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coding-style.md

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Coding Style

These are general coding style guidelines we've adopted for my research group.

Background on UNIX command-line options: Many (most?) UNIX style command-line options have "long form" and a "short form", where the latter is a single character. For example -a and --all for ls (although, interestingly, -l doesn't have a long form).

Short form options can be strung together, e.g., ls -l -a becomes ls -la. Thus --abc and -abc mean very different things; the first represents a single option, the second is a shorthand for multiple options, e.g., -a -b -c.

For more details, see GNU Program Argument Syntax Conventions.

General

  • We use a maximum line length of 120 character. The rationale for this limit is that 120 is (approximately) the number of characters that will render in GitHub without horizontal scrolling. This maximizes use of screen real estate.

Describing Arguments in Command-Line Applications

  • The description should be a short phrase that begins with a capital letter an ends with a period. It prescribes the function or method's effect as a command ("Do this", "Return that"), not as a description; e.g. don't write "Returns the pathname...". This overarching guideline is adapted from PEP 257: Docstring Conventions.
  • The description should be as succinct as possible, typically a noun phrase. For example, for -index, "Path to input collection." is preferred to "Set the path to the input collection.".
  • Omit articles, e.g., "Number of Hits." is preferred over "The number of hits."
  • Boolean flags should be written as verb phrases, and there is generally no need to indicate that it's a flag in the description. For example, for -storeRaw, "Store raw source documents." is preferred to "Flag to determine whether raw source documents are stored." or "Whether or not to store raw documents.".
  • Prefer prepositional phrases over possessives for clarity, e.g., "Foo parameter of Bar." is preferred to "Bar's Foo parameter." even though the latter is shorter. This is especially the case if Bar has multiple tokens.

Pull Requests and Commit Messages

  • The title of pull requests should be written in the imperative, to be consistent with PEP 257: Docstring Conventions. Capitalize the initial letter but don't end with punctuation. Equivalently, you can think of an implied subject of "this pull request will..." So, "Add super duper feature", not "adds super duper feature" or "Adding super duper feature".

  • Typically, the proposer of the pull request merges, after code review and other checks. I admit that I frequently break this rule and just merge the pull request myself — often it's necessary since the proposer doesn't have write access to the repo, and I forget who has write access and who doesn't. In practice, it works out that regular contributors with write access to a repo merge their own pull request, with a somewhat fuzzy definition of how "regular" is defined.

  • Write a good commit message. The first line of your commit message should match the title of your pull request. If the pull request is relatively small, this should suffice as a commit message. Since our repos are set up for squashed commits, GitHub's default commit message is just a concatenation of the commit messages of all the individual commits that comprise this PR. Don't just use this message. Because we end up with unhelpful commit messages like this one. Instead, I like to either write a short narrative paragraph summarizing issues on the pull request itself, or a short bulleted list. Remember, there's no need to duplicate everything on the pull request, since we can always trace back to examine the discussion online.

Python

  • We adopt PEP8.
  • We adopt single quotes ' for strings; unless another approach is obviously better, we use f-strings for formatting.

Docstrings

  • We adopt the numpy docstring style.
  • In general, follow guidelines in "Describing Arguments in Command-Line Applications".

Command-Line Options

We try to stay true to the UNIX convention, which is what argparse (implicitly) endorses anyway. This means that Java and Python counterparts of script that do the same thing will have different parameters. Thus:

  • Options begin with two dashes: --index instead of -index.
  • Use single dash (instead of underscore) for multi-token options: --max-value instead of -max_value.
  • Use . to group parameters, e.g., --bm25 (use BM25) and --bm25.b (set the BM25 b parameter). This looks better than --bm25-b.

Java

  • Two space indent, otherwise standard conventions.

Command-Line Options

Java breaks the UNIX convention and is a total mess. For example, -classpath and --class-path both work (although the first is much more common). For command-line programs written in Java, we try to maintain consistency to Java options:

  • Options begin with a single dash: -index instead of --index.
  • Use camel case instead of snake case: -maxValue instead of -max_value.
  • Use . to group parameters, e.g., -bm25 (use BM25) and -bm25.b (set the BM25 b parameter).