Difference between revisions of "Coding Style"

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You should add yourself to the <tt>COPYRIGHT</tt> section of a file if you did a major contribution to it and could take responsibility for the whole file or a part of it.
 
You should add yourself to the <tt>COPYRIGHT</tt> section of a file if you did a major contribution to it and could take responsibility for the whole file or a part of it.
  
<tt>FILE</tt> line of the old file should be removed.
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<tt>FILE</tt> line of the old header should be removed.
 
</li>
 
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Revision as of 12:14, 29 January 2018

This article describes general coding style guidelines, which should be used for new ReactOS code. These guidelines apply exclusively to C and C++ source files. The Members of ReactOS agreed on this document in the October 2013 meeting.

As much existing ReactOS code as possible should be converted to this style unless there are reasons against doing this (like if the code is going to be rewritten from scratch in the near future). See Notes on reformatting existing code for more details.

Code synchronized with other sources (like Wine) must not be rewritten.

File Structure

  1. Every ReactOS source code file should include a file header like this:
    /*
     * PROJECT:     ReactOS Kernel
     * LICENSE:     GPL-2.0+ (https://spdx.org/licenses/GPL-2.0+)
     * PURPOSE:     Does cool things like ...
     * COPYRIGHT:   Copyright 2017 Arno Nymous (abc@mailaddress.com)
     *              Copyright 2017 Mike Blablabla (mike@blabla.com)
     */
    

    Please use SPDX license identifiers available at https://spdx.org/licenses. This makes our source file parseable by licensing tools!

    You should add yourself to the COPYRIGHT section of a file if you did a major contribution to it and could take responsibility for the whole file or a part of it.

    FILE line of the old header should be removed.

  2. Use a header comparable to the following one for functions:
    /**
     * @name SomeAPI
     * @implemented
     *
     * Do nothing for 500ms.
     *
     * @param SomeParameter
     * Description of the parameter.
     *
     * @param YetAnotherParameter
     * Bleh, bleh :)
     *
     * @return
     * STATUS_SUCCESS in case of success, STATUS_UNSUCCESSFUL
     * otherwise.
     *
     * @remarks Must be called at IRQL == DISPATCH_LEVEL
     *
     */
    

Indentation

  1. Indent with 4 spaces, don’t use tabs!
  2. Indent both a case label and the case statement of a switch statement.

    Right:

    switch (Condition)
    {
        case 1:
            DoSomething();
            break;
    }
    

    Wrong:

    switch (Condition)
    {
    case 1:
         DoSomething();
         break;
    }
    

Spacing

  1. Do not use spaces around unary operators.
    Right: i++;
    Wrong: i ++;
  2. Place spaces around binary and ternary operators.
    Right: a = b + c;
    Wrong: a=b+c;
  3. Do not place spaces before comma and semicolon.

    Right:

    for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++)
        DoSomething();
    
    func1(a, b);
    

    Wrong:

    for (int i = 0 ; i < 5 ; i++)
        DoSomething();
    
    func1(a , b) ;
    
  4. Place spaces between control statements and their parentheses.

    Right:

    if (Condition)
        DoSomething();
    

    Wrong:

    if(Condition)
        DoSomething();
    
  5. Do not place spaces between a function and its parentheses, or between a parenthesis and its content.

    Right:

    func(a, b);
    

    Wrong:

    func (a, b);
    func( a, b );
    

Line breaking

  1. Each statement should get its own line.

    Right:

    x++;
    y++;
    
    if (Condition)
        DoSomething();
    

    Wrong:

    x++; y++;
    
    if (Condition) DoSomething();
    

Braces

  1. Always put braces ({ and }) on their own lines.
  2. One-line control clauses may use braces, but this is not a requirement. An exception are one-line control clauses including additional comments.

    Right:

    if (Condition)
        DoSomething();
    
    if (Condition)
    {
        DoSomething();
    }
    
    if (Condition)
    {
        // This is a comment
        DoSomething();
    }
    
    if (Condition)
        DoSomething();
    else
        DoSomethingElse();
    
    if (Condition)
    {
        DoSomething();
    }
    else
    {
        DoSomethingElse();
        YetAnother();
    }
    

    Wrong:

    if (Condition) {
        DoSomething();
    }
    
    if (Condition)
        // This is a comment
        DoSomething();
    
    if (Condition)
        DoSomething();
    else
    {
        DoSomethingElse();
        YetAnother();
    }
    

Control structures

  1. Don’t use inverse logic in control clauses.
    Right: if (i == 1)
    Wrong: if (1 == i)
  2. Avoid too many levels of cascaded control structures. Prefer a “linear style” over a “tree style”. Use goto when it helps to make the code cleaner (e.g. for cleanup patches).

    Right:

    if (!func1())
        return;
    
    i = func2();
    if (i == 0)
        return;
    
    j = func3();
    if (j == 1)
        return;
    
    

    Wrong:

    if (func1())
    {
        i = func2();
        if (func2())
        {
            j = func3();
            if (func3())
            {
                
            }
        }
    }
    

Naming

  1. Capitalize names of variables and functions.
    Hungarian Notation may be used when developing for Win32, but it is not required. If you don’t use it, the first letter of a name must be a capital too (no camelCase). Do not use underscores as separators either.

    Right:

    PLIST_ENTRY FirstEntry;
    VOID NTAPI IopDeleteIoCompletion(PVOID ObjectBody);
    PWSTR pwszTest;
    

    Wrong:

    PLIST_ENTRY first_entry;
    VOID NTAPI iop_delete_io_completion(PVOID objectBody);
    PWSTR pwsztest;
    
  2. Avoid abbreviating function and variable names, use descriptive verbs where possible.
  3. Precede boolean values with meaningful verbs like "is" and "did" if possible and if it fits the usage.

    Right:

    BOOLEAN IsValid;
    BOOLEAN DidSendData;
    

    Wrong:

    BOOLEAN Valid;
    BOOLEAN SentData;
    

Commenting

  1. Avoid line-wasting comments, which could fit into a single line.

    Right:

    // This is a one-line comment
    
    /* This is a C-style comment */
    
    //
    // This is a comment over multiple lines.
    // We don’t define any strict rules for it.
    //
    

    Wrong:

    //
    // This comment wastes two lines
    //
    

Null, false and 0

  1. The null pointer should be written as NULL.
    In the rare case that your environment recommends a different null pointer (e.g. C++11 nullptr), you may use this one of course. Just don’t use the value 0.
  2. Win32/NT Boolean values should be written as TRUE and FALSE.
    In the rare case that you use C/C++ bool variables, you should write them as true and false.

Notes on reformatting existing code

  • Never totally reformat a file and put a code change into it. Do this in separate commits.
  • If a commit only consists of formatting changes, say this clearly in the commit message by preceding it with [FORMATTING].

Using an automatic code style tool

TO BE ADDED BY User:Zefklop

Points deliberately left out

Additional ideas were suggested during the discussion of this document, but a consensus couldn't be reached on them. Therefore we refrain from enforcing any rules on these points:

See also