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author | Mike Funk <mfunk@xulonpress.com> | 2011-10-10 16:31:56 +0200 |
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committer | Mike Funk <mfunk@xulonpress.com> | 2011-10-10 16:31:56 +0200 |
commit | 8afb848fded8fbdfa24b72df7f067e960c83c0e8 (patch) | |
tree | bf3d8fa70610253cb13a87c1aa9d634dcee9f413 /user_guide_src/source/general/styleguide.rst | |
parent | 25246b6b29d87ad7a4f304a7b5623c9f57953356 (diff) | |
parent | bdbe6d222c15e9d1b42a8ee3a3e7fe04b753c1ba (diff) |
Codeigniter develop latest.
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-rw-r--r-- | user_guide_src/source/general/styleguide.rst | 651 |
1 files changed, 651 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/user_guide_src/source/general/styleguide.rst b/user_guide_src/source/general/styleguide.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000..0373fc791 --- /dev/null +++ b/user_guide_src/source/general/styleguide.rst @@ -0,0 +1,651 @@ +######################## +General Style and Syntax +######################## + +The following page describes the use of coding rules adhered to when +developing CodeIgniter. + +.. contents:: Table of Contents + +File Format +=========== + +Files should be saved with Unicode (UTF-8) encoding. The BOM should +*not* be used. Unlike UTF-16 and UTF-32, there's no byte order to +indicate in a UTF-8 encoded file, and the BOM can have a negative side +effect in PHP of sending output, preventing the application from being +able to set its own headers. Unix line endings should be used (LF). + +Here is how to apply these settings in some of the more common text +editors. Instructions for your text editor may vary; check your text +editor's documentation. + +TextMate +'''''''' + +#. Open the Application Preferences +#. Click Advanced, and then the "Saving" tab +#. In "File Encoding", select "UTF-8 (recommended)" +#. In "Line Endings", select "LF (recommended)" +#. *Optional:* Check "Use for existing files as well" if you wish to + modify the line endings of files you open to your new preference. + +BBEdit +'''''' + +#. Open the Application Preferences +#. Select "Text Encodings" on the left. +#. In "Default text encoding for new documents", select "Unicode (UTF-8, + no BOM)" +#. *Optional:* In "If file's encoding can't be guessed, use", select + "Unicode (UTF-8, no BOM)" +#. Select "Text Files" on the left. +#. In "Default line breaks", select "Mac OS X and Unix (LF)" + +PHP Closing Tag +=============== + +The PHP closing tag on a PHP document **?>** is optional to the PHP +parser. However, if used, any whitespace following the closing tag, +whether introduced by the developer, user, or an FTP application, can +cause unwanted output, PHP errors, or if the latter are suppressed, +blank pages. For this reason, all PHP files should **OMIT** the closing +PHP tag, and instead use a comment block to mark the end of file and +it's location relative to the application root. This allows you to still +identify a file as being complete and not truncated. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + <?php + + echo "Here's my code!"; + + ?> + +**CORRECT**:: + + <?php + + echo "Here's my code!"; + + /* End of file myfile.php */ + /* Location: ./system/modules/mymodule/myfile.php */ + +Class and Method Naming +======================= + +Class names should always start with an uppercase letter. Multiple words +should be separated with an underscore, and not CamelCased. All other +class methods should be entirely lowercased and named to clearly +indicate their function, preferably including a verb. Try to avoid +overly long and verbose names. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + class superclass + class SuperClass + +**CORRECT**:: + + class Super_class + +:: + + class Super_class { + + function __construct() + { + + } + } + +Examples of improper and proper method naming: + +**INCORRECT**:: + + function fileproperties() // not descriptive and needs underscore separator + function fileProperties() // not descriptive and uses CamelCase + function getfileproperties() // Better! But still missing underscore separator + function getFileProperties() // uses CamelCase + function get_the_file_properties_from_the_file() // wordy + +**CORRECT**:: + + function get_file_properties() // descriptive, underscore separator, and all lowercase letters + +Variable Names +============== + +The guidelines for variable naming is very similar to that used for +class methods. Namely, variables should contain only lowercase letters, +use underscore separators, and be reasonably named to indicate their +purpose and contents. Very short, non-word variables should only be used +as iterators in for() loops. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + $j = 'foo'; // single letter variables should only be used in for() loops + $Str // contains uppercase letters + $bufferedText // uses CamelCasing, and could be shortened without losing semantic meaning + $groupid // multiple words, needs underscore separator + $name_of_last_city_used // too long + +**CORRECT**:: + + for ($j = 0; $j < 10; $j++) + $str + $buffer + $group_id + $last_city + +Commenting +========== + +In general, code should be commented prolifically. It not only helps +describe the flow and intent of the code for less experienced +programmers, but can prove invaluable when returning to your own code +months down the line. There is not a required format for comments, but +the following are recommended. + +`DocBlock <http://manual.phpdoc.org/HTMLSmartyConverter/HandS/phpDocumentor/tutorial_phpDocumentor.howto.pkg.html#basics.docblock>`_ +style comments preceding class and method declarations so they can be +picked up by IDEs:: + + /** + * Super Class + * + * @package Package Name + * @subpackage Subpackage + * @category Category + * @author Author Name + * @link http://example.com + */ + class Super_class { + +:: + + /** + * Encodes string for use in XML + * + * @access public + * @param string + * @return string + */ + function xml_encode($str) + +Use single line comments within code, leaving a blank line between large +comment blocks and code. + +:: + + // break up the string by newlines + $parts = explode("\n", $str); + + // A longer comment that needs to give greater detail on what is + // occurring and why can use multiple single-line comments. Try to + // keep the width reasonable, around 70 characters is the easiest to + // read. Don't hesitate to link to permanent external resources + // that may provide greater detail: + // + // http://example.com/information_about_something/in_particular/ + + $parts = $this->foo($parts); + +Constants +========= + +Constants follow the same guidelines as do variables, except constants +should always be fully uppercase. *Always use CodeIgniter constants when +appropriate, i.e. SLASH, LD, RD, PATH_CACHE, etc.* + +**INCORRECT**:: + + myConstant // missing underscore separator and not fully uppercase + N // no single-letter constants + S_C_VER // not descriptive + $str = str_replace('{foo}', 'bar', $str); // should use LD and RD constants + +**CORRECT**:: + + MY_CONSTANT + NEWLINE + SUPER_CLASS_VERSION + $str = str_replace(LD.'foo'.RD, 'bar', $str); + +TRUE, FALSE, and NULL +===================== + +**TRUE**, **FALSE**, and **NULL** keywords should always be fully +uppercase. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + if ($foo == true) + $bar = false; + function foo($bar = null) + +**CORRECT**:: + + if ($foo == TRUE) + $bar = FALSE; + function foo($bar = NULL) + +Logical Operators +================= + +Use of **\|\|** is discouraged as its clarity on some output devices is +low (looking like the number 11 for instance). **&&** is preferred over +**AND** but either are acceptable, and a space should always precede and +follow **!**. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + if ($foo || $bar) + if ($foo AND $bar) // okay but not recommended for common syntax highlighting applications + if (!$foo) + if (! is_array($foo)) + +**CORRECT**:: + + if ($foo OR $bar) + if ($foo && $bar) // recommended + if ( ! $foo) + if ( ! is_array($foo)) + + +Comparing Return Values and Typecasting +======================================= + +Some PHP functions return FALSE on failure, but may also have a valid +return value of "" or 0, which would evaluate to FALSE in loose +comparisons. Be explicit by comparing the variable type when using these +return values in conditionals to ensure the return value is indeed what +you expect, and not a value that has an equivalent loose-type +evaluation. + +Use the same stringency in returning and checking your own variables. +Use **===** and **!==** as necessary. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + // If 'foo' is at the beginning of the string, strpos will return a 0, + // resulting in this conditional evaluating as TRUE + if (strpos($str, 'foo') == FALSE) + +**CORRECT**:: + + if (strpos($str, 'foo') === FALSE) + +**INCORRECT**:: + + function build_string($str = "") + { + if ($str == "") // uh-oh! What if FALSE or the integer 0 is passed as an argument? + { + + } + } + +**CORRECT**:: + + function build_string($str = "") + { + if ($str === "") + { + + } + } + + +See also information regarding +`typecasting <http://us3.php.net/manual/en/language.types.type-juggling.php#language.types.typecasting>`_, +which can be quite useful. Typecasting has a slightly different effect +which may be desirable. When casting a variable as a string, for +instance, NULL and boolean FALSE variables become empty strings, 0 (and +other numbers) become strings of digits, and boolean TRUE becomes "1":: + + $str = (string) $str; // cast $str as a string + +Debugging Code +============== + +No debugging code can be left in place for submitted add-ons unless it +is commented out, i.e. no var_dump(), print_r(), die(), and exit() +calls that were used while creating the add-on, unless they are +commented out. + +:: + + // print_r($foo); + +Whitespace in Files +=================== + +No whitespace can precede the opening PHP tag or follow the closing PHP +tag. Output is buffered, so whitespace in your files can cause output to +begin before CodeIgniter outputs its content, leading to errors and an +inability for CodeIgniter to send proper headers. In the examples below, +select the text with your mouse to reveal the incorrect whitespace. + + +Compatibility +============= + +Unless specifically mentioned in your add-on's documentation, all code +must be compatible with PHP version 5.1+. Additionally, do not use PHP +functions that require non-default libraries to be installed unless your +code contains an alternative method when the function is not available, +or you implicitly document that your add-on requires said PHP libraries. + +Class and File Names using Common Words +======================================= + +When your class or filename is a common word, or might quite likely be +identically named in another PHP script, provide a unique prefix to help +prevent collision. Always realize that your end users may be running +other add-ons or third party PHP scripts. Choose a prefix that is unique +to your identity as a developer or company. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + class Email pi.email.php + class Xml ext.xml.php + class Import mod.import.php + +**CORRECT**:: + + class Pre_email pi.pre_email.php + class Pre_xml ext.pre_xml.php + class Pre_import mod.pre_import.php + +Database Table Names +==================== + +Any tables that your add-on might use must use the 'exp\_' prefix, +followed by a prefix uniquely identifying you as the developer or +company, and then a short descriptive table name. You do not need to be +concerned about the database prefix being used on the user's +installation, as CodeIgniter's database class will automatically convert +'exp\_' to what is actually being used. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + email_addresses // missing both prefixes + pre_email_addresses // missing exp_ prefix + exp_email_addresses // missing unique prefix + +**CORRECT**:: + + exp_pre_email_addresses + +.. note:: Be mindful that MySQL has a limit of 64 characters for table + names. This should not be an issue as table names that would exceed this + would likely have unreasonable names. For instance, the following table + name exceeds this limitation by one character. Silly, no? + **exp_pre_email_addresses_of_registered_users_in_seattle_washington** + +One File per Class +================== + +Use separate files for each class your add-on uses, unless the classes +are *closely related*. An example of CodeIgniter files that contains +multiple classes is the Database class file, which contains both the DB +class and the DB_Cache class, and the Magpie plugin, which contains +both the Magpie and Snoopy classes. + +Whitespace +========== + +Use tabs for whitespace in your code, not spaces. This may seem like a +small thing, but using tabs instead of whitespace allows the developer +looking at your code to have indentation at levels that they prefer and +customize in whatever application they use. And as a side benefit, it +results in (slightly) more compact files, storing one tab character +versus, say, four space characters. + +Line Breaks +=========== + +Files must be saved with Unix line breaks. This is more of an issue for +developers who work in Windows, but in any case ensure that your text +editor is setup to save files with Unix line breaks. + +Code Indenting +============== + +Use Allman style indenting. With the exception of Class declarations, +braces are always placed on a line by themselves, and indented at the +same level as the control statement that "owns" them. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + function foo($bar) { + // ... + } + + foreach ($arr as $key => $val) { + // ... + } + + if ($foo == $bar) { + // ... + } else { + // ... + } + + for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++) + { + for ($j = 0; $j < 10; $j++) + { + // ... + } + } + +**CORRECT**:: + + function foo($bar) + { + // ... + } + + foreach ($arr as $key => $val) + { + // ... + } + + if ($foo == $bar) + { + // ... + } + else + { + // ... + } + + for ($i = 0; $i < 10; $i++) + { + for ($j = 0; $j < 10; $j++) + { + // ... + } + } + +Bracket and Parenthetic Spacing +=============================== + +In general, parenthesis and brackets should not use any additional +spaces. The exception is that a space should always follow PHP control +structures that accept arguments with parenthesis (declare, do-while, +elseif, for, foreach, if, switch, while), to help distinguish them from +functions and increase readability. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + $arr[ $foo ] = 'foo'; + +**CORRECT**:: + + $arr[$foo] = 'foo'; // no spaces around array keys + +**INCORRECT**:: + + function foo ( $bar ) + { + + } + +**CORRECT**:: + + function foo($bar) // no spaces around parenthesis in function declarations + { + + } + +**INCORRECT**:: + + foreach( $query->result() as $row ) + +**CORRECT**:: + + foreach ($query->result() as $row) // single space following PHP control structures, but not in interior parenthesis + +Localized Text +============== + +Any text that is output in the control panel should use language +variables in your lang file to allow localization. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + return "Invalid Selection"; + +**CORRECT**:: + + return $this->lang->line('invalid_selection'); + +Private Methods and Variables +============================= + +Methods and variables that are only accessed internally by your class, +such as utility and helper functions that your public methods use for +code abstraction, should be prefixed with an underscore. + +:: + + convert_text() // public method + _convert_text() // private method + +PHP Errors +========== + +Code must run error free and not rely on warnings and notices to be +hidden to meet this requirement. For instance, never access a variable +that you did not set yourself (such as $_POST array keys) without first +checking to see that it isset(). + +Make sure that while developing your add-on, error reporting is enabled +for ALL users, and that display_errors is enabled in the PHP +environment. You can check this setting with:: + + if (ini_get('display_errors') == 1) + { + exit "Enabled"; + } + +On some servers where display_errors is disabled, and you do not have +the ability to change this in the php.ini, you can often enable it with:: + + ini_set('display_errors', 1); + +**NOTE:** Setting the +`display_errors <http://us.php.net/manual/en/ref.errorfunc.php#ini.display-errors>`_ +setting with ini_set() at runtime is not identical to having it enabled +in the PHP environment. Namely, it will not have any effect if the +script has fatal errors + +Short Open Tags +=============== + +Always use full PHP opening tags, in case a server does not have +short_open_tag enabled. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + <? echo $foo; ?> + + <?=$foo?> + +**CORRECT**:: + + <?php echo $foo; ?> + +One Statement Per Line +====================== + +Never combine statements on one line. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + $foo = 'this'; $bar = 'that'; $bat = str_replace($foo, $bar, $bag); + +**CORRECT**:: + + $foo = 'this'; + $bar = 'that'; + $bat = str_replace($foo, $bar, $bag); + +Strings +======= + +Always use single quoted strings unless you need variables parsed, and +in cases where you do need variables parsed, use braces to prevent +greedy token parsing. You may also use double-quoted strings if the +string contains single quotes, so you do not have to use escape +characters. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + "My String" // no variable parsing, so no use for double quotes + "My string $foo" // needs braces + 'SELECT foo FROM bar WHERE baz = \'bag\'' // ugly + +**CORRECT**:: + + 'My String' + "My string {$foo}" + "SELECT foo FROM bar WHERE baz = 'bag'" + +SQL Queries +=========== + +MySQL keywords are always capitalized: SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, WHERE, +AS, JOIN, ON, IN, etc. + +Break up long queries into multiple lines for legibility, preferably +breaking for each clause. + +**INCORRECT**:: + + // keywords are lowercase and query is too long for + // a single line (... indicates continuation of line) + $query = $this->db->query("select foo, bar, baz, foofoo, foobar as raboof, foobaz from exp_pre_email_addresses + ...where foo != 'oof' and baz != 'zab' order by foobaz limit 5, 100"); + +**CORRECT**:: + + $query = $this->db->query("SELECT foo, bar, baz, foofoo, foobar AS raboof, foobaz + FROM exp_pre_email_addresses + WHERE foo != 'oof' + AND baz != 'zab' + ORDER BY foobaz + LIMIT 5, 100"); + +Default Function Arguments +========================== + +Whenever appropriate, provide function argument defaults, which helps +prevent PHP errors with mistaken calls and provides common fallback +values which can save a few lines of code. Example:: + + function foo($bar = '', $baz = FALSE) + |