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HACKING
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Since 1999, people have been hacking on Krita. Everyone brought their
own coding style, their own code conventions, their own likes and
dislikes. Me, (Boudewijn that is), I like indents of four spaces, and
no scope prefixes for variables. However, in the interests of
consistency, these are the rules new code should adhere to:
See also http://techbase.kde.org/Policies/Kdelibs_Coding_Style -- that document
is leading.
Qt vs STD vs Boost:
In general, use the Qt classes wherever possible, even if someone tells you
that the STD class is better or whatever. We're dealing with a big project
with lots of developers here and we should keep the code as consistent and
easy to grasp as possible. Since people need to know Qt in the first place,
keep to Qt. Discuss deviations on #krita
C++11 and C++14
Yes, but. Avoid lambdas. Avoid the new sig/slot connection syntax _unless_
you are porting all of Krita to the new syntax. Sure, it has some advantages,
but having two different ways of doing the same thing is begging for trouble
and comprehension problems. For now, keep using foreach, we're using it all
over the place. auto is fine, when using in for loops. Don't go overboard
using it in other places.
Before using other new features, discuss on #krita so we can expand this list.
Our minimum gcc version is 4.5, shipped with Ubuntu 12.04
Indentation
With four spaces. Use the default kdelibs indentation
(http://techbase.kde.org/Policies/Kdelibs_Coding_Style)
Includes
Avoid as much as possible #includes in header files; use forward declarations
of classes.
Initializers
Avoid as much as possible initializers in the body of the constructor. Use
initializer lists instead.
Scope prefixes
Use only m_ for class-level variables. No other scope prefixes; no g_, l_,
no 'p' for pointer variables.
Shared pointers
Use shared pointers wherever possible.
Getter/setter
Krita doesn't use Qt's properties -- yet. If you want to introduce use of
properties, convert any and all classes in Krita before committing.
Getter/setters are named 'x() for getters and setX(int x) for setters. If you
come across violations of this rule, change the code.
Class naming
If you use a well-known design pattern, name the class according to the design
pattern. All files should start with 'kis_', all classes with the 'Kis' prefix.
In filenames, separate words with an underscore; in classnames use capital letters.
New implementation files end in .cpp, not in .cc anymore.
Example: kis_new_class.h/KisNewClass.
Function naming
Functions should be named in camelBackedFashion, to conform to Qt's standards.
If you encounter functions in c_style_like_this, feel free to rename. Also:
verbNoun -- i.e., rotateLayer, not layer_rotate. The latter is a true c-ism,
introduced by a language that needs to prefix the 'class' name to every function
in order to have something that not quite OO.
Variable/Parameter names
Variable/parameter names start with an undercast letter. A name composed of different
words is done in camelBackedStyle.
Designer
Krita has started to use designer. All dialogs and all widgets that have a layout
manager must be done in designer. We don't add code nor add signal/slot connections
in designer
Enums
All enums should be prefixed with 'enum'.
Namespaces
Currently, we only use anonymous namespaces for things like undo
commands. For the rest, some classes have a 'Kis' prefix, others don't. This should
be made consistent, and we might want to use namespaces to keep all of Krita
inside.
Files and classes
It's preferred (and strongly preferred) to have only one class per .h/.cpp file.
(Which is logical, because otherwise you won't be able to keep to the naming scheme.)
Spaces
Keep the source airy and open. In particular, there should be empty lines between function
declarations and definitions.
Slots and signals
Prefix slots with slot and signals with sig: slotUpdateSelection, sigSelectionUpdated.
Boolean operators
Use the standard !, !=, ==, && etc style, not the "not", "and" etc. style. Keep krita code
using one, easily recognizable, C++ style.
Boudewijn Rempt