`__
jQuery global state
-------------------
Don't mess with jQuery global state once the app has loaded. Code like
this is very dangerous::
$.ajaxSetup({ async: false });
$.get(...);
$.ajaxSetup({ async: true });
jQuery and the browser are free to run other code while the request is
pending, which could perform other Ajax requests with the altered
settings.
Instead, switch to the more general |ajax|_ function, which can take options
like ``async``.
.. |ajax| replace:: ``$.ajax``
.. _ajax: http://api.jquery.com/jQuery.ajax
State and logs files
--------------------
Do not write state and logs files inside the current working directory
in the production environment. This will not how you expect, because the
current working directory for the app changes every time we do a deploy.
Instead, hardcode a path in settings.py -- see SERVER\_LOG\_PATH in
settings.py for an example.
JS array/object manipulation
============================
For generic functions that operate on arrays or JavaScript objects, you
should generally use `Underscore `__. We used
to use jQuery's utility functions, but the Underscore equivalents are
more consistent, better-behaved and offer more choices.
A quick conversion table::
$.each → _.each (parameters to the callback reversed)
$.inArray → _.indexOf (parameters reversed)
$.grep → _.filter
$.map → _.map
$.extend → _.extend
There's a subtle difference in the case of ``_.extend``; it will replace
attributes with undefined, whereas jQuery won't::
$.extend({foo: 2}, {foo: undefined}); // yields {foo: 2}, BUT...
_.extend({foo: 2}, {foo: undefined}); // yields {foo: undefined}!
Also, ``_.each`` does not let you break out of the iteration early by
returning false, the way jQuery's version does. If you're doing this,
you probably want ``_.find``, ``_.every``, or ``_.any``, rather than
'each'.
Some Underscore functions have multiple names. You should always use the
canonical name (given in large print in the Underscore documentation),
with the exception of ``_.any``, which we prefer over the less clear
'some'.
More arbitrary style things
===========================
General
-------
Indentation is four space characters for Python, JS, CSS, and shell
scripts. Indentation is two space characters for HTML templates.
We never use tabs anywhere in source code we write, but we have some
third-party files which contain tabs.
Keep third-party static files under the directory
``zephyr/static/third/``, with one subdirectory per third-party project.
We don't have an absolute hard limit on line length, but we should avoid
extremely long lines. A general guideline is: refactor stuff to get it
under 85 characters, unless that makes the code a lot uglier, in which
case it's fine to go up to 120 or so.
Whitespace guidelines:
- Put one space (or more for alignment) around binary arithmetic and
equality operators.
- Put one space around each part of the ternary operator.
- Put one space between keywords like ``if`` and ``while`` and their
associated open paren.
- Put one space between the closing paren for ``if`` and ``while``-like
constructs and the opening curly brace. Put the curly brace on the
same line unless doing otherwise improves readability.
- Put no space before or after the open paren for function calls and no
space before the close paren for function calls.
- For the comma operator and colon operator in languages where it is
used for inline dictionaries, put no space before it and at least one
space after. Only use more than one space for alignment.
Javascript
----------
Don't use ``==`` and ``!=`` because these operators perform type
coercions, which can mask bugs. Always use ``===`` and ``!==``.
End every statement with a semicolon.
``if`` statements with no braces are allowed, if the body is simple and
its extent is abundantly clear from context and formatting.
Anonymous functions should have spaces before and after the argument
list::
var x = function (foo, bar) { // ...
When calling a function with an anonymous function as an argument, use
this style::
$.get('foo', function (data) {
var x = ...;
// ...
});
The inner function body is indented one level from the outer function
call. The closing brace for the inner function and the closing
parenthesis for the outer call are together on the same line. This style
isn't necessarily appropriate for calls with multiple anonymous
functions or other arguments following them.
Use
::
$(function () { ...
rather than
::
$(document).ready(function () { ...
and combine adjacent on-ready functions, if they are logically related.
The best way to build complicated DOM elements is a Mustache template
like ``zephyr/static/templates/message.handlebars``. For simpler things
you can use jQuery DOM building APIs like so::
var new_tr = $('
').attr('id', zephyr.id);
Passing a HTML string to jQuery is fine for simple hardcoded things::
foo.append('foo
');
but avoid programmatically building complicated strings.
We used to favor attaching behaviors in templates like so::
but there are some reasons to prefer attaching events using jQuery code:
- Potential huge performance gains by using delegated events where
possible
- When calling a function from an ``onclick`` attribute, ``this`` is
not bound to the element like you might think
- jQuery does event normalization
Either way, avoid complicated JavaScript code inside HTML attributes;
call a helper function instead.
HTML / CSS
----------
Don't use the ``style=`` attribute. Instead, define logical classes and
put your styles in ``zulip.css``.
Don't use the tag name in a selector unless you have to. In other words,
use ``.foo`` instead of ``span.foo``. We shouldn't have to care if the
tag type changes in the future.
Don't use inline event handlers (``onclick=``, etc. attributes).
Instead, attach a jQuery event handler
(``$('#foo').on('click', function () {...})``) when the DOM is ready
(inside a ``$(function () {...})`` block).
Use this format when you have the same block applying to multiple CSS
styles (separate lines for each selector)::
selector1,
selector2 {
};
Python
------
- Scripts should start with ``#!/usr/bin/env python2.7`` and not
``#!/usr/bin/env python2.7``. See commit ``437d4aee`` for an explanation of
why. Don't put such a line on a Python file unless it's meaningful to
run it as a script. (Some libraries can also be run as scripts, e.g.
to run a test suite.)
- The first import in a file should be
``from __future__ import absolute_import``, per `PEP
328 `__
- Put all imports together at the top of the file, absent a compelling
reason to do otherwise.
- Unpacking sequences doesn't require list brackets::
[x, y] = xs # unnecessary
x, y = xs # better
- For string formatting, use ``x % (y,)`` rather than ``x % y``, to
avoid ambiguity if ``y`` happens to be a tuple.
- When selecting by id, don't use ``foo.pk`` when you mean ``foo.id``.
E.g.
::
recipient = Recipient(type_id=huddle.pk, type=Recipient.HUDDLE)
should be written as
::
recipient = Recipient(type_id=huddle.id, type=Recipient.HUDDLE)
in case we ever change the primary keys.
Version Control
===============
Commit Discipline
-----------------
We follow the Git project's own commit discipline practice of "Each
commit is a minimal coherent idea". This discipline takes a bit of
work, but it makes it much easier for code reviewers to spot bugs, and
makesthe commit history a much more useful resource for developers
trying to understand why the code works the way it does, which also
helps a lot in preventing bugs.
Coherency requirements for any commit:
- It should pass tests (so test updates needed by a change should be in
the same commit as the original change, not a separate "fix the tests
that were broken by the last commit" commit).
- It should be safe to deploy individually, or comment in detail in the
commit message as to why it isn't (maybe with a [manual] tag). So
implementing a new API endpoint in one commit and then adding the
security checks in a future commit should be avoided -- the security
checks should be there from the beginning.
- Error handling should generally be included along with the code that
might trigger the error.
- TODO comments should be in the commit that introduces the
issue or functionality with further work required.
When you should be minimal:
- Significant refactorings should be done in a separate commit from
functional changes.
- Moving code from one file to another should be done in a separate
commits from functional changes or even refactoring within a file.
- 2 different refactorings should be done in different commits.
- 2 different features should be done in different commits.
- If you find yourself writing a commit message that reads like a list
of somewhat dissimilar things that you did, you probably should have
just done 2 commits.
When not to be overly minimal:
- For completely new features, you don't necessarily need to split out
new commits for each little subfeature of the new feature. E.g. if
you're writing a new tool from scratch, it's fine to have the initial
tool have plenty of options/features without doing separate commits
for each one. That said, reviewing a 2000-line giant blob of new
code isn't fun, so please be thoughtful about submitting things in
reviewable units.
- Don't bother to split back end commits from front end commits, even
though the backend can often be coherent on its own.
Other considerations:
- Overly fine commits are easily squashed, but not vice versa, so err
toward small commits, and the code reviewer can advise on squashing.
- If a commit you write doesn't pass tests, you should usually fix
that by amending the commit to fix the bug, not writing a new "fix
tests" commit on top of it.
Zulip expects you to structure the commits in your pull requests to
form a clean history before we will merge them; it's best to write
your commits following these guidelines in the first place, but if you
don't, you can always fix your history using `git rebase -i`.
It can take some practice to get used to writing your commits with a
clean history so that you don't spend much time doing interactive
rebases. For example, often you'll start adding a feature, and
discover you need to a refactoring partway through writing the
feature. When that happens, we recommend stashing your partial
feature, do the refactoring, commit it, and then finish implementing
your feature.
Commit Messages
---------------
- The first line of commit messages should be written in the imperative
and be kept relatively short while concisely explaining what the
commit does. For example:
Bad::
bugfix
gather_subscriptions was broken
fix bug #234.
Good::
Fix gather_subscriptions throwing an exception when given bad input.
- Use present-tense action verbs in your commit messages.
Bad::
Fixing gather_subscriptions throwing an exception when given bad input.
Fixed gather_subscriptions throwing an exception when given bad input.
Good::
Fix gather_subscriptions throwing an exception when given bad input.
- Please use a complete sentence in the summary, ending with a
period.
- The rest of the commit message should be written in full prose and
explain why and how the change was made. If the commit makes
performance improvements, you should generally include some rough
benchmarks showing that it actually improves the performance.
- Any paragraph content in the commit message should be line-wrapped
to less than 76 characters per line, so that your commit message
will be reasonably readable in `git log` in a normal terminal.
- In your commit message, you should describe any manual testing you
did in addition to running the automated tests, and any aspects of
the commit that you think are questionable and you'd like special
attention applied to.
Tests
-----
All significant new features should come with tests.
Third party code
----------------
When adding new third-party packages to our codebase, please include
"[third]" at the beginning of the commit message. You don't necessarily
need to do this when patching third-party code that's already in tree.