1 GNU m4 STYLE - The way this code should look. -*- outline -*-
3 Before all else this code follows the GNU coding standards and
4 indentation style described in standards.info. Additionally the
5 following restrictions on coding style apply:
9 + Avoid TABs in .h and .c files. See HACKING for details.
13 + All of this code is ANSI-C, GNU C extensions are conditional so that
14 the code will compile cleanly on non GLIBC/GCC systems.
18 + All non-static symbols have a prefix either `M4' or `m4'.
20 + All exported symbols which are part of the library api have the
23 + Symbols which are exported from the library (for efficiency perhaps)
24 but are not part of the supported library api have the prefix
27 + Function names should be verb phrases; m4_module_get_field.
29 + Functions which exist to be used as callbacks from API functions, and
30 hence which likely have strange looking parameters are named with the
31 suffix `_CB', to make it obvious why they look a little odd.
33 + Macros which implement fast versions of functions share the
34 same name as the function they replace, and may not evaluate
35 parameters more than once.
37 + Otherwise macros are in uppercase, prefixed `M4' if they are visible
38 to the user after installation, to help the user know when to be
39 careful about multiple evaluations of parameters.
41 + Function names should contain the name of the module they belong to,
42 usually immediately after the namespace prefix: m4_module_load.
44 + Variables should not be exported (not true, but I'm working on it),
45 but accessor functions used instead. Note the `get'/`set' part of
46 the symbol name comes before the module part: m4_get_module_macros.
48 + Structures come with accessor macros named <struct name>_<field
49 name> (in upper case), to make refactoring of nested structures much
52 + Structures are typedeffed separately, and the structure itself
53 generally not exported unless in the `m4__' namespace to support
56 + An opaque abstract data type (ADT) can have public and private fields:
57 By convention public fields will have exported accessor functions (and
58 maybe also fast macro versions of the same), and private fields will
59 not export accessors at all. However, there should be non-exported
60 (or at least in the `m4__' namespace) accessor functions for even the
61 private fields of an ADT to aid possible later refactoring.
65 + There are four groups of sources in subdirectories: `gnu' contains
66 the files maintained outside of m4, as a portability layer when building
67 the souce for non-glibc2 machines; `m4' contains the functionality for
68 libm4 and enables the user to write modules; `modules' implements the
69 builtin macros for the m4 binary; `src' is a small wrapper program
70 which links libm4 and loads initial modules to implement the m4 engine.
72 + The headers in gnu need to be managed carefully: gnulib headers
73 can be included by other files in the same directory using `#include
74 "file.h"', and from files in other directories with `#include
75 <m4/file.h>'. The include path to invocations of the compiler from
76 various Makefile.am are set to prevent the possibility of picking up
77 an m4/file.h when the system file.h (e.g stdbool.h) is present. This,
78 in turn means the replacement headers can live in gnulib/m4 without
79 suffering a renaming scheme at configure time. Don't break with the
80 `#include' convention, or the compile will go wrong in hard to debug
81 ways on some platforms.
83 + Low coupling. Classes (and in C, by this I mean files of functions)
84 should not rely on a web of other classes to be useful, they should
85 communicate with as few other classes as possible.
87 + High cohesion. The api and caller boundaries should be well defined
88 and adhered to; a class should do one thing only.
90 ========================================================================
92 Copyright (C) 2003, 2006, 2010, 2013-2014, 2017 Free Software
95 Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
96 under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or
97 any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no
98 Invariant Sections, with no Front-Cover Texts, and with no Back-Cover
99 Texts. A copy of the license is included in the ``GNU Free
100 Documentation License'' file as part of this distribution.