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libmaple Coding Standards
=========================
Author: Marti Bolivar (mbolivar@leaflabs.com)
LeafLabs team members are required to follow these when producing new
code. Community contributors to libmaple are strongly encouraged to
do so; following these rules will greatly increase the probability
that your patches will be folded in.
In general, do it like this unless there's a really good reason why
not. You being lazy doesn't count as a good reason. Most, if not
all, of these decisions are entirely arbitrary, but it's important for
readability that we be consistent.
The file .dir-locals.el in the libmaple root directory already ensures
that many of these standards are followed by default in Emacs (but not
on Windows, where it would need to be named _dir_locals.el, and no
way, man). There's also some elisp scattered about this file which
will provide you additional help.
Vim customizations to do the same thing would be nice (hint, hint)!
License
-------
- Put an MIT license at the beginning of the file (look at any of our
source files for an example). Copyright should go either to you or
to LeafLabs, LLC.
Emacs: if you don't like seeing the license, you should use
elide-head (which will hide it for you). You can use the following:
(require 'elide-head)
(setq programming-mode-hooks '(c-mode-hook c++-mode-hook))
(add-to-list 'elide-head-headers-to-hide
'("The MIT License" . "DEALINGS IN\n [*] THE SOFTWARE"))
(add-to-list 'elide-head-headers-to-hide
'("The MIT License" . "DEALINGS IN THE\n...SOFTWARE"))
(dolist (hook programming-mode-hooks)
(add-hook hook (lambda () (elide-head))))
Whitespace/Indentation
----------------------
- 4 space indents. [Set in .dir-locals.el]
- Unix newlines. [Some exceptions are currently grandfathered in;
these will go away in time.]
- No tab characters. [Set in .dir-locals.el]
- No trailing whitespace. For help getting this (and no tab
characters) done automatically in Emacs, you can use this:
http://github.com/mbolivar/code-fascism
I hear tell you can get something similar in vim; ask around, I
guess.
- Files end in exactly one newline. [The presence of a newline at EOF
is already done by `c-require-final-newline' in recent versions of
Emacs.]
- Exactly two newlines separate source paragraphs (you do separate
your code into paragraphs, don't you?).
- The first line in a function is non-blank.
- Don't indent C code within a conditionally-compiled extern "C"
block. Emacs does this by default, which can be very annoying; you
can turn this behavior off with
(defun c-mode-inextern-lang-hook ()
(setcdr (assq 'inextern-lang c-offsets-alist) '-))
(add-hook 'c-mode-hook c-mode-inextern-lang-hook)
Comments
--------
- Multi-line comments are pretty flexible. Any of these is fine:
/* Comment starts here.
* Continued lines have a '*' before them.
* The comment can end after the last line.
*/
/* Comment starts here.
* The comment can end on the same line. */
/*
* You can also place a newline after the opening "/*".
*/
- Doxygen comments are multi-line comments that begin with /** instead.
- Single-line comments on the same line are // in C or C++.
- Single-line comments on their own source line should be /* */ in C,
but can also be // in C++. In Emacs, you can use M-;
(comment-dwim), and it'll Do What You Mean.
Braces
------
- Mostly 1TBS:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Indent_style#Variant:_1TBS
The only difference is that the opening brace of a function's
definition occurs exactly one space character after the closing
parenthesis in that function's parameter list. Example:
void func(void) {
...
}
Naming conventions
------------------
There's always a fight about upper and lower case vs. underscores.
We'll handle this as follows.
- First, Dammit_Dont_Mix_Like_This, because It_Looks_Really_Ugly, ok?
[There's been some debate about this, and some exceptions are
already grandfathered in, so in order to settle it, let's call this
a "recommendation" instead of "requirement".]
- Variables: Use underscores to separate words in C identifiers:
int some_example_name;
It is strongly advised to do it this way in C++ too, but it's not
[yet] mandatory.
- Classes: Pascal case. So ThisIsAClassName, but thisIsNot,
this_is_not, and like I said, Dont_You_DareTryANYTHING_STUPID.
- Functions: C functions are all lowercase, and words are separated by
underscores. C++ method names are camel cased (thisIsAnExample).
- Structs: pick a style from "Variables" or "Classes" depending on how
you mean it (since it might be either a simple record type, in which
case do like c variables, or you might be faking an object in c, in
which case do like classes). If it's in a typedef, don't feel
obliged to put "_t" at the end of the name; we don't.
- Macros and constants: all caps, separated by underscores. Variables
with the "const" qualifier aren't considered "constants" for the
purposes of this rule; i.e., case them according to the rules for
variables.
- foo.h gets #ifdef'ed to _FOO_H_.
- Acronyms: The case of letters in an acronym is determined by the
case of the first letter in the acronym, which is determined by
following the above rules. Examples:
void usb_func() { ... }
class SomethingUSB {
void usbInit();
void initUSB();
};
Never do this:
class BadUsb { ... }; // say "GoodUSB" instead
Documentation
-------------
- Document your code!
- For complicated peripherals, it would be nice if you put longer-form
comments into this directory (notes/), with a comment in the
corresponding .h file referring to it. See libmaple/dac.h for an
example. That lets us keep the source files relatively clean while
still allowing new readers to have a starting point.
- At least put a Doxygen comment with a nonempty @brief for every .h
file you add. See the existing ones for examples.
- Doxygen comments generally just belong on types, functions,
etc. that are part of the public user-facing API. This generally
means that if there's ReST documentation for it under docs/source/,
it needs Doxygen comments, and that ReST should use Breathe to pull
that Doxygen comment out. (For more info on this, see docs/README).
There are some exceptions to this rule since Breathe isn't totally
mature yet and Sphinx's C++ domain is still in flux. In these
cases, document the code "manually" in ReST.
This should be avoided if at all possible, since it creates a
maintenance burden of documenting things in two places at once, and
makes it easier for documentation to go stale.
- For libmaple proper (the pure C library under libmaple/); the
convention is to document any user-facing entity at the point where
it is defined. In particular, this means you should document an
externally-linked function defined in a .c file in that .c file, not
in the header file where it is declared to the user.
General Formatting
------------------
- Keep it 80-column clean. That means Emacs says the largest column
number=79. If you haven't already, you should turn on column
numbers to help you out:
(column-number-mode 1)
You can get more help from lineker-mode. Download it here:
http://www.helsinki.fi/~sjpaavol/programs/lineker.el
Then put the file somewhere in your load-path, and:
(require 'lineker)
(dolist (hook '(c-mode-hook c++-mode-hook))
(add-hook hook (lambda () (lineker-mode 1))))
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