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Limnoria/docs/STYLE
2004-09-28 07:54:41 +00:00

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====================================================================
Code not following these style guidelines fastidiously is likely
(*very* likely) not to be accepted into the Supybot core.
====================================================================
Read PEP 8 (Guido's Style Guide) and know that we use almost all the
same style guidelines.
Maximum line length is 79 characters. 78 is a safer bet, though.
This is **NON-NEGOTIABLE**. Your code will not be accepted while you
are violating this guidline.
Identation is 4 spaces per level. No tabs. This also is
**NON-NEGOTIABLE**. Your code, again, will *never* be accepted while
you have literal tabs in it.
Single quotes are used for all string literals that aren't docstrings.
They're just easier to type.
Triple double quotes (""") are always used for docstrings.
Raw strings (r'' or r"") should be used for regular expressions.
Spaces go around all operators (except around '=' in default
arguments to functions) and after all commas (unless doing so keeps a
line within the 79 character limit).
Functions calls should look like this: "foo(bar(baz(x), y))". They
should not look like "foo (bar (baz (x), y))", or like
"foo(bar(baz(x), y) )" or like anything else. I hate extraneous
spaces.
Class names are StudlyCaps. Method and function names are camelCaps
(StudlyCaps with an initial lowercase letter). If variable and
attribute names can maintain readability without being camelCaps,
then they should be entirely in lowercase, otherwise they should also
use camelCaps. Plugin names are StudlyCaps.
Imports should always happen at the top of the module, one import per
line (so if imports need to be added or removed later, it can be done
easily).
Unless absolutely required by some external force, imports should be
ordered by the string length of the module imported. I just think it
looks prettier.
A blank line should be between all consecutive method declarations in
a class definition. Two blank lines should be between all
consecutive class definitions in a file. Comments are even better
than blank lines for separating classes.
Database filenames should generally begin with the name of the plugin
and the extension should be 'db'. plugins.DBHandler does this
already.
Whenever creating a file descriptor or socket, keep a reference
around and be sure to close it. There should be no code like this:
s = urllib2.urlopen('url').read()
Instead, do this:
fd = urllib2.urlopen('url')
try:
s = fd.read()
finally:
fd.close()
This is to be sure the bot doesn't leak file descriptors.
All plugin files should include a docstring decsribing what the
plugin does. This docstring will be returned when the user is
configuring the plugin. All plugin classes should also include a
docstring describing how to do things with the plugin; this docstring
will be returned when the user requests help on a plugin name.
Method docstrings in classes deriving from callbacks.Privmsg should
include an argument list as their first line, and after that a blank
line followed by a longer description of what the command does. The
argument list is used by the 'syntax' command, and the longer
description is used by the 'help' command.
Whenever joining more than two strings, use string interpolation, not
addition:
s = x + y + z # Bad.
s = '%s%s%s' % (x, y, z) # Good.
s = ''.join([x, y, z]) # Best, but not as general.
This has to do with efficiency; the intermediate string x+y is made
(and thus copied) before x+y+z is made, so it's less efficient.
People who use string concatenation in a for loop will be swiftly
kicked in the head.
When writing strings that have formatting characters in them, don't
use anything but %s unless you absolutely must. In particular, %d
should never be used, it's less general than %s and serves no useful
purpose. If you got the %d wrong, you'll get an exception that says,
"foo instance can't be converted to an integer." But if you use %s,
you'll get to see your nice little foo instance, if it doesn't
convert to a string cleanly, and if it does convert cleanly, you'll
get to see what you expect to see. Basically, %d just sucks.
As a corrolary to the above, note that sometimes %f is used, but on
when floats need to be formatted, e.g., %.2f.
Use the log module to its fullest; when you need to print some values
to debug, use self.log.debug to do so, and leave those statements in
the code (commented out) so they can later be re-enabled. Remember
that once code is buggy, it tends to have more bugs, and you'll
probably need those print statements again.
While on the topic of logs, note that we do not use % (i.e.,
str.__mod__) with logged strings; we simple pass the format
parameters as additional arguments. The reason is simple: the
logging module supports it, and it's cleaner (fewer tokens/glyphs) to
read.
While still on the topic of logs, it's also important to pick the
appropriate log level for given information.
DEBUG: Appropriate to tell a programmer *how* we're doing
something (i.e., debugging printfs, basically). If
you're trying to figure out why your code doesn't work,
DEBUG is the new printf -- use that, and leave the
statements in your code.
INFO: Appropriate to tell a user *what* we're doing, when what
we're doing isn't important for the user to pay attention
to. A user who likes to keep up with things should enjoy
watching our logging at the INFO level; it shouldn't be
too low-level, but it should give enough information that
it keeps him relatively interested at peak times.
WARNING: Appropriate to tell a user when we're doing something
that he really ought to pay attention to. Users should
see WARNING and think, "Hmm, should I tell the Supybot
developers about this?" Later, he should decide not to,
but it should give the user a moment to pause and think
about what's actually happening with his bot.
ERROR: Appropriate to tell a user when something has gone wrong.
Uncaught exceptions are ERRORs. Conditions that we
absolutely want to hear about should be errors. Things
that should *scare* the user should be errors.
CRITICAL: Not really appropriate. I can think of no absolutely
critical issue yet encountered in Supybot; the only
possible thing I can imagine is to notify the user that
the partition on which Supybot is running has filled up.
That would be a CRITICAL condition, but it would also be
hard to log :)
All plugins should have test cases written for them. Even if it
doesn't actually test anything but just exists, it's good to have the
test there so there's a place to add more tests later (and so we can
be sure that all plugins are adequately documented; PluginTestCase
checks that every command has documentation)
All uses of eval() that expect to get integrated in Supybot must be
approved by jemfinch, no exceptions. Chances are, it won't be
accepted. Have you looked at utils.safeEval?
SQL table names should be all-lowercase and include underscores to
separate words. This is because SQL itself is case-insensitive.
This doesn't change, however the fact that variable/member names
should be camel case.
SQL statements in code should put SQL words in ALL CAPS:
"""SELECT quote FROM quotes ORDER BY random() LIMIT 1""". This makes
SQL significantly easier to read.
Common variable names:
L => an arbitrary list.
t => an arbitrary tuple.
x => an arbitrary float.
s => an arbitrary string.
f => an arbitrary function.
p => an arbitrary predicate.
i,n => an arbitrary integer.
cb => an arbitrary callback.
db => a database handle.
fd => a file-like object.
msg => an ircmsgs.IrcMsg object.
irc => an irclib.Irc object (or proxy)
nick => a string that is an IRC nick.
channel => a string that is an IRC channel.
hostmask => a string that is a user's IRC prefix.
When the semantic functionality (that is, the "meaning" of a variable
is obvious from context, one of these names should be used. This
just makes it easier for people reading our code to know what a
variable represents without scouring the surrounding code.
Multiple variable assignments should always be surrounded with
parentheses -- i.e., if you're using the partition function, then
your assignment statement should look like
(good, bad) = partition(p, L). The parentheses make it obvious that
you're doing a multiple assignment, and that's important because I
hate reading code and wondering where a variable came from.