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