Official:Code guidelines and formatting conventions

From Official Kodi Wiki
Revision as of 19:11, 21 June 2015 by Paxxi (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Home icon grey.png   ▶ Development ▶ Code guidelines and formatting conventions

These are conventions which we try to follow when writing code for Kodi. They are this way mainly for reasons of taste, however, sticking to a common set of formatting rules also makes it slightly easier to read through our sources. If you want to submit patches, please try to follow these rules.

As such we don't follow these rules slavishly, in certain cases it is ok (and in fact favorable) to stray from them.

Indentation

Use spaces as tab policy with an indentation size of 2

Namespaces

Namespaces are not required to use any indentation to simplify nested namespaces and wrapping .cpp files in a namespace

namespace KODI
{
namespace UTILS
{
class ILogger
{
  void Log(...) = 0;
}
}
}

Braces

Braces should go to newline and your code should look like the following example:

if (int i = 0; i < t; i++)
{
  [...]
}
else
{
  [...]
}

class Dummy()
{
  [...]
}

Whitespaces

Conventional operators should be surrounded by a whitespace.

a = (b + c) * d;

Reserved words should be separated from opening parentheses by a whitespace.

while (true)
for (int i = 0; i < x; ++i)

Commas should be followed by a whitespace.

void Dummy::Method(int a, int b, int c);
int d, e;

Semicolons should be followed by a whitespace if there is more than one expression per line.

for (int i = 0; i < x; ++i)
doSomething(e); doSomething(f); // this is probably bad style anyway

Control statements

Insert new line before

  • else in an if statement
  • catch in a try statement
  • while in a do statement

if else

  • put then statement, return or throw to new line
  • keep else if on one line
if (true) 
  return;

if (true) 
{
  [...]
} 
else if (false) 
{
  return;
} 
else
  return;

switch / case

switch (cmd)
{
  case x:
  {
    doSomething();
    break;
  }
  case x:
  case z:
    return true;
  default:
    doSomething();
}

Naming

Namespaces

Namespaces should be in uppercase letters

namespace KODI
{
...
}

Constants

Use upper case with underscore spacing where necessary.

const int MY_CONSTANT = 1;

Enums

Use CamelCase for the enum name and upper case for the values.

enum Dummy
{
  VALUE_X,
  VALUE_Y
};

Interfaces

We use CamelCase for interface names and they should be prefixed with an uppercase I. Filename should match the interface name, e.g. ILogger.h

class ILogger
{
  void Log(...) = 0;
}

Classes

We use CamelCase for class names and they should be prefixed with an uppercase C. Filename should match the class name without the prefixed C, e.g. Logger.cpp

class CLogger : public ILogger
{
  void Log(...)
}

Methods

We use CamelCase for method names and first letter should be upper case.

void MyDummyClass::DoSomething();

Variables

We use CamelCase for variables. Type prefixing is optional.

Global Variables

Prefix global variables with g_

int g_globalVariableA;

Member Variables

Prefix member variables with m_

int m_variableA;

Conventions

Casts

New code should use C++ style casts and not older C style casts. When modifying existing code the developer can choose to update it to C++ style casts or leave as is. Remember that whenever a dynamic_cast is used the result can be a nullptr and needs to be checked accordingly.

NULL vs nullptr

Prefer the use of nullptr instead of NULL. nullptr is a typesafe version and as such can't be implicitly converted to int or anything else.

auto

Feel free to use auto wherever it improves readability. Good places are iterators or when dealing with containers.

std::map<std::string, std::vector<int>>::iterator i = var.begin();
vs
auto i = var.being();

for loops

Use newer style foreach loops whenever it makes sense. If iterators are used see above about using auto.

for (auto& : var)
{
  ...
}

Use const auto& if there's no reason to modify the value.