This document superceeds any other prior documentation or commentary regarding the formatting of the Hamlib C and C++ source code. This document does not apply to the Autotools build system, i.e. configure.ac, Makefile.am or the Autoconf macros in the 'macros/' directory. 0. Background Throughout its life, a number of coding styles have found their way into the Hamlib source tree. Besides lacking a readable consistency, recent compilers have reported logic errors likely due to inconsistent formatting. Such errors can escape notice during casual scanning of a source file. 1. Objective Adopt certain mandatory and recommended coding guidelines to aid in readability of the Hamlib C source code and avoid logic errors due to inconsistent code formatting to the extent possible. 2. Mandatory rules * The use of tab characters, ASCII hexadecimal 0x09, shall no longer be permitted for the indentation and alignment of C or C++ source or header files, only spaces, ASCII hexadecimal 0x20, shall be used for indentation and alignment. The use of the '\t' escape sequence in rig_debug() output, static strings, and the like is permitted. * Indentation shall be 4 spaces. Alignment shall consist of the number of spaces necessary after indentation. Discussion: Plenty has been written regarding the use of the tab character in source files and the proper setup of the various editors. There is no point in rehashing that here, except to say that spaces are universal. Modern editors are configurable to setting indents to four spaces and tab stops to four spaces. * Bare conditionals shall not be permitted. All conditionals--'if', 'else', 'for', 'while', and 'do while' shall have their statements enclosed in braces. Discussion: Consider this conditional: if (something); do_that(); No harm, eh? Look again. The programmer gave the 'if' conditional a null statement with the trailing ';' at the end of the line. As a result, 'do_that()' will be called whether 'something' is true or not. Most likely this is not what the programmer intended! If, instead, the code is reformatted to: if (something) { ; do_that(); } by a code formatter, the null statement becomes harmless and 'do_that()' is called depending on the truth of 'something'. Here proper indentation and alignment is only half the battle in finding such bugs, enclosing all statement blocks in braces is the other half. Patch submissions will be checked for adherence to these two rules. While patches won't be rejected outright, the corrections will be applied and the patch set rebased before being pushed to the repositories. 3. Recommended coding style The following bullet points follow the formatting the Artistic Style code formatter will apply when using the included 'scripts/astylerc' configuration file. Any version from 2.03 or later should work. It can be invoked from a backend directory as follows: $ astyle --options=../scripts/astylerc moonmelter.c The old file will be copied to 'moonmelter.c.orig' as a back up. * Brace style is K&R where the opening brace of a function definition is on a new line in the far left column following the function signature. For conditionals, the opening brace is at the end of the conditional one space after the closing parentheses. In all cases the closing brace is on a line of its own and lines up vertically with the conditional key word. The exception (there is always at least one) is when 'else', 'else if, or 'while' from a 'do while' loop are cuddled after the closing brace. See 'src/rig.c' for many examples. * Indents are four spaces as detailed above. Each level of code should be one indent further to the right. An exception is where a conditional needs to be split over multiple lines and an extra indentation provides more readability of the statement block. See 'src/rig.c' for many examples. * Isolate conditional blocks with a blank line before and after. Like paragraphs in prose that focus on a topic, it's important that conditionals be obvious to the reader. An exception is where another conditional follows immediately on the next line. Indentation is sufficient. See 'src/rig.c' for many examples. * No space between parentheses and the enclosed characters. You know where to look by now. ;-) * One space on either side of operators and between function arguments. * One space between a conditional key word and its opening parentheses. * No space between a function name and its opening paretheses. * No space between a pointer operator ('*') and the pointer name. Likewise for the address operator ('&'). Exception: In a function prototype and definition, a space should be put between the '*' operator and the function/macro name to indicate a pointer is returned, not that the function/macro name is an assigned pointer value. * Keep code lines under 80 characters. This will require some judgement on where the break works best. A couple of keys are, a) break conditionals before a comparison operator so it appears at the front of the next line, and, b) when breaking a function call, put all arguments on their own line. It is sometimes necessary for strings to go beyond the 80 character point. This is fine. If needed, a C compiler will concatenate strings that are split across multiple lines. * Avoid trailing comments when possible. Comments should precede the statement(s) they describe. * When a conditional is split across mutliple lines, readability of the following statement can be aided by a blank line above the statement and/or an extra level of indentation. 4. Use of code formatting tools There are a number of tools that can be used to format the source code. Some are standalone and others are part of an editor or IDE. 4.1 astyle Use of the Artistic Style (astyle) formatter (http://astyle.sourceforge.net/) with the included options file ('scripts/astylerc') will provide most of the objectives outlined above. Some manual formatting may be required. For example, if a line is already less than 80 characters and ends with an operator, astyle will not move the operator to the front of the next line where it is preferred. 4.2 GNU Indent GNU Indent lacked a few of the features of astyle for padding conditional blocks and enforcing spaces around operators and between comma separated arguments (if I'm mistaken, please provide a working example--N0NB). Otherwise, acceptable results should be possible. 4.3 GNU Emacs GNU Emacs with the included C Mode can be configured to provide acceptable formatting while editing source files. Eventually a custom Hamlib style elisp file will be included in the 'scripts/' directory. Useful minor modes include: modeline-char: Displays the character and its Unicode value on the modeline. fill-column-indicator: Draws a vertical line at fill column. highlight-numbers: Applies a color face to numeric constants. highlight-parentheses: Highlights parentheses and the nesting braces around point (cursor). cwarn: Parses the C code for harmful constructs. whitespace: Shows whitespace--tabs, spaces, and newlines in the buffer. 4.4 Other editors & IDEs Other editors and IDEs likely have various ways to apply ones preferred style. The main things to configure are having the key produce four spaces and that tab stops be every four positions across the screen (if configurable). 5 Summary Hamlib source code is no place for an entry into the obfuscated C contest! Many of us are hobbyists and write this for fun. Easy to read and understand logic is preferred over a clever solution. If your solution must be written in a clever fashion, please document it well in your comments. 73, Nate, N0NB