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STYLEGUIDE.txt
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STYLEGUIDE.txt
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Python coding style guide for Mailman
Copyright (C) 2002-2004 Barry A. Warsaw
$Revision: 7097 $
NOTE: The canonical version of this style guide can be found at:
http://barry.warsaw.us/software/STYLEGUIDE.txt
This document contains a style guide for Python programming, as used in
Mailman. In general, Guido van Rossum's style guide should be taken as a
basis, as embodied in PEP 8:
http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/
however, my (Barry Warsaw's) personal preferences differ from Guido's in a few
places. "When in Rome..." should apply meaning, when coding stuff for Python,
Guido's style should rule, however when coding for Mailman, I'd like to see my
preferences used instead.
Remember rule #1, A Foolish Consistency is the Hobgoblin of Little Minds.
That said, here's a quick outline of where my preferences depart from Guido's:
- Imports usually should be on separate lines. While it's sometimes
okay to say
from types import StringType, ListType
it's never okay to say
import os, sys
Put these on separate lines.
- Imports are always put at the top of the file, just after any module
comments and docstrings, and before module globals and constants.
Imports should be grouped, with the order being:
1. standard library imports
2. related major package imports (i.e. all email package imports next)
3. application specific imports
From-imports should follow non-from imports. Dotted imports should follow
non-dotted imports. Non-dotted imports should be grouped by increasing
length, while dotted imports should be grouped roughly alphabetically.
- In general, there should be at most one class per module, if the module
contains class definitions. If it's a module of functions, that's fine,
group them as common sense dictates. A class-containing module can also
contain some helper functions, but it's best to keep these non-public
(i.e. use a single leading underscore).
Always give the class and the module the same name, differing only by case
as PEP 8 recommends. E.g.
from mailman.parser import Parser
- When importing a class from a class-containing module, it's usually
okay to spell this
from myclass import MyClass
from foo.bar.yourclass import YourClass
If this spelling causes name clashes, then spell them
import myclass
import foo.bar.yourclass
and use "myclass.MyClass"
- Right hanging comments are discouraged, in favor of preceding comments.
E.g.
foo = blarzigop(bar) # if you don't blarzigop it, it'll shlorp
should be written as
# if you don't blarzigop it, it'll shlorp
foo = blarzigop(bar)
- Major sections of code in a module should be separated by line feed
characters (e.g. ^L -- that's a single character control-L not two
characters). This helps with Emacs navigation.
Always put a ^L before module-level functions, before class definitions,
before big blocks of constants which follow imports, and any place else that
would be convenient to jump to. Always put two blank lines before a ^L.
- Put to blank lines between any module level function. Put only one blank
line between methods in a class. No blank lines between the class
definition and the first method in the class (although class docstrings
often go in this space).
- Try to minimize the vertical whitespace in a class. If you're inclined to
separate stanzas of code for readability, consider putting a comment in
describing what the next stanza's purpose is. Don't put stupid or obvious
comments in just to avoid vertical whitespace though.
- Unless internal quote characters would mess things up, the general rule is
that single quotes should be used for short strings, double quotes for
triple-quoted multi-line strings and docstrings. E.g.
foo = 'a foo thing'
warn = "Don't mess things up"
notice = """Our three chief weapons are:
- surprise
- deception
- an almost fanatical devotion to the pope
"""
- Write docstrings for all public modules, functions, classes, and methods.
Docstrings are not necessary and usually discouraged for non-public methods,
but you should have a comment that describes what the method does. This
comment should appear after the "def" line.
- PEP 257 describes good docstrings conventions. Note that most importantly,
the """ that ends a multiline docstring should be on a line by itself, e.g.:
"""Return a foobang
Optional plotz says to frobnicate the bizbaz first.
"""
- For one liner docstrings, keep the closing """ on the same line --
except for module docstrings!
- <> is strongly preferred over !=
- fill-column for docstrings should be 78.
- Always use string methods instead of string module functions.
- For sequences, (strings, lists, tuples), use the fact that empty sequences
are false, so "if not seq" or "if seq" is preferable to "if len(seq)" or "if
not len(seq)". Always use True and False instead of 1 and 0 for boolean
values.
- Always decide whether a class's methods and instance variables should be
public or non-public. In general, never make data variables public unless
you're implementing essentially a record. It's almost always preferable to
give a functional interface to your class instead (Python 2.2's descriptors
and properties make this much nicer).
Also decide whether your attributes should be private or not. The
difference between private and non-public is that the former will never be
useful for a derived class, while the latter might be. Yes, you should
design your classes with inheritance in mind!
- Single leading underscores are generally preferred for non-public
attributes. Use double leading underscores only in classes designed for
inheritance to ensure that truly private attributes will never name clash.
Public attributes should have no leading or trailing underscores unless they
conflict with reserved words, in which case, a single trailing underscore is
preferable to a leading one, or a corrupted spelling, e.g. class_ rather
than klass.
Local Variables:
mode: indented-text
indent-tabs-mode: nil
End: