forked from fosnola/libstaroffice
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
/
HACKING
36 lines (27 loc) · 1.65 KB
/
HACKING
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
libstaroffice coding style
-------------------
Indentation/spacing: We indent with tabs. Not spaces. This decision is, of
course, rather contentious, but it does have the force of inertia going for
it. Try to keep lines less than 120 columns wide. Please run
astyle -HU -A3 -k3 -y -n -s2 -r \*.cpp \*.h \*.?xx
Naming: Version-specific classes, enumerations, and defines should be prefixed
with a clear abreviation of the format 'ClarisWks', 'MacWrt', ...
Generic classes (this includes utility abstractions like streams and strings)
should be prefixed with STOFF.
For better worse, we have decided on using the 'm_' prefix for naming class and struct
variables (i.e.: my_class->m_var). Short-hand for variable names is allowed,
but don't overdo it (m_var->len() instead of m_variable->length() is ok,
m_nam instead of m_name is stupid).
Memory allocation: Use the C++ standard operations for this (new, delete) and shared_ptr (boost, c++11, ...).
Data structures: Use the C++ standard library wherever appropriate and
convenient. It should almost never be necessary to roll your own data
structure.
Strings: You may use either the C++ standard strings or our very own
UTF8-compliant RVNGString. Hand-allocated char *'s are discouraged.
Further information: The OpenOffice.org (http://tools.openoffice.org/coding.html)
and AbiWord (cvs://cvs.abisource.com/abi/docs/AbiSourceCodeGuidelines.abw)
contain lots of useful information that will make you a better C++ coder.
Follow their advice religiously, except when they contradict something in this
document.
Fun: Remember, the important thing is to have fun. :-) These rules are a means,
not an end. Happy hacking!