Difference between revisions of "Coding standard"
From OdaWiki
(→General Requirements) |
|||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
Some of the existing doom code in Odamex breaks these guidelines, which is exempt, unless you want to rewrite it! | Some of the existing doom code in Odamex breaks these guidelines, which is exempt, unless you want to rewrite it! | ||
− | == | + | ==Requirements== |
− | This is a list | + | This is a list that must be adhered to when you are: |
* An Odamex developer. | * An Odamex developer. | ||
* A patch submitter. | * A patch submitter. | ||
Rules: | Rules: | ||
− | * | + | * Add a test for every change |
− | * Do not change | + | * Do not change code that already works |
+ | * Make logical changes in separate patches | ||
===Formatting=== | ===Formatting=== |
Revision as of 14:02, 5 May 2008
Overview
Odamex relies on a coding standard to help keep consistency between subprojects, this also helps things like reduce bugs and also provides easy readability of the code.
Some of the existing doom code in Odamex breaks these guidelines, which is exempt, unless you want to rewrite it!
Requirements
This is a list that must be adhered to when you are:
- An Odamex developer.
- A patch submitter.
Rules:
- Add a test for every change
- Do not change code that already works
- Make logical changes in separate patches
Formatting
- If creating a new file, include a GPL header at the top of it, as seen in other files.
- Descriptive comments
- Comments of reasonable size. (not too big and not too small)
- Comment formatting. (in c/c++, either // for 1 liners or /* */ for multiple lines)
- Indentations to be of 1 tab character, using 4 space width tabs
- Be sure your editor/IDE's EOL mode is LF, not CRLF or CR
- 80 line character limit, for devs with text-based editors
- if you can, limit functions to a maximum size (like the amount that would fit on a monitor with a reasonable screen resolution)
Code
Things you should definitely AVOID in your code:
- Precompiler macros
- Global variables (they can create problems elsewhere in code)
- Variants (tagged unions) - they can present a performance problem
- Magic numbers (use #define or const in your code for fixed numbers, at the top of files)
- Hungarian notation (just plan evil)
- C style strings. (replace them with C++ types where it is safe to do so)
- goto
What you should strive for:
- Clarity of code
- Defensive and secure coding practices
- Maintain traditional naming conventions, for consistency
See Also
- none