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joplin/readme/coding_style.md
2022-08-08 18:32:09 +02:00

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Coding style

Coding style is mostly enforced by a pre-commit hook that runs eslint. This hook is installed whenever running yarn install on any of the application directory. If for some reason the pre-commit hook didn't get installed, you can manually install it by running yarn install at the root of the repository.

Use TypeScript for new files

Creating a new .ts file

Because the TypeScript compiler generates .js files, be sure to add these new .js files to .eslintignore and .gitignore.

To do this,

  1. If the TypeScript compiler has already generated a .js file for the new .ts file, delete it.
  2. Run yarn run updateIgnored in the root directory of the project (or yarn run postinstall)

Convert existing .js files to TypeScript before modifying

Even if you are modifying a file that was originally in JavaScript you should ideally convert it first to TypeScript before modifying it.

If this is a large file however please ask first if it needs to be converted. Some very old and large JS files are tricky to convert properly due to poorly defined types, so in some cases it's better to leave that for another day (or another PR).

Filenames

Use the same case for imported and exported members

If you create a file that exports a single function called processData(), the file should be named processData.ts. When importing, it should be imported as processData, too. Basically, be consistent with naming, even though JS allows things to be named differently.

BAD:

// ProcessDATA.ts
export default const processData = () => {
	// ...
};

// foo.ts
import doDataProcessing from './ProcessDATA';

doDataProcessing();
...

Good:

// processData.ts
export default const processData = () => {
	// ...
};

// foo.ts
import processData from './processData';

processData();
...

Use camelCase for constants in new code

BAD:

// Bad! Don't use in new code!
const GRAVITY_ACCEL = 9.8;

Good:

const gravityAccel = 9.8;

Indent using tabs

VSCode: In vscode, be sure to check whether new files are created with tab or space indentation! Spaces can be converted to tabs using the command palette.

Use strict equality

Use === instead of ==.

Although the TypeScript compiler will give error messages if two different types are compared with == (e.g. number == boolean), its compiler error messages in this case can be misleading.

See also

Declare variables just before their usage

BAD:

// Bad!
let foo, bar;

const doThings = () => {
	// do things unrelated to foo, bar
};

// Do things involving foo and bar
foo = Math.random();
bar = foo + Math.random() / 100;
foo += Math.sin(bar + Math.tan(foo));
...

Good:

...
const doThings = () => {
	// do things unrelated to foo, bar
};

// Do things involving foo and bar
let foo = Math.random();
let bar = foo + Math.random() / 100;
foo += Math.sin(bar + Math.tan(foo));
...

Don't allow this to lead to duplicate code, however. If constants are used multiple times, it's okay to declare them at the top of a file or in a separate, imported file.

Prefer const to let (where possible)

Prefer () => {} to function() { ... }

Doing this avoids having to deal with the this keyword. Not having it makes it easier to refactor class components into React Hooks, because any use of this (used in classes) will be correctly detected as invalid by TypeScript.

BAD:

// Bad!
function foo() {
	...
}

Good:

const foo = () => {
	...
};

See also

Avoid default and optional parameters

As much as possible, avoid default parameters in function definitions and optional fields in interface definitions. When all parameters are required, it is much easier to refactor the code because the compiler will automatically catch any missing parameters.

React

Use function components for new code

New code should use React Hooks and function components, rather than objects that extend Component.

Bad:

// Don't do this in new code!
class Example extends React.Component {
	constructor(props: { text: string }) {
		super(props);
	}

	render() {
		return (
			<div>${text}</div>
		);
	}
}

Good:

const Example = (props: { text: string }) => {
	return (
		<div>${text}</div>
	);
};

Use react custom hooks to simplify long code

If eslint gives an error about useFoo being called outside of a component, be sure the custom hook is titled appropriately.

See also

Other projects' style guides

We aren't using these guides, but they may still be helpful!