5.5 KiB
cURL C code style
Source code that has a common style is easier to read than code that uses different styles in different places. It helps making the code feel like one single code base. Easy-to-read is a very important property of code and helps making it easier to review when new things are added and it helps debugging code when developers are trying to figure out why things go wrong. A unified style is more important than individual contributors having their own personal tastes satisfied.
Our C code has a few style rules. Most of them are verified and upheld by the
lib/checksrc.pl script. Invoked with make checksrc
or even by default by the
build system when built after ./configure --enable-debug
has been used.
It is normally not a problem for anyone to follow the guidelines, as you just need to copy the style already used in the source code and there are no particularly unusual rules in our set of rules.
We also work hard on writing code that are warning-free on all the major platforms and in general on as many platforms as possible. Code that obviously will cause warnings will not be accepted as-is.
Naming
Try using a non-confusing naming scheme for your new functions and variable names. It doesn't necessarily have to mean that you should use the same as in other places of the code, just that the names should be logical, understandable and be named according to what they're used for. File-local functions should be made static. We like lower case names.
See the INTERNALS document on how we name non-exported library-global symbols.
Indenting
We use only spaces for indentation, never TABs. We use two spaces for each new open brace.
if(something_is_true) {
while(second_statement == fine) {
moo();
}
}
Comments
Since we write C89 code, //
comments are not allowed. They weren't
introduced in the C standard until C99. We use only /*
and */
comments:
/* this is a comment */
Long lines
Source code in curl may never be wider than 80 columns and there are two reasons for maintaining this even in the modern era of very large and high resolution screens:
-
Narrower columns are easier to read than very wide ones. There's a reason newspapers have used columns for decades or centuries.
-
Narrower columns allow developers to easier show multiple pieces of code next to each other in different windows. I often have two or three source code windows next to each other on the same screen - as well as multiple terminal and debugging windows.
Braces
In if/while/do/for expressions, we write the open brace on the same line as the keyword and we then set the closing brace on the same indentation level as the initial keyword. Like this:
if(age < 40) {
/* clearly a youngster */
}
When we write functions however, the opening brace should be in the first column of the first line:
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
return 1;
}
'else' on the following line
When adding an else
clause to a conditional expression using braces, we add
it on a new line after the closing brace. Like this:
if(age < 40) {
/* clearly a youngster */
}
else {
/* probably grumpy */
}
No space before parentheses
When writing expressions using if/while/do/for, there shall be no space between the keyword and the open parenthesis. Like this:
while(1) {
/* loop forever */
}
Use boolean conditions
Rather than test a conditional value such as a bool against TRUE or FALSE, a pointer against NULL or != NULL and an int against zero or not zero in if/while conditions we prefer:
result = do_something();
if(!result) {
/* something went wrong */
return result;
}
No assignments in conditions
To increase readability and reduce complexity of conditionals, we avoid assigning variables within if/while conditions. We frown upon this style:
if((ptr = malloc(100)) == NULL)
return NULL;
and instead we encourage the above version to be spelled out more clearly:
ptr = malloc(100);
if(!ptr)
return NULL;
New block on a new line
We never write multiple statements on the same source line, even for very short if() conditions.
if(a)
return TRUE;
else if(b)
return FALSE;
and NEVER:
if(a) return TRUE;
else if(b) return FALSE;
Space around operators
Please use spaces on both sides of operators in C expressions. Postfix (), [], ->, ., ++, --
and Unary +, - !, ~, &
operators excluded they should
have no space.
Examples:
bla = func();
who = name[0];
age += 1;
true = !false;
size += -2 + 3 * (a + b);
ptr->member = a++;
struct.field = b--;
ptr = &address;
contents = *pointer;
complement = ~bits;
empty = (!*string) ? TRUE : FALSE;
Platform dependent code
Use #ifdef HAVE_FEATURE
to do conditional code. We avoid checking for
particular operating systems or hardware in the #ifdef lines. The HAVE_FEATURE
shall be generated by the configure script for unix-like systems and they are
hard-coded in the config-[system].h files for the others.
We also encourage use of macros/functions that possibly are empty or defined
to constants when libcurl is built without that feature, to make the code
seamless. Like this style where the magic()
function works differently
depending on a build-time conditional:
#ifdef HAVE_MAGIC
void magic(int a)
{
return a + 2;
}
#else
#define magic(x) 1
#endif
int content = magic(3);