Mercurial > audlegacy
comparison HACKING @ 4415:2c3390afe10e
Added a coding guideline document.
author | Matti Hamalainen <ccr@tnsp.org> |
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date | Mon, 31 Mar 2008 17:21:21 +0300 |
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children | ac8d871b6075 f922499e69bc |
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1 Hacking / coding guide for Audacious and Audacious-plugins | |
2 ========================================================== | |
3 (C) Copyright 2008 Audacious Development Team | |
4 Written by Matti 'ccr' Hämäläinen <ccr@tnsp.org> | |
5 | |
6 | |
7 Premeable | |
8 ========= | |
9 This document describes the guidelines for people who wish to work on | |
10 improving or cleaning up Audacious media player, or any of the plugins | |
11 we distribute in the plugins package. | |
12 | |
13 It is probably obvious to anyone who has taken a look into the depths | |
14 of Audacious source, that many of these guidelines are not actually | |
15 followed currently in all places, if at all. | |
16 | |
17 In fact, the purpose of this document is to act as a target to aim at, | |
18 when noticing and cleaning up uncompliant code.. or writing new code. | |
19 | |
20 | |
21 Coding guidelines | |
22 ================= | |
23 | |
24 - We use Glib for portability. This means that we have sized integer types | |
25 like gint{16,32,64}, etc. and shorthand types like guint and guchar | |
26 provided, so please do use them. | |
27 | |
28 Arguably C99 provides inttypes.h with similar types, but C99 support | |
29 may not be complete on all platforms, it is both safer and more uniform | |
30 to use glib types. | |
31 | |
32 | |
33 - Use other glib functionality, especially string handling like: | |
34 * g_snprintf(), g_strdup_printf(), g_strdup() ... | |
35 | |
36 | |
37 - However, avoid following Glib things: | |
38 * GString - Useless in most cases compared to normal 'C' string functions | |
39 and introduces conversions back and forth. | |
40 | |
41 * GList - GList is slow, either use GQueue or libmowgli lists. | |
42 | |
43 | |
44 - Be sure to know when you are handling UTF-8 or something else! Glib offers | |
45 special g_ascii_*() functions for certain operations that you might need | |
46 when handling non-unicode strings. | |
47 | |
48 | |
49 - When reading data from files, it's usually a BIG mistake to read structs | |
50 directly from the stream! This is not portable, as C does not guarantee | |
51 a struct not to have alignment padding (unless the struct is "packed", | |
52 but see below.) In effect sizeof(struct) on some platform may not be | |
53 equal to some other platform. | |
54 | |
55 Some clever people might think that making struct "packed" via the | |
56 C packed qualifier would be a solution, but this will | |
57 | |
58 What you SHOULD do is read individual members of the struct one by one | |
59 from the stream. This may sound bothersome, but by doing so, your code | |
60 will be portable. | |
61 | |
62 | |
63 - Always use Glib sized types for reading integer data from file streams. | |
64 Using plain C types (like 'long int' for example) is not wise, because | |
65 they may be of different size on different platforms depending on the | |
66 platform ABI. For example, on some 64-bit platforms, 'long int' is | |
67 64 bits, while on 32-bit platforms it is 32 bits. | |
68 | |
69 | |
70 - Audacious core provides some helper functions for reading endian-dependant | |
71 integers from VFS streams (aud_vfs_fget_{le,be}{16,32,64}), see vfs.h and | |
72 documentation for more information. | |
73 | |
74 | |
75 | |
76 Additional style guidelines | |
77 =========================== | |
78 | |
79 - Indentation: Use the same indentation style (also spaces vs. tabs) | |
80 as the file you are editing. In new files/code, use indentation of | |
81 4 spaces (no tabs). | |
82 | |
83 - Whitespace usage in code: | |
84 | |
85 a = 1; | |
86 | |
87 if (b == d && !strcmp(a, c)) ... | |
88 | |
89 - Blocks: | |
90 | |
91 while (...) { | |
92 do_something(...) | |
93 } | |
94 | |
95 if (...) { | |
96 } else { | |
97 } |