines, indent as you would for a block. +b. Line widths: +- Don't worry about having lines of code > 80-char wide. +- Lines of comments should be formatted according to ease of viewing, but simplicity is to be preferred over beauty. +c. Don't use braces for condition-body one-liners. +d. Never place condition bodies on same line as condition. +e. Space between first paren and keyword, but *not* following first paren or preceding final paren. +f. No spaces when fewer than intra-expression three parens together; when three or more, space according to clarity. +g. No spaces for subscripting or unary operators. +h. No space before ':' but one after it, except in the ternary operator: one on both sides. +i. Space all other operators. +j. Braces, when used, always have their own lines and are at same indentation level as "parent" scope. + +(WRONG) +if( a==b[ i ] ) { printf ("Hello\n"); } +foo->bar(someLongVariableName, + anotherLongVariableName, + anotherLongVariableName, + anotherLongVariableName, + anotherLongVariableName); + +(RIGHT) +if (a == b[i]) + printf("Hello\n"); // NOTE spaces used instead of tab here for clarity - first byte should be '\t'. +foo->bar( + someLongVariableName, + anotherLongVariableName, + anotherLongVariableName, + anotherLongVariableName, + anotherLongVariableName +); + + + +1. Namespaces; + +a. No "using namespace" declarations in header files. +b. All symbols should be declared in a namespace except for final applications. +c. Preprocessor symbols should be prefixed with the namespace in all-caps and an underscore. + +(WRONG) +#include +using namespace std; +tuple meanAndSigma(vector const& _v); + +(CORRECT) +#include +std::tuple meanAndSigma(std::vector const& _v); + + + +2. Preprocessor; + +a. File comment is always at top, and includes: +- Copyright. +- License (e.g. see COPYING). +b. Never use #ifdef/#define/#endif file guards. Prefer #pragma once as first line below file comment. +c. Prefer static const variable to value macros. +d. Prefer inline constexpr functions to function macros. +e. Split complex macro on multiple lines with '\'. + + + +3. Capitalization; + +GOLDEN RULE: Preprocessor: ALL_CAPS; C++: camelCase. + +a. Use camelCase for splitting words in names, except where obviously extending STL/boost functionality in which case follow those naming conventions. +b. The following entities' first alpha is upper case: +- Type names. +- Template parameters. +- Enum members. +- static const variables that form an external API. +c. All preprocessor symbols (macros, macro arguments) in full uppercase with underscore word separation. + + +All other entities' first alpha is lower case. + + + +4. Variable prefixes: + +a. Leading underscore "_" to parameter names. +- Exception: "o_parameterName" when it is used exclusively for output. See 6(f). +- Exception: "io_parameterName" when it is used for both input and output. See 6(f). +b. Leading "c_" to const variables (unless part of an external API). +c. Leading "g_" to global (non-const) variables. +d. Leading "s_" to static (non-const, non-global) variables. + + + +5. Error reporting: + +- Prefer exception to bool/int return type. + + + +6. Declarations: + +a. {Typename} + {qualifiers} + {name}. +b. Only one per line. +c. Associate */& with type, not variable (at ends with parser, but more readable, and safe if in conjunction with (b)). +d. Favour declarations close to use; don't habitually declare at top of scope ala C. +e. Always pass non-trivial parameters with a const& suffix. +f. If a function returns multiple values, use std::tuple (std::pair acceptable). Prefer not using */& arguments, except where efficiency requires. +g. Never use a macro where adequate non-preprocessor C++ can be written. +h. Make use of auto whenever type is clear or unimportant: +- Always avoid doubly-stating the type. +- Use to avoid vast and unimportant type declarations. +- However, avoid using auto where type is not immediately obvious from the context, and especially not for arithmetic expressions. +i. Don't pass bools: prefer enumerations instead. +j. Prefer enum class to straight enum. + + +(WRONG) +const double d = 0; +int i, j; +char *s; +float meanAndSigma(std::vector _v, float* _sigma, bool _approximate); +Derived* x(dynamic_cast(base)); +for (map::iterator i = l.begin(); i != l.end(); ++l) {} + + +(CORRECT) +enum class Accuracy +{ + Approximate, + Exact +}; +double const d = 0; +int i; +int j; +char* s; +std::tuple meanAndSigma(std::vector const& _v, Accuracy _a); +auto x = dynamic_cast(base); +for (auto i = x.begin(); i != x.end(); ++i) {} + + +7. Structs & classes + +a. Structs to be used when all members public and no virtual functions. +- In this case, members should be named naturally and not prefixed with 'm_' +b. Classes to be used in all other circumstances. + + + +8. Members: + +a. One member per line only. +b. Private, non-static, non-const fields prefixed with m_. +c. Avoid public fields, except in structs. +d. Use override, final and const as much as possible. +e. No implementations with the class declaration, except: +- template or force-inline method (though prefer implementation at bottom of header file). +- one-line implementation (in which case include it in same line as declaration). +f. For a property 'foo' +- Member: m_foo; +- Getter: foo() [ also: for booleans, isFoo() ]; +- Setter: setFoo(); + + + +9. Naming + +a. Collection conventions: +- -s means std::vector e.g. using MyTypes = std::vector +- -Set means std::set e.g. using MyTypeSet = std::set +- -Hash means std::unordered_set e.g. using MyTypeHash = std::unordered_set +b. Class conventions: +- -Face means the interface of some shared concept. (e.g. FooFace might be a pure virtual class.) +c. Avoid unpronouncable names; +- If you need to shorten a name favour a pronouncable slice of the original to a scattered set of consonants. +- e.g. Manager shortens to Man rather than Mgr. +d. Avoid prefixes of initials (e.g. DON'T use IMyInterface, CMyImplementation) +e. Find short, memorable & (at least semi-) descriptive names for commonly used classes or name-fragments. +- A dictionary and thesaurus are your friends. +- Spell correctly. +- Think carefully about the class's purpose. +- Imagine it as an isolated component to try to decontextualise it when considering its name. +- Don't be trapped into naming it (purely) in terms of its implementation. + + + +10. Type-definitions + +a. Prefer 'using' to 'typedef'. e.g. using ints = std::vector; rather than typedef std::vector ints; +b. Generally avoid shortening a standard form that already includes all important information: +- e.g. stick to shared_ptr rather than shortening to ptr. +c. Where there are exceptions to this (due to excessive use and clear meaning), note the change prominently and use it consistently. +- e.g. using Guard = std::lock_guard; ///< Guard is used throughout the codebase since it's clear in meaning and used commonly. +d. In general expressions should be roughly as important/semantically meaningful as the space they occupy. + + + +11. Commenting + +a. Comments should be doxygen-compilable, using @notation rather than \notation. +b. Document the interface, not the implementation. +- Documentation should be able to remain completely unchanged, even if the method is reimplemented. +- Comment in terms of the method properties and intended alteration to class state (or what aspects of the state it reports). +- Be careful to scrutinise documentation that extends only to intended purpose and usage. +- Reject documentation that is simply an English transaction of the implementation. + + + +12. Include Headers + +Includes should go in increasing order of generality (libethereum -> libethcore -> libdevcrypto -> libdevcore -> boost -> STL). For example: + +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include +#include + +See http://stackoverflow.com/questions/614302/c-header-order/614333#614333 for the reason: this makes it easier to find missing includes in header files. + + + +13. Logging + +Logging should be performed at appropriate verbosities depending on the logging message. +The more likely a message is to repeat (and thus cause noise) the higher in verbosity it should be. +Some rules to keep in mind: + + - Verbosity == 0 -> Reserved for important stuff that users must see and can understand. + - Verbosity == 1 -> Reserved for stuff that users don't need to see but can understand. + - Verbosity >= 2 -> Anything that is or might be displayed more than once every minute + - Verbosity >= 3 -> Anything that only a developer would understand + - Verbosity >= 4 -> Anything that is low-level (e.g. peer disconnects, timers being cancelled) + + +14. Recommended reading + +Herb Sutter and Bjarne Stroustrup +- "C++ Core Guidelines" (https://github.com/isocpp/CppCoreGuidelines/blob/master/CppCoreGuidelines.md) + +Herb Sutter and Andrei Alexandrescu +- "C++ Coding Standards: 101 Rules, Guidelines, and Best Practices" + +Scott Meyers +- "Effective C++: 55 Specific Ways to Improve Your Programs and Designs (3rd Edition)" +- "More Effective C++: 35 New Ways to Improve Your Programs and Designs" +- "Effective Modern C++: 42 Specific Ways to Improve Your Use of C++11 and C++14" -- cgit