335 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
335 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
Git commit conventions
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======================
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Each commit message should start with a directory or full file path
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prefix, so it was clear which part of codebase a commit affects. If
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a change affects one file, it's better to use path to a file. If it
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affects few files in a subdirectory, using subdirectory as a prefix
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is ok. For longish paths, it's acceptable to drop intermediate
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components, which still should provide good context of a change.
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It's also ok to drop file extensions.
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Besides prefix, first line of a commit message should describe a
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change clearly and to the point, and be a grammatical sentence with
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final full stop. First line must fit within 72 characters. Examples
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of good first line of commit messages:
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py/objstr: Add splitlines() method.
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py: Rename FOO to BAR.
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docs/machine: Fix typo in reset() description.
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ports: Switch to use lib/foo instead of duplicated code.
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After the first line add an empty line and in the following lines describe
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the change in a detail, if needed, with lines fitting within 75 characters
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(with an exception for long items like URLs which cannot be broken). Any
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change beyond 5 lines would likely require such detailed description.
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To get good practical examples of good commits and their messages, browse
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the `git log` of the project.
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When committing you must sign-off your commit by adding "Signed-off-by:"
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line(s) at the end of the commit message, e.g. using `git commit -s`. You
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are then certifying and signing off against the following:
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* That you wrote the change yourself, or took it from a project with
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a compatible license (in the latter case the commit message, and possibly
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source code should provide reference where the implementation was taken
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from and give credit to the original author, as required by the license).
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* That you are allowed to release these changes to an open-source project
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(for example, changes done during paid work for a third party may require
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explicit approval from that third party).
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* That you (or your employer) agree to release the changes under
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MicroPython's license, which is the MIT license. Note that you retain
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copyright for your changes (for smaller changes, the commit message
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conveys your copyright; if you make significant changes to a particular
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source module, you're welcome to add your name to the file header).
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* Your contribution including commit message will be publicly and
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indefinitely available for anyone to access, including redistribution
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under the terms of the project's license.
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* Your signature for all of the above, which is the "Signed-off-by" line,
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includes your full real name and a valid and active email address by
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which you can be contacted in the foreseeable future.
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Code auto-formatting
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====================
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Both C and Python code formatting are controlled for consistency across the
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MicroPython codebase. C code is formatted using the `tools/codeformat.py`
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script which uses [uncrustify](https://github.com/uncrustify/uncrustify).
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Python code is linted and formatted using
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[ruff & ruff format](https://github.com/astral-sh/ruff).
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After making changes, and before committing, run `tools/codeformat.py` to
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reformat your C code and `ruff format` for any Python code. Without
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arguments this tool will reformat all source code (and may take some time
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to run). Otherwise pass as arguments to the tool the files that changed,
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and it will only reformat those.
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uncrustify
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==========
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Only [uncrustify](https://github.com/uncrustify/uncrustify) v0.71 or v0.72 can
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be used for MicroPython. Different uncrustify versions produce slightly
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different formatting, and the configuration file formats are often
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incompatible. v0.73 or newer *will not work*.
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Depending on your operating system version, it may be possible to install a pre-compiled
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uncrustify version:
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Ubuntu, Debian
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--------------
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Ubuntu versions 21.10 or 22.04LTS, and Debian versions bullseye or bookworm all
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include v0.72 so can be installed directly:
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```
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$ apt install uncrustify
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```
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Arch Linux
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----------
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The current Arch uncrustify version is too new. There is an [old Arch package
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for v0.72](https://archive.archlinux.org/packages/u/uncrustify/) that can be
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installed from the Arch Linux archive ([more
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information](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Downgrading_packages#Arch_Linux_Archive)). Use
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the [IgnorePkg feature](https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Pacman#Skip_package_from_being_upgraded)
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to prevent it re-updating.
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Brew
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----
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This command may work, please raise a new Issue if it doesn't:
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```
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curl -L https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-core/raw/2b07d8192623365078a8b855a164ebcdf81494a6/Formula/uncrustify.rb > uncrustify.rb && brew install uncrustify.rb && rm uncrustify.rb
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```
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Automatic Pre-Commit Hooks
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==========================
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To have code formatting and commit message conventions automatically checked,
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a configuration file is provided for the [pre-commit](https://pre-commit.com/)
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tool.
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First install `pre-commit`, either from your system package manager or via
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`pip`. When installing `pre-commit` via pip, it is recommended to use a
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virtual environment. Other sources, such as Brew are also available, see
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[the docs](https://pre-commit.com/index.html#install) for details.
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```
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$ apt install pre-commit # Ubuntu, Debian
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$ pacman -Sy python-precommit # Arch Linux
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$ brew install pre-commit # Brew
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$ pip install pre-commit # PyPI
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```
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Next, install [uncrustify (see above)](#uncrustify). Other dependencies are managed by
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pre-commit automatically, but uncrustify needs to be installed and available on
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the PATH.
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Then, inside the MicroPython repository, register the git hooks for pre-commit
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by running:
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```
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$ pre-commit install --hook-type pre-commit --hook-type commit-msg
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```
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pre-commit will now automatically run during `git commit` for both code and
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commit message formatting.
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The same formatting checks will be run by CI for any Pull Request submitted to
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MicroPython. Pre-commit allows you to see any failure more quickly, and in many
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cases will automatically correct it in your local working copy.
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To unregister `pre-commit` from your MicroPython repository, run:
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```
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$ pre-commit uninstall --hook-type pre-commit --hook-type commit-msg
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```
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Tips:
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* To skip pre-commit checks on a single commit, use `git commit -n` (for
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`--no-verify`).
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* To ignore the pre-commit message format check temporarily, start the commit
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message subject line with "WIP" (for "Work In Progress").
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Running pre-commit manually
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===========================
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Once pre-commit is installed as per the previous section it can be manually
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run against the MicroPython python codebase to update file formatting on
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demand, with either:
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* `pre-commit run --all-files` to fix all files in the MicroPython codebase
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* `pre-commit run --file ./path/to/my/file` to fix just one file
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* `pre-commit run --file ./path/to/my/folder/*` to fix just one folder
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Python code conventions
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=======================
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Python code follows [PEP 8](https://legacy.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/) and
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is auto-formatted using [ruff format](https://docs.astral.sh/ruff/formatter)
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with a line-length of 99 characters.
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Naming conventions:
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- Module names are short and all lowercase; eg pyb, stm.
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- Class names are CamelCase, with abbreviations all uppercase; eg I2C, not
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I2c.
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- Function and method names are all lowercase with words separated by
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a single underscore as necessary to improve readability; eg mem_read.
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- Constants are all uppercase with words separated by a single underscore;
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eg GPIO_IDR.
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C code conventions
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==================
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C code is auto-formatted using [uncrustify](https://github.com/uncrustify/uncrustify)
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and the corresponding configuration file `tools/uncrustify.cfg`, with a few
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minor fix-ups applied by `tools/codeformat.py`. When writing new C code please
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adhere to the existing style and use `tools/codeformat.py` to check any changes.
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The main conventions, and things not enforceable via the auto-formatter, are
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described below.
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White space:
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- Expand tabs to 4 spaces.
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- Don't leave trailing whitespace at the end of a line.
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- For control blocks (if, for, while), put 1 space between the
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keyword and the opening parenthesis.
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- Put 1 space after a comma, and 1 space around operators.
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Braces:
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- Use braces for all blocks, even no-line and single-line pieces of
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code.
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- Put opening braces on the end of the line it belongs to, not on
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a new line.
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- For else-statements, put the else on the same line as the previous
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closing brace.
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Header files:
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- Header files should be protected from multiple inclusion with #if
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directives. See an existing header for naming convention.
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Names:
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- Use underscore_case, not camelCase for all names.
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- Use CAPS_WITH_UNDERSCORE for enums and macros.
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- When defining a type use underscore_case and put '_t' after it.
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Integer types: MicroPython runs on 16, 32, and 64 bit machines, so it's
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important to use the correctly-sized (and signed) integer types. The
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general guidelines are:
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- For most cases use mp_int_t for signed and mp_uint_t for unsigned
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integer values. These are guaranteed to be machine-word sized and
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therefore big enough to hold the value from a MicroPython small-int
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object.
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- Use size_t for things that count bytes / sizes of objects.
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- You can use int/uint, but remember that they may be 16-bits wide.
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- If in doubt, use mp_int_t/mp_uint_t.
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Comments:
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- Be concise and only write comments for things that are not obvious.
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- Use `// ` prefix, NOT `/* ... */`. No extra fluff.
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Memory allocation:
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- Use m_new, m_renew, m_del (and friends) to allocate and free heap memory.
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These macros are defined in py/misc.h.
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Examples
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--------
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Braces, spaces, names and comments:
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#define TO_ADD (123)
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// This function will always recurse indefinitely and is only used to show
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// coding style
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int foo_function(int x, int some_value) {
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if (x < some_value) {
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foo(some_value, x);
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} else {
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foo(x + TO_ADD, some_value - 1);
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}
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for (int my_counter = 0; my_counter < x; ++my_counter) {
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}
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}
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Type declarations:
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typedef struct _my_struct_t {
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int member;
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void *data;
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} my_struct_t;
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Documentation conventions
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=========================
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MicroPython generally follows CPython in documentation process and
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conventions. reStructuredText syntax is used for the documentation.
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Specific conventions/suggestions:
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* Use `*` markup to refer to arguments of a function, e.g.:
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```
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.. method:: poll.unregister(obj)
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Unregister *obj* from polling.
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```
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* Use following syntax for cross-references/cross-links:
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```
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:func:`foo` - function foo in current module
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:func:`module1.foo` - function foo in module "module1"
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(similarly for other referent types)
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:class:`Foo` - class Foo
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:meth:`Class.method1` - method1 in Class
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:meth:`~Class.method1` - method1 in Class, but rendered just as "method1()",
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not "Class.method1()"
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:meth:`title <method1>` - reference method1, but render as "title" (use only
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if really needed)
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:mod:`module1` - module module1
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`symbol` - generic xref syntax which can replace any of the above in case
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the xref is unambiguous. If there's ambiguity, there will be a warning
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during docs generation, which need to be fixed using one of the syntaxes
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above
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```
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* Cross-referencing arbitrary locations
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~~~
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.. _xref_target:
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Normal non-indented text.
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This is :ref:`reference <xref_target>`.
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(If xref target is followed by section title, can be just
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:ref:`xref_target`).
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~~~
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* Linking to external URL:
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```
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`link text <http://foo.com/...>`_
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```
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* Referencing builtin singleton objects:
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```
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``None``, ``True``, ``False``
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```
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* Use following syntax to create common description for more than one element:
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~~~
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.. function:: foo(x)
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bar(y)
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Description common to foo() and bar().
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~~~
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More detailed guides and quickrefs:
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* http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/rest.html
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* http://www.sphinx-doc.org/en/stable/markup/inline.html
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* http://docutils.sourceforge.net/docs/user/rst/quickref.html
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