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{{Note|1=<!--T:1-->
{{Note|1=<!--T:1-->
This document describes the recommended coding style for KDE Frameworks. Nobody is forced to use this style, but to have consistent formatting of the source code files it is recommended to make use of it.
This document describes the recommended coding style for KDE Frameworks. With Frameworks 5.80 Extra-CMake-Modules contains a finalized clang-format configuration file with this coding style.




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== Artistic Style (astyle) automatic code formatting == <!--T:29-->
== Clang-format automatic code formatting == <!--T:29-->
You can use [http://astyle.sourceforge.net/ astyle] (>=1.23) to format code or to test if you have followed this document. Run the following command:
By including the [https://api.kde.org/ecm/kde-module/KDEClangFormat.html KDEClangFormat] CMake module the [https://invent.kde.org/frameworks/extra-cmake-modules/-/blob/master/kde-modules/clang-format.cmake .clang-format file] is copied into the source folder. Using the provided `kde_clang_format` function one can create a target which formats all given files.
Projects can enforce the formatting using a [https://api.kde.org/ecm/kde-module/KDEGitCommitHooks.html pre-commit hook] which uses the "git clang-format" tool to ensure the changes are properly formatted.


<syntaxhighlight lang="text">
Tips and tricks:
astyle --indent=spaces=4 --brackets=linux \
      --indent-labels --pad=oper --unpad=paren \
      --one-line=keep-statements --convert-tabs \
      --indent-preprocessor \
      `find -type f -name '*.cpp'-or -name '*.cc' -or -name '*.h'`
</syntaxhighlight>


<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp-qt">
// without trailing comma to enums and initializer lists
enum ViewType { FullView, CompactView };
const QStringList values = {QStringLiteral("value1"), QStringLiteral("value2")};


<!--T:30-->
// with trailing comma to enums and initializer lists
With astyle (>=2.01) you need to run the following command:
enum ViewType {
 
    FullView,
<syntaxhighlight lang="text">
    CompactView,
astyle --indent=spaces=4 --style=linux \
};
      --indent-labels --pad-oper --unpad-paren --pad-header \
const QStringList values = {
      --keep-one-line-statements --convert-tabs \
    QStringLiteral("value1"),
      --indent-preprocessor \
    QStringLiteral("value2"),
      `find -type f -name '*.cpp' -or -name '*.cc' -or -name '*.h'`
};
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp-qt">
// the statement is longer than 160 characters, clang-format will break it into two lines
const QStringList result =
    MyVeryVeryLongFunction(QStringLiteral("averyverylongparameterforthisfunction"), QStringLiteral("averyverylongparameterforthisfunction"));
// using a comment at the end to preserve the a manual linebreak
const QStringList result = MyVeryVeryLongFunction(QStringLiteral("averyverylongparameterforthisfunction"), //
                                                  QStringLiteral("averyverylongparameterforthisfunction"));


<!--T:31-->
</syntaxhighlight>
Note: With more recent astyle --brackets has become --style, so change --brackets=linux to --style=linux.


<!--T:41-->
You can find a shell script to run this command in:


<!--T:40-->
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp-qt">
* [https://commits.kde.org/kde-dev-scripts?path=astyle-kdelibs kde-dev-scripts/astyle-kdelibs] (POSIX)
// here the indentation feels a bit off because it is only indented one tab and not relatively to the variable declaration
* [https://commits.kde.org/kde-dev-scripts?path=astyle-kdelibs.bat kde-dev-scripts/astyle-kdelibs.bat] (Windows)
int resultFromComplexCalculation = someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename1
    + someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename2
    + someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename3;
// adding parentheses around the entire statement will ensure sure it is indented relatively to the variable declaration
int resultFromComplexCalculation = (someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename1
                                    + someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename2
                                    + someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename3);


== Emacs and Vim scripts == <!--T:32-->
</syntaxhighlight>
The [https://projects.kde.org/projects/kde/kdesdk/kde-dev-scripts/repository/revisions/master/show kde-dev-scripts] directory in the kdesdk module contains, among other useful things, some useful additions to the Emacs and Vim text editors that make it easier to edit KDE code with them.
=== Emacs ===
The [https://projects.kde.org/projects/kde/kdesdk/kde-dev-scripts/repository/revisions/master/show/kde-emacs kde-emacs] directory contains a set of key bindings, macros and general useful code. It is compatible with both GNU Emacs and XEmacs.


<!--T:33-->
Also the formatting can be turned off for specific parts.
To start using kde-emacs, add the following to your .emacs:
<syntaxhighlight lang="cpp-qt">
 
// clang-format off
 
Some fragile or from third parties imported code...
<syntaxhighlight lang="text">
// clang-format on
(add-to-list 'load-path "/path/to/kde-emacs")
(require 'kde-emacs)
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


Many settings can be changed by editing the "kde-emacs" group via <tt>M-x customize-group</tt>.
But you should be careful with excluding parts from the formatting and only do this when it would break code or it would require too many manual interventions as suggested above
 
For more information, including what the key bindings are and what additional settings you could add to your .emacs, please check <tt>kde-emacs.el</tt> itself.
 
=== Vim ===
You can find a vim script in [https://projects.kde.org/projects/kde/kdesdk/kde-dev-scripts/repository/revisions/master/raw/kde-devel-vim.vim kde-devel-vim.vim] that helps you to keep the coding style correct. In addition to defaulting to the KDE Frameworks coding style it will automatically use the correct style for Solid and kdepim code. If you want to add rules for other projects feel free to add them in the SetCodingStyle function.
 
To use the script, include it in your {{path|~/.vimrc}} like this:
 
<syntaxhighlight lang="text">
source /path/to/kde/sources/kdesdk/scripts/kde-devel-vim.vim
</syntaxhighlight>


Document started by Urs Wolfer. Some parts of this document have been adopted from the Qt Coding Style document posted by Zack Rusin on kde-core-devel.
Document started by Urs Wolfer. Some parts of this document have been adopted from the Qt Coding Style document posted by Zack Rusin on kde-core-devel.


[[Category:Policies]] [[Category:C++]]
[[Category:Policies]] [[Category:C++]]

Revision as of 06:15, 29 March 2021

Note

This document describes the recommended coding style for KDE Frameworks. With Frameworks 5.80 Extra-CMake-Modules contains a finalized clang-format configuration file with this coding style.


In short: KDE Frameworks coding style follows the Qt coding style, with one main difference: using curly braces even when the body of a conditional statement contains only one line.


Indentation

  • No tabs
  • 4 Spaces instead of one tab

Variable declaration

  • Each variable should be declared on a new line
  • Each new word in a variable name starts with a capital letter (so-called camelCase)
  • Avoid abbreviations
  • Use indicative/useful names. No short names, except:
    • Single character variable names can denote counters and temporary variables whose purpose is obvious
  • Variables and functions start with a lowercase letter
  • Member variable names should be prefixed with m_ to make it easier to distinguish them from function parameters and local variable names
    • The same applies to Private (d-pointer) class member variable names, (it may be a bit overkill when the Private class is merely used as a struct and all the code is in the public class, so you can use the m_ prefix everywhere to keep it consistent, or switch to prefixing m_ when adding the first method to a Private class)
  • Static (global) variable names should be prefixed with s_

Example:

// wrong
KProgressBar *prbar;
QString prtxt, errstr;

// correct
KProgressBar *downloadProgressBar;
QString progressText;
QString errorString;

Whitespace

  • Use blank lines to group statements
  • Use only one empty line
  • Use one space after each keyword
  • For pointers or references, use a single space before '*' or '&', but not after
  • No space after a cast

Example:

// wrong
QString* myString;
if(true){
}

// correct
QString *myString;
if (true) {
}

Enumerations

Ideally it should be one member per line.

Always add a trailing comma to the last member in an Enumeration. This helps produce better diffs (and has the good side-effect that code formatting tools, e.g. clang-format, will not put the whole enum on one line).

The same rule in the Braces section below applies, i.e. the left curly brace goes on the same line as the start of the statement.

Example:

// Wrong
enum ViewType
{
    FullView,
    CompactView
};

// Correct
enum ViewType {
    FullView,
    CompactView, // The last enum member should have a trailing comma
};

Braces

As a base rule, the left curly brace goes on the same line as the start of the statement.

Example:

// wrong
if (true)
{
}

enum ViewType
{
    FullView,
    CompactView
};

// correct
if (true) {
}

enum ViewType {
    FullView,
    CompactView,
};


Exception: Function implementations, class, struct and namespace declarations always have the opening brace on the start of a line.

Example:

void debug(int i)
{
    qDebug("foo: %i", i);
}

class Debug
{
};


Use curly braces even when the body of a conditional statement contains only one line.

Example:

// wrong
if (true)
    return true;

for (int i = 0; i < 10; ++i)
    qDebug("%i", i);


// correct
if (true) {
    return true;
}

for (int i = 0; i < 10; ++i) {
    qDebug("%i", i);
}

Switch statements

Case labels are on the same column as the switch

Example:

switch (myEnum) {
case Value1:
    doSomething();
    break;
case Value2:
    doSomethingElse();
    // fall through
default:
    defaultHandling();
    break;
}


Line breaks

Try to keep lines shorter than 100 characters, inserting line breaks as necessary.

Qt Includes

  • If you add #includes for Qt classes, use only the class name.

Example:

// wrong
#include <QtCore/QString>


// correct
#include <QString>


Clang-format automatic code formatting

By including the KDEClangFormat CMake module the .clang-format file is copied into the source folder. Using the provided `kde_clang_format` function one can create a target which formats all given files. Projects can enforce the formatting using a pre-commit hook which uses the "git clang-format" tool to ensure the changes are properly formatted.

Tips and tricks:

// without trailing comma to enums and initializer lists
enum ViewType { FullView, CompactView };
const QStringList values = {QStringLiteral("value1"), QStringLiteral("value2")};

// with trailing comma to enums and initializer lists
enum ViewType {
    FullView,
    CompactView,
};
const QStringList values = {
    QStringLiteral("value1"),
    QStringLiteral("value2"),
};
// the statement is longer than 160 characters, clang-format will break it into two lines
const QStringList result =
    MyVeryVeryLongFunction(QStringLiteral("averyverylongparameterforthisfunction"), QStringLiteral("averyverylongparameterforthisfunction"));
// using a comment at the end to preserve the a manual linebreak
const QStringList result = MyVeryVeryLongFunction(QStringLiteral("averyverylongparameterforthisfunction"), //
                                                  QStringLiteral("averyverylongparameterforthisfunction"));


// here the indentation feels a bit off because it is only indented one tab and not relatively to the variable declaration
int resultFromComplexCalculation = someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename1
    + someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename2
    + someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename3;
// adding parentheses around the entire statement will ensure sure it is indented relatively to the variable declaration
int resultFromComplexCalculation = (someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename1
                                    + someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename2
                                    + someveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryveryverylongvariablename3);

Also the formatting can be turned off for specific parts.

// clang-format off
Some fragile or from third parties imported code...
// clang-format on

But you should be careful with excluding parts from the formatting and only do this when it would break code or it would require too many manual interventions as suggested above

Document started by Urs Wolfer. Some parts of this document have been adopted from the Qt Coding Style document posted by Zack Rusin on kde-core-devel.