| # libyang Coding Style |
| |
| This file describes the coding style used in most C files in the libyang |
| library. |
| |
| ## Basics |
| |
| - Use space instead of tabs for indentations. |
| |
| - There is no strict limit for the line length, However, try to keep lines in a |
| reasonable length (120 characters). |
| |
| - Avoid trailing spaces on lines. |
| |
| - Put one blank line between function definitions. |
| |
| - Don't mix declarations and code within a block. Similarly, don't use |
| declarations in iteration statements. |
| |
| ## Naming |
| |
| Use underscores to separate words in an identifier: `multi_word_name`. |
| |
| Use lowercase for most names. Use uppercase for macros, macro parameters and |
| members of enumerations. |
| |
| Do not use names that begin with `_`. If you need a name for "internal use |
| only", use `__` as a suffix instead of a prefix. |
| |
| ## Comments |
| |
| Avoid `//` comments. Use `/* ... */` comments, write block comments with the |
| leading asterisk on each line. You may put the `/*` and `*/` on the same line as |
| comment text if you prefer. |
| |
| ```c |
| /* |
| * comment text |
| */ |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Functions |
| |
| Put the return type, function name, and the braces that surround the function's |
| code on separate lines, all starting in column 0. |
| |
| ```c |
| static int |
| foo(int arg) |
| { |
| ... |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| When you need to put the function parameters on multiple lines, start new line |
| at column after the opening parenthesis from the initial line. |
| |
| ```c |
| static int |
| my_function(struct my_struct *p1, struct another_struct *p2, |
| int size) |
| { |
| ... |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| In the absence of good reasons for another order, the following parameter order |
| is preferred. One notable exception is that data parameters and their |
| corresponding size parameters should be paired. |
| |
| 1. The primary object being manipulated, if any (equivalent to the "this" |
| pointer in C++). |
| 2. Input-only parameters. |
| 3. Input/output parameters. |
| 4. Output-only parameters. |
| 5. Status parameter. |
| |
| Functions that destroy an instance of a dynamically-allocated type should accept |
| and ignore a null pointer argument. Code that calls such a function (including |
| the C standard library function `free()`) should omit a null-pointer check. We |
| find that this usually makes code easier to read. |
| |
| ### Function Prototypes |
| |
| Put the return type and function name on the same line in a function prototype: |
| |
| ```c |
| static const struct int foo(int arg); |
| ``` |
| |
| ## Statements |
| |
| - Indent each level of code with 4 spaces. |
| - Put single space between `if`, `while`, `for`, etc. statements and the |
| expression that follow them. On the other hand, function calls has no space |
| between the function name and opening parenthesis. |
| - Opening code block brace is kept at the same line with the `if`, `while`, |
| `for` or `switch` statements. |
| |
| ```c |
| if (a) { |
| x = exp(a); |
| } else { |
| return 1; |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| - Start switch's cases at the same column as the switch. |
| |
| ```c |
| switch (conn->state) { |
| case 0: |
| return "data found"; |
| case 1: |
| return "data not found"; |
| default: |
| return "unknown error"; |
| } |
| ``` |
| |
| - Do not put gratuitous parentheses around the expression in a return statement, |
| that is, write `return 0;` and not `return(0);` |
| |
| ## Types |
| |
| Use typedefs sparingly. Code is clearer if the actual type is visible at the |
| point of declaration. Do not, in general, declare a typedef for a struct, union, |
| or enum. Do not declare a typedef for a pointer type, because this can be very |
| confusing to the reader. |
| |
| Use the `int<N>_t` and `uint<N>_t` types from `<stdint.h>` for exact-width |
| integer types. Use the `PRId<N>`, `PRIu<N>`, and `PRIx<N>` macros from |
| `<inttypes.h>` for formatting them with `printf()` and related functions. |
| |
| Pointer declarators bind to the variable name, not the type name. Write |
| `int *x`, not `int* x` and definitely not `int * x`. |
| |
| ## Expresions |
| |
| Put one space on each side of infix binary and ternary operators: |
| |
| ```c |
| * / % + - << >> < <= > >= == != & ^ | && || ?: = += -= *= /= %= &= ^= |= <<= >>= |
| ``` |
| |
| Do not put any white space around postfix, prefix, or grouping operators with |
| one exception - `sizeof`, see the note below. |
| |
| ```c |
| () [] -> . ! ~ ++ -- + - * & |
| ``` |
| |
| The "sizeof" operator is unique among C operators in that it accepts two very |
| different kinds of operands: an expression or a type. In general, prefer to |
| specify an expression |
| ```c |
| int *x = calloc(1, sizeof *x); |
| ``` |
| When the operand of sizeof is an expression, there is no need to parenthesize |
| that operand, and please don't. There is an exception to this rule when you need |
| to work with partially compatible structures: |
| |
| ```c |
| struct a_s { |
| uint8_t type; |
| } |
| |
| struct b_s { |
| uint8_t type; |
| char *str; |
| } |
| |
| struct c_s { |
| uint8_t type; |
| uint8_t *u8; |
| } |
| ... |
| struct a_s *a; |
| |
| switch (type) { |
| case 1: |
| a = (struct a_s *)calloc(1, sizeof(struct b_s)); |
| break; |
| case 2: |
| a = (struct a_s *)calloc(1, sizeof(struct c_s)); |
| break; |
| ... |
| ``` |