Difference between revisions of "StyleGuide"
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===Conditionals=== | ===Conditionals=== | ||
− | ( | + | <pre> |
+ | if( ref($a) eq "ARRAY" ) | ||
+ | { | ||
+ | print "Dang"; | ||
+ | return 0; | ||
+ | } | ||
+ | </pre> | ||
+ | |||
+ | If the code inside the condition this is acceptable: | ||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
return 0 if( ref($a) eq "ARRAY" ); | return 0 if( ref($a) eq "ARRAY" ); | ||
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$a = 23 if( !defined $a ); | $a = 23 if( !defined $a ); | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
− | + | However this is NEVER OK: | |
− | |||
<pre> | <pre> | ||
− | if( | + | if( !defined $a ) $a = 23; |
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Revision as of 17:32, 7 August 2009
EPrints has been under development for many years and has some fluff about the place. For new programmers this document is intended as a 'style guide' to at least keep the code and documentation consistent across new modules.
Contents
Programming Style
Naming
TYPE EXAMPLE module StyleGuide subroutine get_value global var AUTH_OK local var $field_name
Subroutines
sub get_value { my( $self, $arg1, $arg2 ) = @_; return $r; }
Where possible, use "return" rather than an "if" block.
AVOID:
sub get_value { my( $self, $arg1 ) = @_; my $r; if( $arg1 ) { $r = $arg1 * 2; } else { log( "some error" ); } return $r; }
Prefer this style instead, treating the problem like a basic exception to the normal running of the function:
sub get_value { my( $self, $arg1 ) = @_; if( !defined $arg1 ) { log( "some error" ); return; } return $arg1 * 2; }
Conditionals
if( ref($a) eq "ARRAY" ) { print "Dang"; return 0; }
If the code inside the condition this is acceptable:
return 0 if( ref($a) eq "ARRAY" );
$a = 23 if( !defined $a );
However this is NEVER OK:
if( !defined $a ) $a = 23;
Loops
foreach my $field ( @fields ) { push @foo, $field->get_name(); } OR, when nested: FIELD: foreach my $field ( @fields ) { VALUE: foreach my $value ( @{$field->{ "lsd" }} ) { next VALUE if !defined $value; $values{ $value } = 1; } }
Avoid $_ where possible.
Try and use "next" rather than if when inside loops.
Licensing
We would like everything under the same license.... the EPrints license:
###################################################################### # # This file is part of GNU EPrints 3. # # Copyright (c) 2000-2007 University of Southampton, UK. SO17 1BJ. # # EPrints 3 is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify # it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by # the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or # (at your option) any later version. # # EPrints 3 is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, # but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of # MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the # GNU General Public License for more details. # # You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License # along with EPrints 3; if not, write to the Free Software # Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA # ######################################################################
Description
Below the license block the name, description and synopsis (a synopsis is an example of usage). Lastly the METHODS title begins the section for inline subroutine documentation.
=head1 NAME EPrints::MyModule - A one line description of MyModule =head1 DESCRIPTION One or two paragraphs explaining the function of EPrints::MyModule. =head1 SYNOPSIS use EPrints::MyModule; my $obj = EPrints::MyModule->new( $opts ); $obj->do_thing( $thingy ); =head1 METHODS =over 4 =cut
Methods
Public Methods
Each public subroutine should have POD documentation above it, with hashes to separate it from the method above. A large module should probably be split into different sections, e.g. "CONSTRUCTOR METHODS", "ACCESSOR METHODS", etc. Private methods can be documented using Perl comments.
###################################################################### =item $objname = EPrints::StyleGuide->my_sub( $arg1, [$opt_arg2], \%opts ) A description of what my_sub does and arguments it takes ($opt_arg2 is shown as optional by using brackets). A description of $arg1 if needed, along with an example: EPrints::StyleGuide->my_sub( "eprintid" ); EPrints::StyleGuide->my_sub( $arg1, undef, { opt1 => $var1, # What is var1 opt2 => $var2, # What is var2 } ); Further elaboration on the effect of $var2. =cut ###################################################################### sub my_sub { ... }
Private Methods
Automatically reformatting code
There is a wonderful utility called perltidy (find link)
This reformats perl for you (and does a syntax check at the same time... lovely.
Use:
perltidy -gnu -csc -b JSON.pm
-gnu reformats into the general 'gnu' style (as opposed to the "Larry Wall/Perl" style) -csc adds comments to the end of longish loops -b edits the file in place (so you may want to leave that off initially)