mirror of https://github.com/zulip/zulip.git
359 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
359 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
# Code style and conventions
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## Be consistent!
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Look at the surrounding code, or a similar part of the project, and try
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to do the same thing. If you think the other code has actively bad
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style, fix it (in a separate commit).
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When in doubt, send an email to <zulip-devel@googlegroups.com> with your
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question.
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## Lint tools
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You can run them all at once with
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./tools/lint-all
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You can set this up as a local Git commit hook with
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``tools/setup-git-repo``
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The Vagrant setup process runs this for you.
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`lint-all` runs many lint checks in parallel, including
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- Javascript ([JSLint](http://www.jslint.com/))
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> `tools/jslint/check-all.js` contains a pretty fine-grained set of
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> JSLint options, rule exceptions, and allowed global variables. If
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> you add a new global, you'll need to add it to the list.
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- Python ([Pyflakes](http://pypi.python.org/pypi/pyflakes))
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- templates
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- Puppet configuration
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- custom checks (e.g. trailing whitespace and spaces-not-tabs)
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## Secrets
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Please don't put any passwords, secret access keys, etc. inline in the
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code. Instead, use the `get_secret` function in `zproject/settings.py`
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to read secrets from `/etc/zulip/secrets.conf`.
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## Dangerous constructs
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### Misuse of database queries
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Look out for Django code like this:
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[Foo.objects.get(id=bar.x.id)
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for bar in Bar.objects.filter(...)
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if bar.baz < 7]
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This will make one database query for each `Bar`, which is slow in
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production (but not in local testing!). Instead of a list comprehension,
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write a single query using Django's [QuerySet
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API](https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/ref/models/querysets/).
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If you can't rewrite it as a single query, that's a sign that something
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is wrong with the database schema. So don't defer this optimization when
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performing schema changes, or else you may later find that it's
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impossible.
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### UserProfile.objects.get() / Client.objects.get / etc.
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In our Django code, never do direct `UserProfile.objects.get(email=foo)`
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database queries. Instead always use `get_user_profile_by_{email,id}`.
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There are 3 reasons for this:
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1. It's guaranteed to correctly do a case-inexact lookup
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2. It fetches the user object from remote cache, which is faster
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3. It always fetches a UserProfile object which has been queried using
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.selected\_related(), and thus will perform well when one later
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accesses related models like the Realm.
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Similarly we have `get_client` and `get_stream` functions to fetch those
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commonly accessed objects via remote cache.
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### Using Django model objects as keys in sets/dicts
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Don't use Django model objects as keys in sets/dictionaries -- you will
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get unexpected behavior when dealing with objects obtained from
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different database queries:
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For example,
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`UserProfile.objects.only("id").get(id=17) in set([UserProfile.objects.get(id=17)])`
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is False
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You should work with the IDs instead.
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### user\_profile.save()
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You should always pass the update\_fields keyword argument to .save()
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when modifying an existing Django model object. By default, .save() will
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overwrite every value in the column, which results in lots of race
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conditions where unrelated changes made by one thread can be
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accidentally overwritten by another thread that fetched its UserProfile
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object before the first thread wrote out its change.
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### Using raw saves to update important model objects
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In most cases, we already have a function in zephyr/lib/actions.py with
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a name like do\_activate\_user that will correctly handle lookups,
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caching, and notifying running browsers via the event system about your
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change. So please check whether such a function exists before writing
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new code to modify a model object, since your new code has a good chance
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of getting at least one of these things wrong.
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### `x.attr('zid')` vs. `rows.id(x)`
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Our message row DOM elements have a custom attribute `zid` which
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contains the numerical message ID. **Don't access this directly as**
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`x.attr('zid')` ! The result will be a string and comparisons (e.g. with
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`<=`) will give the wrong result, occasionally, just enough to make a
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bug that's impossible to track down.
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You should instead use the `id` function from the `rows` module, as in
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`rows.id(x)`. This returns a number. Even in cases where you do want a
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string, use the `id` function, as it will simplify future code changes.
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In most contexts in JavaScript where a string is needed, you can pass a
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number without any explicit conversion.
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### Javascript var
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Always declare Javascript variables using `var`:
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var x = ...;
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In a function, `var` is necessary or else `x` will be a global variable.
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For variables declared at global scope, this has no effect, but we do it
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for consistency.
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Javascript has function scope only, not block scope. This means that a
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`var` declaration inside a `for` or `if` acts the same as a `var`
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declaration at the beginning of the surrounding `function`. To avoid
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confusion, declare all variables at the top of a function.
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### Javascript `for (i in myArray)`
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Don't use it:
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[[1]](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/500504/javascript-for-in-with-arrays),
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[[2]](http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/javascriptguide.xml#for-in_loop),
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[[3]](http://www.jslint.com/lint.html#forin)
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### jQuery global state
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Don't mess with jQuery global state once the app has loaded. Code like
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this is very dangerous:
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$.ajaxSetup({ async: false });
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$.get(...);
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$.ajaxSetup({ async: true });
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jQuery and the browser are free to run other code while the request is
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pending, which could perform other Ajax requests with the altered
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settings.
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Instead, switch to the more general `$.ajax`\_ function, which can take
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options like `async`.
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### State and logs files
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Do not write state and logs files inside the current working directory
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in the production environment. This will not how you expect, because the
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current working directory for the app changes every time we do a deploy.
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Instead, hardcode a path in settings.py -- see SERVER\_LOG\_PATH in
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settings.py for an example.
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## JS array/object manipulation
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For generic functions that operate on arrays or JavaScript objects, you
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should generally use [Underscore](http://underscorejs.org/). We used to
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use jQuery's utility functions, but the Underscore equivalents are more
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consistent, better-behaved and offer more choices.
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A quick conversion table:
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$.each → _.each (parameters to the callback reversed)
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$.inArray → _.indexOf (parameters reversed)
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$.grep → _.filter
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$.map → _.map
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$.extend → _.extend
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There's a subtle difference in the case of `_.extend`; it will replace
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attributes with undefined, whereas jQuery won't:
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$.extend({foo: 2}, {foo: undefined}); // yields {foo: 2}, BUT...
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_.extend({foo: 2}, {foo: undefined}); // yields {foo: undefined}!
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Also, `_.each` does not let you break out of the iteration early by
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returning false, the way jQuery's version does. If you're doing this,
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you probably want `_.find`, `_.every`, or `_.any`, rather than 'each'.
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Some Underscore functions have multiple names. You should always use the
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canonical name (given in large print in the Underscore documentation),
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with the exception of `_.any`, which we prefer over the less clear
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'some'.
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## More arbitrary style things
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### General
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Indentation is four space characters for Python, JS, CSS, and shell
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scripts. Indentation is two space characters for HTML templates.
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We never use tabs anywhere in source code we write, but we have some
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third-party files which contain tabs.
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Keep third-party static files under the directory
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`zephyr/static/third/`, with one subdirectory per third-party project.
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We don't have an absolute hard limit on line length, but we should avoid
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extremely long lines. A general guideline is: refactor stuff to get it
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under 85 characters, unless that makes the code a lot uglier, in which
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case it's fine to go up to 120 or so.
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Whitespace guidelines:
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- Put one space (or more for alignment) around binary arithmetic and
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equality operators.
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- Put one space around each part of the ternary operator.
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- Put one space between keywords like `if` and `while` and their
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associated open paren.
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- Put one space between the closing paren for `if` and `while`-like
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constructs and the opening curly brace. Put the curly brace on the
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same line unless doing otherwise improves readability.
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- Put no space before or after the open paren for function calls and
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no space before the close paren for function calls.
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- For the comma operator and colon operator in languages where it is
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used for inline dictionaries, put no space before it and at least
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one space after. Only use more than one space for alignment.
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### Javascript
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Don't use `==` and `!=` because these operators perform type coercions,
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which can mask bugs. Always use `===` and `!==`.
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End every statement with a semicolon.
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`if` statements with no braces are allowed, if the body is simple and
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its extent is abundantly clear from context and formatting.
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Anonymous functions should have spaces before and after the argument
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list:
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var x = function (foo, bar) { // ...
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When calling a function with an anonymous function as an argument, use
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this style:
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$.get('foo', function (data) {
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var x = ...;
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// ...
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});
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The inner function body is indented one level from the outer function
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call. The closing brace for the inner function and the closing
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parenthesis for the outer call are together on the same line. This style
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isn't necessarily appropriate for calls with multiple anonymous
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functions or other arguments following them.
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Use
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$(function () { ...
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rather than
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$(document).ready(function () { ...
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and combine adjacent on-ready functions, if they are logically related.
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The best way to build complicated DOM elements is a Mustache template
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like `zephyr/static/templates/message.handlebars`. For simpler things
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you can use jQuery DOM building APIs like so:
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var new_tr = $('<tr />').attr('id', zephyr.id);
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Passing a HTML string to jQuery is fine for simple hardcoded things:
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foo.append('<p id="selected">foo</p>');
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but avoid programmatically building complicated strings.
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We used to favor attaching behaviors in templates like so:
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<p onclick="select_zephyr({{id}})">
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but there are some reasons to prefer attaching events using jQuery code:
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- Potential huge performance gains by using delegated events where
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possible
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- When calling a function from an `onclick` attribute, `this` is not
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bound to the element like you might think
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- jQuery does event normalization
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Either way, avoid complicated JavaScript code inside HTML attributes;
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call a helper function instead.
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### HTML / CSS
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Don't use the `style=` attribute. Instead, define logical classes and
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put your styles in `zulip.css`.
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Don't use the tag name in a selector unless you have to. In other words,
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use `.foo` instead of `span.foo`. We shouldn't have to care if the tag
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type changes in the future.
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Don't use inline event handlers (`onclick=`, etc. attributes). Instead,
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attach a jQuery event handler
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(`$('#foo').on('click', function () {...})`) when the DOM is ready
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(inside a `$(function () {...})` block).
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Use this format when you have the same block applying to multiple CSS
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styles (separate lines for each selector):
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selector1,
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selector2 {
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};
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### Python
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- Scripts should start with `#!/usr/bin/env python` and not
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`#/usr/bin/python` (the right Python may not be installed in
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`/usr/bin`) or `#/usr/bin/env/python2.7` (bad for Python 3
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compatibility). Don't put a shebang line on a Python file unless
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it's meaningful to run it as a script. (Some libraries can also be
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run as scripts, e.g. to run a test suite.)
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- The first import in a file should be
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`from __future__ import absolute_import`, per [PEP
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328](http://docs.python.org/2/whatsnew/2.5.html#pep-328-absolute-and-relative-imports)
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- Put all imports together at the top of the file, absent a compelling
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reason to do otherwise.
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- Unpacking sequences doesn't require list brackets:
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[x, y] = xs # unnecessary
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x, y = xs # better
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- For string formatting, use `x % (y,)` rather than `x % y`, to avoid
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ambiguity if `y` happens to be a tuple.
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- When selecting by id, don't use `foo.pk` when you mean `foo.id`.
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E.g.
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recipient = Recipient(type_id=huddle.pk, type=Recipient.HUDDLE)
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should be written as
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recipient = Recipient(type_id=huddle.id, type=Recipient.HUDDLE)
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in case we ever change the primary keys.
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### Tests
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All significant new features should come with tests. See testing.
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### Third party code
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When adding new third-party packages to our codebase, please include
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"[third]" at the beginning of the commit message. You don't necessarily
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need to do this when patching third-party code that's already in tree.
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