Documentation / CodingGuidelineson commit Documentation: add --patch option to synopsis of git-add (2164037)
   1Like other projects, we also have some guidelines to keep to the
   2code.  For git in general, three rough rules are:
   3
   4 - Most importantly, we never say "It's in POSIX; we'll happily
   5   ignore your needs should your system not conform to it."
   6   We live in the real world.
   7
   8 - However, we often say "Let's stay away from that construct,
   9   it's not even in POSIX".
  10
  11 - In spite of the above two rules, we sometimes say "Although
  12   this is not in POSIX, it (is so convenient | makes the code
  13   much more readable | has other good characteristics) and
  14   practically all the platforms we care about support it, so
  15   let's use it".
  16
  17   Again, we live in the real world, and it is sometimes a
  18   judgement call, the decision based more on real world
  19   constraints people face than what the paper standard says.
  20
  21
  22As for more concrete guidelines, just imitate the existing code
  23(this is a good guideline, no matter which project you are
  24contributing to).  But if you must have a list of rules,
  25here they are.
  26
  27For shell scripts specifically (not exhaustive):
  28
  29 - We prefer $( ... ) for command substitution; unlike ``, it
  30   properly nests.  It should have been the way Bourne spelled
  31   it from day one, but unfortunately isn't.
  32
  33 - We use ${parameter-word} and its [-=?+] siblings, and their
  34   colon'ed "unset or null" form.
  35
  36 - We use ${parameter#word} and its [#%] siblings, and their
  37   doubled "longest matching" form.
  38
  39 - We use Arithmetic Expansion $(( ... )).
  40
  41 - No "Substring Expansion" ${parameter:offset:length}.
  42
  43 - No shell arrays.
  44
  45 - No strlen ${#parameter}.
  46
  47 - No regexp ${parameter/pattern/string}.
  48
  49 - We do not use Process Substitution <(list) or >(list).
  50
  51 - We prefer "test" over "[ ... ]".
  52
  53 - We do not write the noiseword "function" in front of shell
  54   functions.
  55
  56For C programs:
  57
  58 - We use tabs to indent, and interpret tabs as taking up to
  59   8 spaces.
  60
  61 - We try to keep to at most 80 characters per line.
  62
  63 - When declaring pointers, the star sides with the variable
  64   name, i.e. "char *string", not "char* string" or
  65   "char * string".  This makes it easier to understand code
  66   like "char *string, c;".
  67
  68 - We avoid using braces unnecessarily.  I.e.
  69
  70        if (bla) {
  71                x = 1;
  72        }
  73
  74   is frowned upon.  A gray area is when the statement extends
  75   over a few lines, and/or you have a lengthy comment atop of
  76   it.  Also, like in the Linux kernel, if there is a long list
  77   of "else if" statements, it can make sense to add braces to
  78   single line blocks.
  79
  80 - Try to make your code understandable.  You may put comments
  81   in, but comments invariably tend to stale out when the code
  82   they were describing changes.  Often splitting a function
  83   into two makes the intention of the code much clearer.
  84
  85 - Double negation is often harder to understand than no negation
  86   at all.
  87
  88 - Some clever tricks, like using the !! operator with arithmetic
  89   constructs, can be extremely confusing to others.  Avoid them,
  90   unless there is a compelling reason to use them.
  91
  92 - Use the API.  No, really.  We have a strbuf (variable length
  93   string), several arrays with the ALLOC_GROW() macro, a
  94   path_list for sorted string lists, a hash map (mapping struct
  95   objects) named "struct decorate", amongst other things.
  96
  97 - When you come up with an API, document it.
  98
  99 - The first #include in C files, except in platform specific
 100   compat/ implementations, should be git-compat-util.h or another
 101   header file that includes it, such as cache.h or builtin.h.
 102
 103 - If you are planning a new command, consider writing it in shell
 104   or perl first, so that changes in semantics can be easily
 105   changed and discussed.  Many git commands started out like
 106   that, and a few are still scripts.
 107
 108 - Avoid introducing a new dependency into git. This means you
 109   usually should stay away from scripting languages not already
 110   used in the git core command set (unless your command is clearly
 111   separate from it, such as an importer to convert random-scm-X
 112   repositories to git).