Coding style
File format
Use misc/lv_templ.c and misc/lv_templ.h
Naming conventions
Words are separated by '_'
In variable and function names use only lower case letters (e.g. height_tmp)
In enums and defines use only upper case letters (e.g. e.g. MAX_LINE_NUM)
Global names (API):
start with lv
followed by module name: btn, label, style etc.
followed by the action (for functions): set, get, refr etc.
closed with the subject: name, size, state etc.
Typedefs
prefer
typedef struct
andtypedef enum
instead ofstruct name
andenum name
always end
typedef struct
andtypedef enum
type names with_t
Abbreviations:
Only words longer or equal than 6 characters can be abbreviated.
Abbreviate only if it makes the word at least half as long
Use only very straightforward and well-known abbreviations (e.g. pos: position, def: default, btn: button)
Coding guide
Functions:
Try to write function shorter than is 50 lines
Always shorter than 200 lines (except very straightforwards)
Variables:
One line, one declaration (BAD: char x, y;)
Use
<stdint.h>
(uint8_t, int32_t etc)Declare variables where needed (not all at function start)
Use the smallest required scope
Variables in a file (outside functions) are always static
Do not use global variables (use functions to set/get static variables)
Formatting
Here is example to show bracket placing and using of white spaces:
/**
* Set a new text for a label. Memory will be allocated to store the text by the label.
* @param label pointer to a label object
* @param text '\0' terminated character string. NULL to refresh with the current text.
*/
void lv_label_set_text(lv_obj_t * label, const char * text)
{ /*Main brackets of functions in new line*/
if(label == NULL) return; /*No bracket only if the command is inline with the if statement*/
lv_obj_inv(label);
lv_label_ext_t * ext = lv_obj_get_ext(label);
/*Comment before a section*/
if(text == ext->txt || text == NULL) { /*Bracket of statements start inline*/
lv_label_refr_text(label);
return;
}
...
}
Use 4 spaces indentation instead of tab.
You can use astyle to format the code. Run code-format.py
from
the scripts
folder.
pre-commit
pre-commit is a multi-language package manager for pre-commit hooks. See the installation guide to get pre-commit python package installed into your development machine.
Once you have pre-commit
installed you will need to set up the git
hook scripts
with:
pre-commit install
now pre-commit
will run automatically on git commit
!
Hooks
The format-source
local hook (see .pre-commit-config.yaml
) runs
astyle on all the staged source and header files (that are not
excluded, see exclude
key of the hook configuration) before entering
the commit message, if any file gets formatted by astyle you will
need to add the change to the staging area and run git commit
again.
The trailing-whitespace
hook fixes trailing whitespaces on all of
the files.
Skipping hooks
If you want to skip any particular hook you can do so with:
SKIP=name-of-the-hook git commit
Testing hooks
It's no necessary to do a commit to test the hooks, you can test hooks by adding the files into the staging area and run:
pre-commit run name-of-the-hook
Comments
Before every function have a comment like this:
Always use
/*Something*/
format and NOT//Something
Write readable code to avoid descriptive comments like:
x++; /*Add 1 to x*/
. The code should show clearly what you are doing.You should write why have you done this:
x++; /*Because of closing '\0' of the string*/
Short "code summaries" of a few lines are accepted. E.g.
/*Calculate the new coordinates*/
In comments use ` ` when referring to a variable. E.g.
/*Update the value of `x_act`*/