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Coding Guidelines
This page outlines the set of coding guidelines, including stylistic guidelines, followed in the code within the repository. The intent of these guidelines to to promote readability from consistency, rather than pitch these as better from an alternate set of guidelines, and to be a bit more specific/concrete than simply saying "look at the rest of the code and be similar". That said, do look at the rest of the code as illustrative. FWIW, these are based roughly on the guidelines followed in the .NET framework in the early v1 days.
Thanks in advance for helping keep the code consistent, and making it easier to incorporate contributions and pull requests!
- Each file should contain at most one top-level class. Consider using nested classes if a class is only meaningful in the scope of another class (which is often the primary motivation for grouping classes into the same file).
- The class name and the file name should match.
- The file’s location on the file system should be indicative of the namespace that the class belongs to.
- Favor keeping code for a class together, rather than split into a bunch of partial classes. The one exception to this rule is for extremely big classes that are in fact a union of logically independent pieces of functionality. In this case, the file name should be ClassName.LogicalGroup.cs.
- Include a header comment consistent with the rest of the codebase in each file.
- Namespace imports should occur top-level in the class (outside of the namespace scope), and listed alphabetically, with the exception that System.* namespaces should appear first. Do import the implicit System namespace.
- Members within a class should exist in the following order: static fields and constants, member fields, constructors, properties, events, methods, explicitly implemented interface members, and finally nested classes.
- Member fields may be logically grouped, but other members (properties, events and methods) should be alphabetically ordered. Do not group by member visibility.
- Use region blocks for explicitly implemented interfaces. Do not use region blocks for other grouping.
- Initialize members within the constructor, and not at the point of their declaration. This helps avoid the jumping around in the debugger when debugging instantiation of a class.
- Use K&R style bracing, where the open brace is on the end of the line rather than on a line by itself.
- Separate out open/close braces across lines, i.e. do not begin a scope and end a scope on the same line.
- Always use braces for block statements, even if a block only contains a single statement.
- Indent each level using 4 spaces in c# code, and 2 spaces in script or html/markup. Do not use any tabs.
- Use single space between arguments
- Do not use spaces between method names and parentheses or between parentheses and arguments.
- Do not use spaces in indexer-brackets.
- Use a single space after keywords in control-flow statements.
- Use a single space between operators.
- Use a single new line as separator between consecutive members.
- Use two lines as separator between nested classes.
- Do use a single new line between namespace declaration and the class declaration and the first member within the class.
- Within a method, use new line based on judgement to group logically related set of statements. In particular do not go the extreme and introduce a blank line between every consecutive pair of statements.
- Exercise good judgement for how long a line of code runs. There isn't a fixed rule, but as a general hint, try to limit a line to 120 columns.
Use parentheses around expressions involving binary operators (esp. in if/while statements). Also use them where they help readability, i.e. do not rely on requiring one to think about operator precedence rules while reading code.
Always be explicit about visibility of classes and members. Do not implicitly use default "internal" and "private" visibility.
- Use PascalCasing (first letter of each word is capitalized) for type names, namespaces and members (properties, methods, events, and static fields).
- Use camelCasing (first letter lowercase, first letter of each subsequent word capitalized) for parameters, locals and member fields.
- Use leading underscore for private fields.
- Use C# keywords for primitive types (string, int etc.) unless you are referring to a static method (eg. String.Empty).
- Use namespace import instead of namespace-qualified type names.