| Like other projects, we also have some guidelines to keep to the |
| code. For git in general, three rough rules are: |
| |
| - Most importantly, we never say "It's in POSIX; we'll happily |
| ignore your needs should your system not conform to it." |
| We live in the real world. |
| |
| - However, we often say "Let's stay away from that construct, |
| it's not even in POSIX". |
| |
| - In spite of the above two rules, we sometimes say "Although |
| this is not in POSIX, it (is so convenient | makes the code |
| much more readable | has other good characteristics) and |
| practically all the platforms we care about support it, so |
| let's use it". |
| |
| Again, we live in the real world, and it is sometimes a |
| judgement call, the decision based more on real world |
| constraints people face than what the paper standard says. |
| |
| |
| As for more concrete guidelines, just imitate the existing code |
| (this is a good guideline, no matter which project you are |
| contributing to). It is always preferable to match the _local_ |
| convention. New code added to git suite is expected to match |
| the overall style of existing code. Modifications to existing |
| code is expected to match the style the surrounding code already |
| uses (even if it doesn't match the overall style of existing code). |
| |
| But if you must have a list of rules, here they are. |
| |
| For shell scripts specifically (not exhaustive): |
| |
| - We prefer $( ... ) for command substitution; unlike ``, it |
| properly nests. It should have been the way Bourne spelled |
| it from day one, but unfortunately isn't. |
| |
| - We use ${parameter-word} and its [-=?+] siblings, and their |
| colon'ed "unset or null" form. |
| |
| - We use ${parameter#word} and its [#%] siblings, and their |
| doubled "longest matching" form. |
| |
| - We use Arithmetic Expansion $(( ... )). |
| |
| - No "Substring Expansion" ${parameter:offset:length}. |
| |
| - No shell arrays. |
| |
| - No strlen ${#parameter}. |
| |
| - No regexp ${parameter/pattern/string}. |
| |
| - We do not use Process Substitution <(list) or >(list). |
| |
| - We prefer "test" over "[ ... ]". |
| |
| - We do not write the noiseword "function" in front of shell |
| functions. |
| |
| - As to use of grep, stick to a subset of BRE (namely, no \{m,n\}, |
| [::], [==], nor [..]) for portability. |
| |
| - We do not use \{m,n\}; |
| |
| - We do not use -E; |
| |
| - We do not use ? nor + (which are \{0,1\} and \{1,\} |
| respectively in BRE) but that goes without saying as these |
| are ERE elements not BRE (note that \? and \+ are not even part |
| of BRE -- making them accessible from BRE is a GNU extension). |
| |
| For C programs: |
| |
| - We use tabs to indent, and interpret tabs as taking up to |
| 8 spaces. |
| |
| - We try to keep to at most 80 characters per line. |
| |
| - When declaring pointers, the star sides with the variable |
| name, i.e. "char *string", not "char* string" or |
| "char * string". This makes it easier to understand code |
| like "char *string, c;". |
| |
| - We avoid using braces unnecessarily. I.e. |
| |
| if (bla) { |
| x = 1; |
| } |
| |
| is frowned upon. A gray area is when the statement extends |
| over a few lines, and/or you have a lengthy comment atop of |
| it. Also, like in the Linux kernel, if there is a long list |
| of "else if" statements, it can make sense to add braces to |
| single line blocks. |
| |
| - We try to avoid assignments inside if(). |
| |
| - Try to make your code understandable. You may put comments |
| in, but comments invariably tend to stale out when the code |
| they were describing changes. Often splitting a function |
| into two makes the intention of the code much clearer. |
| |
| - Double negation is often harder to understand than no negation |
| at all. |
| |
| - Some clever tricks, like using the !! operator with arithmetic |
| constructs, can be extremely confusing to others. Avoid them, |
| unless there is a compelling reason to use them. |
| |
| - Use the API. No, really. We have a strbuf (variable length |
| string), several arrays with the ALLOC_GROW() macro, a |
| string_list for sorted string lists, a hash map (mapping struct |
| objects) named "struct decorate", amongst other things. |
| |
| - When you come up with an API, document it. |
| |
| - The first #include in C files, except in platform specific |
| compat/ implementations, should be git-compat-util.h or another |
| header file that includes it, such as cache.h or builtin.h. |
| |
| - If you are planning a new command, consider writing it in shell |
| or perl first, so that changes in semantics can be easily |
| changed and discussed. Many git commands started out like |
| that, and a few are still scripts. |
| |
| - Avoid introducing a new dependency into git. This means you |
| usually should stay away from scripting languages not already |
| used in the git core command set (unless your command is clearly |
| separate from it, such as an importer to convert random-scm-X |
| repositories to git). |
| |
| - When we pass <string, length> pair to functions, we should try to |
| pass them in that order. |