From 9057d68f2234f164342b4fc23a48f5b3a31c8ffe Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Christian Neukirchen Date: Sun, 28 Dec 2008 21:10:34 +0100 Subject: Add RUBY-STYLE --- RUBY-STYLE | 172 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 172 insertions(+) create mode 100644 RUBY-STYLE diff --git a/RUBY-STYLE b/RUBY-STYLE new file mode 100644 index 0000000..62a71c1 --- /dev/null +++ b/RUBY-STYLE @@ -0,0 +1,172 @@ += Christian Neukirchen's Ruby Style Guide + +You may not like all rules presented here, but they work very well for +me and have helped producing high quality code. Everyone is free to +code however they want, write and follow their own style guides, but +when you contribute to my code, please follow these rules: + + +== Formatting: + +* Use ASCII (or UTF-8, if you have to). + +* Use 2 space indent, no tabs. + +* Use Unix-style line endings. + +* Use spaces around operators, after commas, around { and before }. + +* Use two spaces before statement modifiers (postfix + if/unless/while/until/rescue). + +* Use an empty line before the return value of a method (unless it + only has one line), and an empty line between defs. + +* Use RDoc and its conventions for API documentation. Don't put an + empty line between the comment block and the def. + +* Use empty lines to break up a long method into logical paragraphs. + +* Keep lines <80 chars. + +* Avoid trailing whitespace. + + +== Syntax: + +* Use def with parentheses when there are arguments. + +* Never use for, unless you exactly know why. + +* Never use then. + +* Use when x; ... for one-line cases. + +* Indent when as deep as case. + +* Use &&/|| for boolean expressions, and/or for control flow. (Rule + of thumb: If you have to use outer parentheses, you are using the + wrong operators.) + +* Avoid multiline ?:, use if. + +* Suppress superfluous parentheses when calling methods, but keep them + when calling "functions", i.e. when you use the return value in the + same line. + + x = Math.sin(y) + array.delete e + +* Prefer {...} over do...end. Multiline {...} is fine: having + different statement endings (} for blocks, end for if/while/...) + makes it easier to see what ends where. But use do...end for + "control flow" and "method definitions" (e.g. in Rakefiles and + certain DSLs.) Avoid do...end when chaining. + +* Avoid return where not required. + +* Avoid line continuation (\) where not required. + +* Using the return value of = is okay: + + if v = array.grep(/foo/) ... + +* Use ||= freely. + +* Use non-OO regexps (they won't make the code better). Freely use + =~, $0-9, $~, $` and $' when needed. + + +== Naming: + +* Use snake_case for methods. + +* Use CamelCase for classes and modules. (Keep acronyms like HTTP, + RFC, XML uppercase.) + +* Use SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE for other constants. + +* The length of an identifier determines its scope. Use one-letter + variables for short block/method parameters, according to this + scheme: + + a,b,c: any object + d: directory names + e: elements of an Enumerable + f: files and file names + i,j: indexes + k: the key part of a hash entry + m: methods + o: any object + r: return values of short methods + s: strings + v: any value + v: the value part of a hash entry + x,y,z: numbers + + And in general, the first letter of the class name if all objects + are of that type. + +* Use _ or names prefixed with _ for unused variables. + +* When using inject with short blocks, name the arguments |a, e| + (mnemonic: accumulator, element) + +* When defining binary operators, name the argument "other". + +* Prefer map over collect, find over detect, find_all over select. + + +== Comments: + +* Comments longer than a word are capitalized and use punctuation. + Use two spaces after periods. + +* Avoid superfluous comments. + + +== The rest: + +* Avoid hashes-as-optional-parameters. Does the method do too much? + +* Avoid long methods. + +* Avoid long parameter lists. + +* Use def self.method to define singleton methods. + +* Add "global" methods to Kernel (if you have to) and make them private. + +* Avoid alias when alias_method will do. + +* Use OptionParser for parsing complex command line options and + ruby -s for trivial command line options. + +* Write for 1.8, but avoid doing things you know that will break in 1.9. + +* Avoid needless metaprogramming. + + +== General: + +* Code in a functional way, avoid mutation when it makes sense. + +* Do not mess around in core classes when writing libraries. + +* Do not program defensively. + (See http://www.erlang.se/doc/programming_rules.shtml#HDR11.) + +* Keep the code simple. + +* Don't overdesign. + +* Don't underdesign. + +* Avoid bugs. + +* Read other style guides and apply the parts that don't dissent with + this list. + +* Be consistent. + +* Use common sense. -- cgit 1.4.1