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150 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
150 lines
6.2 KiB
Plaintext
PHP Coding Standards
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====================
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This file lists several standards that any programmer, adding or changing
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code in PHP, should follow. Since this file was added at a very late
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stage of the development of PHP v3.0, the code base does not (yet) fully
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follow it, but it's going in that general direction.
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This is an initial version - it'll most probably grow as time passes.
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Code Implementation
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-------------------
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[1] Functions that are given pointers to resources should not free them
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For instance, function int mail(char *to, char *from) should NOT free
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to and/or from.
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Exceptions:
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- The function's designated behavior is freeing that resource. E.g. efree()
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- The function is given a boolean argument, that controls whether or not
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the function may free its arguments (if true - the function must free its
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arguments, if false - it must not)
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- Low-level parser routines, that are tightly integrated with the token
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cache and the bison code for minimum memory copying overhead.
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[2] Functions that are tightly integrated with other functions within the
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same module, and rely on each other non-trivial behavior, should be
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documented as such and declared 'static'. They should be avoided if
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possible.
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[3] Use definitions and macros whenever possible, so that constants have
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meaningful names and can be easily manipulated. The only exceptions
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to this rule are 0 and 1, when used as false and true (respectively).
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Any other use of a numeric constant to specify different behavior
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or actions should be done through a #define.
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[4] When writing functions that deal with strings, be sure to remember
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that PHP holds the length property of each string, and that it
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shouldn't be calculated with strlen(). Write your functions in a such
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a way so that they'll take advantage of the length property, both
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for efficiency and in order for them to be binary-safe.
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Functions that change strings and obtain their new lengths while
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doing so, should return that new length, so it doesn't have to be
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recalculated with strlen() (e.g. _php3_addslashes())
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[5] Use php3_error() to report any errors/warnings during code execution.
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Use descriptive error messages, and try to avoid using identical
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error strings for different stages of an error. For example,
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if in order to obtain a URL you have to parse the URL, connect,
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and retreive the text, assuming something can go wrong at each
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of these stages, don't report an error "Unable to get URL"
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on all of them, but instead, write something like "Unable
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to parse URL", "Unable to connect to URL server" and "Unable
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to fetch URL text", respectively.
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[6] NEVER USE strncat(). If you're absolutely sure you know what you're doing,
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check its man page again, and only then, consider using it, and even then,
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try avoiding it.
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Naming Conventions
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------------------
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[1] Function names for user functions implementation should be prefixed with
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"php3_", and followed by a word or an underscore-delimited list of words,
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in lowercase letters, that describes the function.
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[2] Function names used by user functions implementations should be prefixed
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with "_php3_", and followed by a word or an underscore-delimited list of
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words, in lowercase letters, that describes the function. If applicable,
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they should be declared 'static'.
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[3] Variable names must be meaningful. One letter variable names must be
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avoided, except for places where the variable has no real meaning or
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a trivial meaning (e.g. for (i=0; i<100; i++) ...).
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[4] Variable names should be in lowercase; Use underscores to seperate
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between words.
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Syntax and indentation
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----------------------
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[1] Never use C++ style comments (i.e. // comment). Always use C-style
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comments instead. PHP is written in C, and is aimed at compiling
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under any ANSI-C compliant compiler. Even though many compilers
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accept C++-style comments in C code, you have to ensure that your
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code would compile with other compilers as well.
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The only exception to this rule is code that is Win32-specific,
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because the Win32 port is MS-Visual C++ specific, and this compiler
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is known to accept C++-style comments in C code.
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[2] Use K&R-style. Of course, we can't and don't want to
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force anybody to use a style she's not used to, but
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at the very least, when you write code that goes into the core
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of PHP or one of its standard modules, please maintain the K&R
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style. This applies to just about everything, starting with
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indentation and comment styles and up to function decleration
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syntax.
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[3] Be generous with whitespace and braces. Always prefer
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if (foo) {
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bar;
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}
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to
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if(foo)bar;
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Keep one empty line between the variable decleration section and
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the statements in a block, as well as between logical statement
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groups in a block. Maintain at least one empty line between
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two functions, preferably two.
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Documentation and Folding Hooks
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-------------------------------
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In order to make sure that the online documentation stays in line with
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the code, each user-level function should have its user-level function
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prototype before it along with a brief one-line description of what the
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function does. It would look like this:
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/* {{{ proto int abs(int number)
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Return the absolute value of the number */
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void php3_abs(INTERNAL_FUNCTION_PARAMETERS) {
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...
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}
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/* }}} */
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The {{{ symbols are the default folding symbols for the folding mode in
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Emacs. vim will soon have support for folding as well. Folding is very
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useful when dealing with large files because you can scroll through the
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file quickly and just unfold the function you wish to work on. The }}}
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at the end of each function marks the end of the fold, and should be on
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a separate line.
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The "proto" keyword there is just a helper for the doc/genfuncsummary script
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which generates a full function summary. Having this keyword in front of the
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function prototypes allows us to put folds elsewhere in the code without
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messing up the function summary.
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Optional arguments are written like this:
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/* {{{ proto object imap_header(int stream_id, int msg_no [, int from_length [, int subject_length [, string default_host]]])
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And yes, please keep everything on a single line, even if that line is massive.
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