We generally use the [Google C++ Style Guide] (http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/cppguide.xml) as a basis for our Coding Standard, however we will deviate from it in a few areas, as noted below.
Items marked {DEV} indicate a deviation from the Google guidelines. Items marked {DO} are reiterating points from the Google guidelines.
Before you upload code to Gerrit, use git cl format
to auto-format your code.
This will catch most of the trivial formatting errors and save you time.
- We will use
.h
for C++ headers. - {DEV} #define guards should be of the form:
<PATH>_<FILE>_H_
. (Compiler codebase is varied, including<PROJECT>_
makes the names excessively long).
- {DO} avoid globally scoped variables, unless absolutely necessary.
- {DEV} Inherit (privately) from angle::NonCopyable helper class (defined in common/angleutils.h) to disable default copy and assignment operators.
- {DEV} all parameters passed by reference, except for STL containers (e.g.
std::vector, std::list), must be labeled
const
. For return parameters other than STL containers, use a pointer. - {DO} avoid use of default arguments.
- {DONT} use C++ exceptions, they are disabled in the builds and not caught.
- {DO} use nullptr (instead of 0 or NULL) for pointers.
- {DO} use size_t for loop iterators and size values.
- {DO} use uint8_t pointers instead of void pointers to denote binary data.
- {DO} use C++11 according to the [Chromium guide on C++11] (http://chromium-cpp.appspot.com/).
- {DEV} Filenames should be all lowercase and can include underscores (
_
). If the file is an implementation of a class, the filename may be capitalized the same as the major class. - {DEV} We use .cpp (instead of .cc), .h and .inl (inlined files) for C++ files and headers.
- Directory names should be all lowercase, unless following an externally imposed capitalization (eg include/EGL, or src/libGLESv2, etc)
Use the following guidelines, they do deviate somewhat from the Google guidelines.
- class and type names: start with capital letter and use CamelCase.
- {DEV} class member variables: use an
m
prefix instead of trailing underscore and use CamelCase. - global variables (if they must be used): use a
g_
prefix. - {DEV} variable names: start with lower case and use CamelCase (chosen for consistency)
- {DEV} function names: Member functions start with lower case and use CamelCase. Non-member functions start with capital letter and use CamelCase (chosen for consistency)
- Constants: start with a
k
and use CamelCase - namespaces: use all lower case
- Enum Names - use class enums, and the values should be uppercase with underscores.
- macros: all uppercase with underscores
- exceptions to naming: use common sense!
- {DO} read and follow Google's recommendations.
- Each file must start with the following boilerplate notice:
//
// Copyright (c) 2016 The ANGLE Project Authors. All rights reserved.
// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style license that can be
// found in the LICENSE file.
//
- {DEV} Avoid excessively long lines. Please keep lines under 100 columns long.
- Use unix-style newlines.
- {DO} use only spaces. No tab characters. Configure your editor to emit spaces when you hit the TAB-key.
- {DEV} indent 4 spaces at a time.
- conditionals: place space outside the parenthesis. No spaces inside.
- switch statements: use the output of
git cl format
. - class format(eg private, public, protected): indent by 2 spaces. Regular 4-space indent from the outer scope for declarations/definitions.
- pointers and references:
*
and&
tight against the variable - namespaces: are not indented.
- extern code blocks: are not indented.
- {DEV} braces should go on a separate line, except for functions defined in a header file where the whole function declaration and definition fit on one line.
Examples:
if (conditional)
{
stuff();
}
else
{
otherstuff()
}
switch (conditional)
{
case foo:
dostuff();
break;
case bar:
otherstuff();
break;
default:
WTFBBQ();
}
class MyClass : public Foo
{
public:
MyClass();
~MyClass() {};
private:
DISALLOW_COPY_AND_ASSIGN(MyClass);
};
char *c;
const string &str;
- If modifying pre-existing code that does not match the standard, the altered portions of the code should be changed to match the standard.