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CODING_STANDARDS
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CODING_STANDARDS
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PHP-GTK Coding Standards
For internals work (that is, code written in C), aim to adhere to the
coding standards distributed with the PHP source:
http://cvs.php.net/php-src/CODING_STANDARDS.
For code written in PHP (for example, demo or test scripts and manual
examples), it has been agreed to adhere to the PEAR coding standards,
for the most part. The only differences are in the naming conventions
- please read the final section below carefully, even if you know PEAR
CS inside out.
The full PEAR Coding Standards document, including plentiful examples,
is available online at http://pear.php.net/manual/en/standards.php.
Overview:
File formats:
ISO-8859-1, text/ASCII, Unix line endings, single line feed after
content.
Indenting and line length:
No tabs, indent 4 spaces, aim to hard wrap at 78 characters (the PEAR
CS suggests 75 to 85 is 'safe', but in documentation it may not be).
Control structures:
Single space to follow control keyword, 'else' on a single line, and
always use curly braces.
e.g.
if ((condition1) || (condition2)) {
action1;
} elseif ((condition3) && (condition4)) {
action2;
} else {
defaultaction;
}
Function calls:
Single spacing between all elements except the brackets.
e.g.
$var = foo($bar, $baz, $quux);
In a block of related assignments this can change.
e.g.
$short = foo($bar);
$long_variable = foo($baz);
Function definitions:
The 'one true brace' convention is used. Arguments with default values
should go at the end of the argument list. Meaningful values should be
returned where possible.
e.g.
function fooFunction($arg1, $arg2 = false)
{
if (!is_array($arg1)) {
return $this->raiseError();
}
return true;
}
Comments:
/* .... */ and/or // ... should be used within code.
Docblock comments should be provided. There is an extensive example of
docblock commenting at: http://pear.php.net/manual/en/standards.sample.php
Including Code:
require_once is used for an unconditional include
include_once is used for a conditional include
Neither uses brackets.
PHP code tags:
<?php
// ...
?>
Example URLs and email addresses:
Always use example.org, example.com or example.net.
Naming conventions:
Always use descriptive names, and avoid abbreviations.
Classes: begin with an uppercase letter. This includes Gtk, Gdk et al, and
it also includes class names in static method calls (e.g. Gtk::main(),
MyClass::init()). Structurally we need to divert from PEAR guidelines here,
as we don't have an equivalent hierarchy to reflect: class 'words' should
also begin with an uppercase letter, e.g. GtkWindow, TheClassThatDoesStuff.
Functions and methods: GTK+ or PHP internal methods should be lowercase,
excepting the class name in static method calls (see above). Functions
and methods written as part of your PHP code should use the studlyCaps()
convention.
Private class members: single underscore prefix.
Constants: true, false and null are lowercase.
This is where we leave PEAR guidelines completely. In PHP-GTK, the
structure is such that we cannot have 'pure' internal GTK+ class constants.
It was therefore agreed to use the format Gtk::INTERNAL_CONSTANT for GTK+
constants, enumerated values and flags throughout. PHP's own internal
constants (e.g. PHP_OS) are not affected.
For other constants in the global namespace (that is, constants in
your PHP code), class constants should follow the MyClass::CONSTANT_NAME
format. Global constants should be uppercase throughout.
Global variables: We can't emulate PEAR completely here, but we can stay
with the idea of prefixing global variable names with an underscore and
an uppercase identifier, e.g. $_MYCLASS_global_varname.
PHP-GTK itself should always be referred to as 'PHP-GTK', as both the PHP
part and the GTK part are acronyms. If you need to write about a specific
version in code commentary, the version number should be separated by a
single space, i.e. 'PHP-GTK 2', 'PHP 5', 'GTK 2'. In file or class names,
simply omit the space.
# vim: set et ts=4 sts sw=4: