C++ Code Style Guide
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All of the C++ code in the project is styled, you should run any changes you make through astyle before pushing a pull request.
We are using astyle version 3.0.1. Version 3.1 should also work, though there are a few cases where they disagree and require annotation.
Blocks of code can be passed through astyle to ensure that their formatting is correct:
astyle --style=1tbs --attach-inlines --indent=spaces=4 --align-pointer=name --max-code-length=100 --break-after-logical --indent-classes --indent-preprocessor --indent-switches --indent-col1-comments --min-conditional-indent=0 --pad-oper --unpad-paren --pad-paren-in --add-brackets --convert-tabs
These options are mirrored in .astylerc
, doc/CODE_STYLE.txt
and
msvc-full-features/AStyleExtension-Cataclysm-BN.cfg
For example, from vi
, set marks a and b around the block, then:
:'a,'b ! astyle --style=1tbs --attach-inlines --indent=spaces=4 --align-pointer=name --max-code-length=100 --break-after-logical --indent-classes --indent-preprocessor --indent-switches --indent-col1-comments --min-conditional-indent=0 --pad-oper --unpad-paren --pad-paren-in --add-brackets --convert-tabs
See DEVELOPER_TOOLING.md for other environments.
Code Example
Here’s an example that illustrates the most common points of style:
int foo( int arg1, int *arg2 )
{
if( arg1 < 5 ) {
switch( *arg2 ) {
case 0:
return arg1 + 5;
break;
case 1:
return arg1 + 7;
break;
default:
return 0;
break;
}
} else if( arg1 > 17 ) {
int i = 0;
while( i < arg1 ) {
printf( _( "Really long message that's pointless except for the number %d and for its "
"length as it's illustrative of how to break strings properly.\n" ), i );
}
}
return 0;
}
Code Guidelines
These are less generic guidelines and more pain points we’ve stumbled across over time.
- Prefer
int
.long
in particular is problematic since it is not a larger type than int on some platforms we support.- Using integral value larger than 32 bits should be avoided. Use
int64_t
if it’s really necessary. uint
is also a problem, it has poor behavior when overflowing and should be avoided for general purpose programming.- If you need binary data,
unsigned int
orunsigned char
are fine, but you should probably use astd::bitset
instead.
- If you need binary data,
float
is to be avoided, but has valid uses.
- Auto Almost Nothing. Auto has two uses, others should be avoided.
- Aliasing for extremely long iterator or functional declarations.
- Generic code support (but decltype is better).
- Avoid using declaration for standard namespaces.