To facilitate using phoshs/libhandys code style for newly written code and to provide some guidelines if anyone wanted to change the style in the existing codebase.
3.5 KiB
Building
For build instructions see the README.md
Pull requests
Before filing a pull request run the tests:
ninja -C _build test
Use descriptive commit messages, see
https://wiki.gnome.org/Git/CommitMessages
and check
https://wiki.openstack.org/wiki/GitCommitMessages
for good examples.
Coding Style
While much of the original codebase was written using [GNU's Coding Style][1], please try to follow this document for newly written code. For existing code you should probably try to not mix different code styles too much. This coding style is heavily inspired/copied from [phosh's Coding Style][2] which itself is mostly using [libhandy's Coding Style][3].
These are the differences:
- We're not picky about GTK+ style function argument indentation, that is having multiple arguments on one line is also o.k.
- For callbacks we additionally allow for the
on_<action>
pattern e.g.on_feedback_ended ()
since this helps to keep the namespace clean. - Since we're not a library we usually use
G_DEFINE_TYPE
instead ofG_DEFINE_TYPE_WITH_PRIVATE
(except when we need a deriveable type) since it makes the rest of the code more compact.
Source file layout
We use one file per GObject. It should be named like the GObject with
the calls prefix, lowercase and '_' replaced by '-'. So a hypothetical
CallsThing
would go to src/calls-thing.c
. The
individual C files should be structured as (top to bottom of file):
-
License boilerplate
/* * Copyright (C) year copyright holder * * SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-3-or-later * Author: you <youremail@example.com> */
-
A log domain
#define G_LOG_DOMAIN "CallsThing"
Usually just the GObject.
-
#include
s: Calls ones go first, then glib/gtk, then generic C headers. These blocks are separated by newline and each sorted alphabetically:#define G_LOG_DOMAIN "CallsThing" #include "calls-things.h" #include "calls-other-things.h" #include <gio/gdesktopappinfo.h> #include <glib/glib.h> #include <math.h>
This helps to detect missing headers in includes.
-
docstring
-
property enum
enum { PROP_0, PROP_FOO, PROP_BAR,, LAST_PROP }; static GParamSpec *props[LAST_PROP];
-
signal enum
enum { FOO_HAPPENED, BAR_TRIGGERED, N_SIGNALS }; static guint signals[N_SIGNALS] = { 0 };
-
type definitions
typedef struct _CallsThing { GObject parent; ... } CallsThing; G_DEFINE_TYPE (CallsThing, calls_thing, G_TYPE_OBJECT)
-
private methods and callbacks (these can also go at convenient places above
calls_thing_constructed ()
-
calls_thing_set_properties ()
-
calls_thing_get_properties ()
-
calls_thing_constructed ()
-
calls_thing_dispose ()
-
calls_thing_finalize ()
-
calls_thing_class_init ()
-
calls_thing_init ()
-
calls_thing_new ()
-
Public methods, all starting with the object name(i.e.
calls_thing_
)
The reason public methods go at the bottom is that they have declarations in the header file and can thus be referenced from anywhere else in the source file.
Try to avoid forward declarations where possible. [1]: https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/standards.html#Formatting [2]: https://source.puri.sm/Librem5/phosh/blob/master/HACKING.md#coding-style [3]: https://source.puri.sm/Librem5/libhandy/blob/master/HACKING.md#coding-style