libcaca-style(3) - Linux man page

Name

libcaca-style - Libcaca coding style

General guidelines

A pretty safe rule of thumb is: look at what has already been done and try to do the same.

• Tabulations should be avoided and replaced with eight spaces.

• Indentation is generally 4 spaces.

• Lines should wrap at most at 79 characters.

• Do not leave whitespace at the end of lines.

• Do not use multiple spaces for anything else than indentation.

• Code qui fait des warnings == code de porc == deux baffes dans ta gueule

C coding style

Try to use short names whenever possible (i for indices, w for width, cv for canvas...). Macros are always uppercase, variable and function names are always lowercase. Use the underscore to separate words within names:

#define BROKEN 0
#define MAX(x, y) ((x > y) ? (x) : (y))

unsigned int x, y, w, h;
char *font_name;
void frobulate_every_three_seconds(void);
const is a suffix. It's char const *foo, not const char *foo.

Use spaces after commas and between operators. Do not use spaces after an opening parenthesis or before a closing one:

a += 2;
b = (a * (c + d));
x = min(x1, x2, x3);
Do not put a space between functions and the corresponding opening parenthesis:
int function(int);

if(a == b)
    return;
Do not put parentheses around return values:
return a + (b & x) + d[10];
Opening braces should be on a line of their own, aligned with the current block. Braces are optional for one-liners:
int function(int a)
{
    if(a & 0x84)
        return a;

   if(a < 0)
    {
        return -a;
    }
    else
    {
        a /= 2;

       switch(a)
        {
            case 0:
            case 1:
                return -1;
                break;
            default:
                return a;
        }
    }
}

C++ coding style

Nothing here yet.