rgb-cln/doc/STYLE.md

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# Care And Feeding of Your Fellow Coders
Style is an individualistic thing, but working on software is group
activity, so consistency is important. Generally our coding style
is similar to the [Linux coding style][style].
[style]: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/v4.10/process/coding-style.html
## Communication
We communicate with each other via code; we polish each others code,
and give nuanced feedback. Exceptions to the rules below always
exist: accept them. Particularly if they're funny!
## Prefer Short Names
`num_foos` is better than `number_of_foos`, and `i` is better than
`counter`. But `bool found;` is better than `bool ret;`. Be as
short as you can but still descriptive.
## Prefer 80 Columns
We have to stop somewhere. The two tools here are extracting
deeply-indented code into their own functions, and use of short-cuts
using early returns or continues, eg:
```C
for (i = start; i != end; i++) {
if (i->something)
continue;
if (!i->something_else)
continue;
do_something(i);
}
```
## Prefer Simple Statements
Notice the statement above uses separate tests, rather than combining
them. We prefer to only combine conditionals which are fundamentally
related, eg:
```C
if (i->something != NULL && *i->something < 100)
```
## Use of `take()`
Some functions have parameters marked with `TAKES`, indicating that
they can take lifetime ownership of a parameter which is passed using
`take()`. This can be a useful optimization which allows the function
to avoid making a copy, but if you hand `take(foo)` to something which
doesn't support `take()` you'll probably leak memory!
In particular, our automatically generated marshalling code doesn't
support `take()`.
If you're allocating something simply to hand it via `take()` you
should use NULL as the parent for clarity, eg:
```C
msg = towire_shutdown(NULL, &peer->channel_id, peer->final_scriptpubkey);
enqueue_peer_msg(peer, take(msg));
```
## Use of `tmpctx`
There's a convenient temporary tal context which gets cleaned
regularly: you should use this for throwaways rather than (as you'll
see some of our older code do!) grabbing some passing object to hang
your temporaries off!
## Enums and Switch Statements
If you handle various enumerated values in a `switch`, don't use
`default:` but instead mention every enumeration case-by-case. That
way when a new enumeration case is added, most compilers will warn that you
don't cover it. This is particularly valuable for code auto-generated
from the specification!
## Initialization of Variables
Avoid double-initialization of variables; it's better to set them when
they're known, eg:
```C
bool is_foo;
if (bar == foo)
is_foo = true;
else
is_foo = false;
...
if (is_foo)...
```
This way the compiler will warn you if you have one path which doesn't set the
variable. If you initialize with `bool is_foo = false;` then you'll
simply get that value without warning when you change the code and
forget to set it on one path.
## Initialization of Memory
`valgrind` warns about decisions made on uninitialized memory. Prefer
`tal` and `tal_arr` to `talz` and `tal_arrz` for this reason, and
initialize only the fields you expect to be used.
Similarly, you can use `memcheck(mem, len)` to explicitly assert that
memory should have been initialized, rather than having valgrind
trigger later. We use this when placing things on queues, for example.
## Use of static and const
Everything should be declared static and const by default. Note that
`tal_free()` can free a const pointer (also, that it returns `NULL`, for
convenience).
## Typesafety Is Worth Some Pain
If code is typesafe, refactoring is as simple as changing a type and
compiling to find where to refactor. We rely on this,
so most places in the code will break if you hand the wrong type, eg
`type_to_string` and `structeq`.
The two tools we have to help us are complicated macros in
`ccan/typesafe_cb` allow you to create callbacks which must match the
type of their argument, rather than using `void *`. The other is
`ARRAY_SIZE`, a macro which won't compile if you hand it a pointer
instead of an actual array.
## Use of `FIXME`
There are two cases in which you should use a `/* FIXME: */` comment:
one is where an optimization is possible but it's not clear that it's
yet worthwhile, and the second one is to note an ugly corner case
which could be improved (and may be in a following patch).
There are always compromises in code: eventually it needs to ship.
`FIXME` is `grep`-fodder for yourself and others, as well as useful
warning signs if we later encounter an issue in some part of the code.
## If You Don't Know The Right Thing, Do The Simplest Thing
Sometimes the right way is unclear, so it's best not to spend time on
it. It's far easier to rewrite simple code than complex code, too.
## Write For Today: Unused Code Is Buggy Code
Don't overdesign: complexity is a killer. If you need a fancy data
structure, start with a brute force linked list. Once that's working,
perhaps consider your fancy structure, but don't implement a generic
thing. Use `/* FIXME: ...*/` to salve your conscience.
## Keep Your Patches Reviewable
Try to make a single change at a time. It's tempting to do "drive-by"
fixes as you see other things, and a minimal amount is unavoidable, but
you can end up shaving infinite yaks. This is a good time to drop a
`/* FIXME: ...*/` comment and move on.