408 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
408 lines
17 KiB
Markdown
# Element Web/Desktop code style guide
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This code style applies to projects which the element-web team directly maintains or is reasonably
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adjacent to. As of writing, these are:
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- element-desktop
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- element-web
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- matrix-react-sdk
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- matrix-js-sdk
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Other projects might extend this code style for increased strictness. For example, matrix-events-sdk
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has stricter code organization to reduce the maintenance burden. These projects will declare their code
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style within their own repos.
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Note that some requirements will be layer-specific. Where the requirements don't make sense for the
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project, they are used to the best of their ability, used in spirit, or ignored if not applicable,
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in that order.
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## Guiding principles
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1. We want the lint rules to feel natural for most team members. No one should have to think too much
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about the linter.
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2. We want to stay relatively close to [industry standards](https://google.github.io/styleguide/tsguide.html)
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to make onboarding easier.
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3. We describe what good code looks like rather than point out bad examples. We do this to avoid
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excessively punishing people for writing code which fails the linter.
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4. When something isn't covered by the style guide, we come up with a reasonable rule rather than
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claim that it "passes the linter". We update the style guide and linter accordingly.
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5. While we aim to improve readability, understanding, and other aspects of the code, we deliberately
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do not let solely our personal preferences drive decisions.
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6. We aim to have an understandable guide.
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## Coding practices
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1. Lint rules enforce decisions made by this guide. The lint rules and this guide are kept in
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perfect sync.
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2. Commit messages are descriptive for the changes. When the project supports squash merging,
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only the squashed commit needs to have a descriptive message.
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3. When there is disagreement with a code style approved by the linter, a PR is opened against
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the lint rules rather than making exceptions on the responsible code PR.
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4. Rules which are intentionally broken (via eslint-ignore, @ts-ignore, etc) have a comment
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included in the immediate vicinity for why. Determination of whether this is valid applies at
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code review time.
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5. When editing a file, nearby code is updated to meet the modern standards. "Nearby" is subjective,
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but should be whatever is reasonable at review time. Such an example might be to update the
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class's code style, but not the file's.
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1. These changes should be minor enough to include in the same commit without affecting a code
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reviewer's job.
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## All code
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Unless otherwise specified, the following applies to all code:
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1. Files must be formatted with Prettier.
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2. 120 character limit per line. Match existing code in the file if it is using a lower guide.
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3. A tab/indentation is 4 spaces.
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4. Newlines are Unix.
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5. A file has a single empty line at the end.
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6. Lines are trimmed of all excess whitespace, including blank lines.
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7. Long lines are broken up for readability.
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## TypeScript / JavaScript
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1. Write TypeScript. Turn JavaScript into TypeScript when working in the area.
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2. Use [TSDoc](https://tsdoc.org/) to document your code. See [Comments](#comments) below.
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3. Use named exports.
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4. Use semicolons for block/line termination.
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1. Except when defining interfaces, classes, and non-arrow functions specifically.
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5. When a statement's body is a single line, it must be written without curly braces, so long as the body is placed on
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the same line as the statement.
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```typescript
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if (x) doThing();
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```
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6. Blocks for `if`, `for`, `switch` and so on must have a space surrounding the condition, but not
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within the condition.
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```typescript
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if (x) {
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doThing();
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}
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```
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7. lowerCamelCase is used for function and variable naming.
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8. UpperCamelCase is used for general naming.
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9. Interface names should not be marked with an uppercase `I`.
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10. One variable declaration per line.
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11. If a variable is not receiving a value on declaration, its type must be defined.
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```typescript
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let errorMessage: Optional<string>;
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```
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12. Objects can use shorthand declarations, including mixing of types.
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```typescript
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{
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room,
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prop: this.prop,
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}
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// ... or ...
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{ room, prop: this.prop }
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```
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13. Object keys should always be non-strings when possible.
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```typescript
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{
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property: "value",
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"m.unavoidable": true,
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[EventType.RoomMessage]: true,
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}
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```
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14. If a variable's type should be boolean, make sure it really is one.
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```typescript
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const isRealUser = !!userId && ...; // good
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const isRealUser = Boolean(userId) && Boolean(userName); // also good
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const isRealUser = Boolean(userId) && isReal; // also good (where isReal is another boolean variable)
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const isRealUser = Boolean(userId && userName); // also fine
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const isRealUser = Boolean(userId || userName); // good: same as &&
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const isRealUser = userId && ...; // bad: isRealUser is userId's type, not a boolean
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if (userId) // fine: userId is evaluated for truthiness, not stored as a boolean
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```
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15. Use `switch` statements when checking against more than a few enum-like values.
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16. Use `const` for constants, `let` for mutability.
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17. Describe types exhaustively (ensure noImplictAny would pass).
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1. Notable exceptions are arrow functions used as parameters, when a void return type is
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obvious, and when declaring and assigning a variable in the same line.
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18. Declare member visibility (public/private/protected).
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19. Private members are private and not prefixed unless required for naming conflicts.
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1. Convention is to use an underscore or the word "internal" to denote conflicted member names.
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2. "Conflicted" typically refers to a getter which wants the same name as the underlying variable.
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20. Prefer readonly members over getters backed by a variable, unless an internal setter is required.
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21. Prefer Interfaces for object definitions, and types for parameter-value-only declarations.
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1. Note that an explicit type is optional if not expected to be used outside of the function call,
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unlike in this example:
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```typescript
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interface MyObject {
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hasString: boolean;
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}
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type Options = MyObject | string;
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function doThing(arg: Options) {
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// ...
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}
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```
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22. Variables/properties which are `public static` should also be `readonly` when possible.
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23. Interface and type properties are terminated with semicolons, not commas.
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24. Prefer arrow formatting when declaring functions for interfaces/types:
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```typescript
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interface Test {
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myCallback: (arg: string) => Promise<void>;
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}
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```
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25. Prefer a type definition over an inline type. For example, define an interface.
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26. Always prefer to add types or declare a type over the use of `any`. Prefer inferred types
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when they are not `any`.
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1. When using `any`, a comment explaining why must be present.
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27. `import` should be used instead of `require`, as `require` does not have types.
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28. Export only what can be reused.
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29. Prefer a type like `Optional<X>` (`type Optional<T> = T | null | undefined`) instead
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of truly optional parameters.
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1. A notable exception is when the likelihood of a bug is minimal, such as when a function
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takes an argument that is more often not required than required. An example where the
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`?` operator is inappropriate is when taking a room ID: typically the caller should
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supply the room ID if it knows it, otherwise deliberately acknowledge that it doesn't
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have one with `null`.
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```typescript
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function doThingWithRoom(
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thing: string,
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room: Optional<string>, // require the caller to specify
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) {
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// ...
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}
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```
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30. There should be approximately one interface, class, or enum per file unless the file is named
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"types.ts", "global.d.ts", or ends with "-types.ts".
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1. The file name should match the interface, class, or enum name.
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31. Bulk functions can be declared in a single file, though named as "foo-utils.ts" or "utils/foo.ts".
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32. Imports are grouped by external module imports first, then by internal imports.
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33. File ordering is not strict, but should generally follow this sequence:
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1. Licence header
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2. Imports
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3. Constants
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4. Enums
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5. Interfaces
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6. Functions
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7. Classes
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1. Public/protected/private static properties
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2. Public/protected/private properties
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3. Constructors
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4. Public/protected/private getters & setters
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5. Protected and abstract functions
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6. Public/private functions
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7. Public/protected/private static functions
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34. Variable names should be noticeably unique from their types. For example, "str: string" instead
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of "string: string".
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35. Use double quotes to enclose strings. You may use single quotes if the string contains double quotes.
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```typescript
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const example1 = "simple string";
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const example2 = 'string containing "double quotes"';
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```
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36. Prefer async-await to promise-chaining
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```typescript
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async function () {
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const result = await anotherAsyncFunction();
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// ...
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}
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```
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## React
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Inheriting all the rules of TypeScript, the following additionally apply:
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1. Types for lifecycle functions are not required (render, componentDidMount, and so on).
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2. Class components must always have a `Props` interface declared immediately above them. It can be
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empty if the component accepts no props.
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3. Class components should have an `State` interface declared immediately above them, but after `Props`.
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4. Props and State should not be exported. Use `React.ComponentProps<typeof ComponentNameHere>`
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instead.
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5. One component per file, except when a component is a utility component specifically for the "primary"
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component. The utility component should not be exported.
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6. Exported constants, enums, interfaces, functions, etc must be separate from files containing components
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or stores.
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7. Stores should use a singleton pattern with a static instance property:
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```typescript
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class FooStore {
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public static readonly instance = new FooStore();
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// or if the instance can't be created eagerly:
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private static _instance: FooStore;
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public static get instance(): FooStore {
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if (!FooStore._instance) {
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FooStore._instance = new FooStore();
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}
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return FooStore._instance;
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}
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}
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```
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8. Stores must support using an alternative MatrixClient and dispatcher instance.
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9. Utilities which require JSX must be split out from utilities which do not. This is to prevent import
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cycles during runtime where components accidentally include more of the app than they intended.
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10. Interdependence between stores should be kept to a minimum. Break functions and constants out to utilities
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if at all possible.
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11. A component should only use CSS class names in line with the component name.
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1. When knowingly using a class name from another component, document it with a [comment](#comments).
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12. Curly braces within JSX should be padded with a space, however properties on those components should not.
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See above code example.
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13. Functions used as properties should either be defined on the class or stored in a variable. They should not
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be inline unless mocking/short-circuiting the value.
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14. Prefer hooks (functional components) over class components. Be consistent with the existing area if unsure
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which should be used.
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1. Unless the component is considered a "structure", in which case use classes.
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15. Write more views than structures. Structures are chunks of functionality like MatrixChat while views are
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isolated components.
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16. Components should serve a single, or near-single, purpose.
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17. Prefer to derive information from component properties rather than establish state.
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18. Do not use `React.Component::forceUpdate`.
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## Stylesheets (\*.pcss = PostCSS + Plugins)
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Note: We use PostCSS + some plugins to process our styles. It looks like SCSS, but actually it is not.
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1. Class names must be prefixed with "mx\_".
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2. Class names must denote the component which defines them, followed by any context.
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The context is not further specified here in terms of meaning or syntax.
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Use whatever is appropriate for your implementation use case.
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Some examples:
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1. `mx_MyFoo`
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2. `mx_MyFoo_avatar`
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3. `mx_MyFoo_avatarUser`
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4. `mx_MyFoo_avatar--user`
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3. Use the `$font` variables instead of manual values.
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4. Keep indentation/nesting to a minimum. Maximum suggested nesting is 5 layers.
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5. Use the whole class name instead of shortcuts:
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```scss
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.mx_MyFoo {
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& .mx_MyFoo_avatar {
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// instead of &_avatar
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// ...
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}
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}
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```
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6. Break multiple selectors over multiple lines this way:
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```scss
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.mx_MyFoo,
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.mx_MyBar,
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.mx_MyFooBar {
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// ...
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}
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```
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7. Non-shared variables should use $lowerCamelCase. Shared variables use $dashed-naming.
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8. Overrides to Z indexes, adjustments of dimensions/padding with pixels, and so on should all be
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[documented](#comments) for what the values mean:
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```scss
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.mx_MyFoo {
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width: calc(100% - 12px); // 12px for read receipts
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top: -2px; // visually centred vertically
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z-index: 10; // above user avatar, but below dialogs
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}
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```
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9. Avoid the use of `!important`. If `!important` is necessary, add a [comment](#comments) explaining why.
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## Tests
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1. Tests must be written in TypeScript.
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2. Jest mocks are declared below imports, but above everything else.
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3. Use the following convention template:
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```typescript
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// Describe the class, component, or file name.
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describe("FooComponent", () => {
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// all test inspecific variables go here
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beforeEach(() => {
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// exclude if not used.
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});
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afterEach(() => {
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// exclude if not used.
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});
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// Use "it should..." terminology
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it("should call the correct API", async () => {
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// test-specific variables go here
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// function calls/state changes go here
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// expectations go here
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});
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});
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// If the file being tested is a utility class:
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describe("foo-utils", () => {
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describe("firstUtilFunction", () => {
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it("should...", async () => {
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// ...
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});
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});
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describe("secondUtilFunction", () => {
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it("should...", async () => {
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// ...
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});
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});
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});
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```
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## Comments
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1. As a general principle: be liberal with comments. This applies to all files: stylesheets as well as
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JavaScript/TypeScript.
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Good comments not only help future readers understand and maintain the code; they can also encourage good design
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by clearly setting out how different parts of the codebase interact where that would otherwise be implicit and
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subject to interpretation.
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2. Aim to document all types, methods, class properties, functions, etc, with [TSDoc](https://tsdoc.org/) doc comments.
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This is _especially_ important for public interfaces in `matrix-js-sdk`, but is good practice in general.
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Even very simple interfaces can often benefit from a doc-comment, both as a matter of consistency, and because simple
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interfaces have a habit of becoming more complex over time.
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3. React components should be documented in the same way as other classes or functions. The documentation should give
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a brief description of how the component should be used, and, especially for more complex components, each of its
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properties should be clearly documented.
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4. Inside a function, there is no need to comment every line, but consider:
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- before a particular multiline section of code within the function, give an overview of what it does,
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to make it easier for a reader to follow the flow through the function as a whole.
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- if it is anything less than obvious, explain _why_ we are doing a particular operation, with particular emphasis
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on how this function interacts with other parts of the codebase.
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5. When making changes to existing code, authors are expected to read existing comments and make any necessary changes
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to ensure they remain accurate.
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6. Reviewers are encouraged to consider whether more comments would be useful, and to ask the author to add them.
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It is natural for an author to feel that the code they have just written is "obvious" and that comments would be
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redundant, whereas in reality it would take some time for reader unfamiliar with the code to understand it. A
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reviewer is well-placed to make a more objective judgement.
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