# Style Guide The style guide can be summed up as 'clang-format with the Google style set'. In addition, the [Google Style Guide](https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html) is followed and cpplint is the source of truth. When in doubt, defer to what code in the project already does. Base rules: * 80 column line length max * LF (Unix-style) line endings * 2-space soft tabs, no TABs! * [Google Style Guide](https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html) for naming/casing/etc * Sort includes according to the [style guide rules](https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html#Names_and_Order_of_Includes) * Comments are properly punctuated (that means capitalization and periods, etc) * TODO's must be attributed like `// TODO(yourgithubname): foo.` Code that really breaks from the formatting rules will not be accepted, as then no one else can use clang-format on the code without also touching all your lines. ### Why? To quote the [Google Style Guide](https://google.github.io/styleguide/cppguide.html): ``` One way in which we keep the code base manageable is by enforcing consistency. It is very important that any programmer be able to look at another's code and quickly understand it. Maintaining a uniform style and following conventions means that we can more easily use "pattern-matching" to infer what various symbols are and what invariants are true about them. Creating common, required idioms and patterns makes code much easier to understand. In some cases there might be good arguments for changing certain style rules, but we nonetheless keep things as they are in order to preserve consistency. ``` ## Buildbot Verification The buildbot runs `xb lint --all` on the master branch, and will run `xb lint --origin` on pull requests. Run `xb format` before you commit each local change so that you are consistently clean, otherwise you may have to rebase. If you forget, run `xb format --origin` and rebase your changes (so you don't end up with 5 changes and then a 6th 'whoops' one - that's nasty). The buildbot is running LLVM 3.8.0. If you are noticing style differences between your local lint/format and the buildbot, ensure you are running that version. ## Tools ### clang-format clang-format with the Google style is used to format all files. I recommend installing/wiring it up to your editor of choice so that you don't even have to think about tabs and wrapping and such. #### Command Line To use the `xb format` auto-formatter, you need to have a `clang-format` on your PATH. If you're on Windows you can do this by installing an LLVM binary package from [the LLVM downloads page](http://llvm.org/releases/download.html). If you install it to the default location the `xb format` command will find it automatically even if you don't choose to put all of LLVM onto your PATH. #### Visual Studio Grab the official [experimental Visual Studio plugin](http://llvm.org/builds/). To switch to the Google style go Tools -> Options -> LLVM/Clang -> ClangFormat and set Style to Google. Then use ctrl-r/ctrl-f to trigger the formatting. Unfortunately it only does the cursor by default, so you'll have to select the whole doc and invoke it to get it all done. If you have a better option, let me know! #### Xcode Install [Alcatraz](http://alcatraz.io/) to get the [ClangFormat](https://github.com/travisjeffery/ClangFormat-Xcode) package. Set it to use the Google style and format on save. Never think about tabs or linefeeds or whatever again. ### cpplint TODO: write a cool script to do this/editor plugins. In the future, the linter will run as a git commit hook and on travis.