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210 lines
6.9 KiB
Markdown
210 lines
6.9 KiB
Markdown
Matrix JavaScript/ECMAScript Style Guide
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========================================
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The intention of this guide is to make Matrix's JavaScript codebase clean,
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consistent with other popular JavaScript styles and consistent with the rest of
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the Matrix codebase. For reference, the Matrix Python style guide can be found
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at https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/code_style.md
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This document reflects how we would like Matrix JavaScript code to look, with
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acknowledgement that a significant amount of code is written to older
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standards.
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Write applications in modern ECMAScript and use a transpiler where necessary to
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target older platforms. When writing library code, consider carefully whether
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to write in ES5 to allow all JavaScript application to use the code directly or
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writing in modern ECMAScript and using a transpile step to generate the file
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that applications can then include. There are significant benefits in being
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able to use modern ECMAScript, although the tooling for doing so can be awkward
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for library code, especially with regard to translating source maps and line
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number through from the original code to the final application.
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General Style
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-------------
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- 4 spaces to indent, for consistency with Matrix Python.
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- 120 columns per line, but try to keep JavaScript code around the 90 column mark.
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Inline JSX in particular can be nicer with more columns per line.
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- No trailing whitespace at end of lines.
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- Don't indent empty lines.
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- One newline at the end of the file.
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- Unix newlines, never `\r`
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- Indent similar to our python code: break up long lines at logical boundaries,
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more than one argument on a line is OK
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- Use semicolons, for consistency with node.
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- UpperCamelCase for class and type names
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- lowerCamelCase for functions and variables.
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- Single line ternary operators are fine.
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- UPPER_SNAKE_CASE for constants
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- Use parentheses or `` ` `` instead of `\` for line continuation where ever possible
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- Open braces on the same line (consistent with Node):
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```javascript
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if (x) {
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console.log("I am a fish"); // Good
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}
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if (x)
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{
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console.log("I am a fish"); // Bad
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}
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```
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- Spaces after `if`, `for`, `else` etc, no space around the condition:
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```javascript
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if (x) {
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console.log("I am a fish"); // Good
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}
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if(x) {
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console.log("I am a fish"); // Bad
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}
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if ( x ) {
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console.log("I am a fish"); // Bad
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}
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```
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- No new line before else, catch, finally, etc:
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```javascript
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if (x) {
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console.log("I am a fish");
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} else {
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console.log("I am a chimp"); // Good
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}
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if (x) {
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console.log("I am a fish");
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}
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else {
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console.log("I am a chimp"); // Bad
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}
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```
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- Declare one variable per var statement (consistent with Node). Unless they
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are simple and closely related. If you put the next declaration on a new line,
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treat yourself to another `var`:
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```javascript
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const key = "foo",
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comparator = function(x, y) {
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return x - y;
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}; // Bad
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const key = "foo";
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const comparator = function(x, y) {
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return x - y;
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}; // Good
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let x = 0, y = 0; // Fine
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let x = 0;
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let y = 0; // Also fine
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```
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- A single line `if` is fine, all others have braces. This prevents errors when adding to the code.:
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```javascript
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if (x) return true; // Fine
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if (x) {
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return true; // Also fine
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}
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if (x)
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return true; // Not fine
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```
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- Terminate all multi-line lists, object literals, imports and ideally function calls with commas (if using a transpiler). Note that trailing function commas require explicit configuration in babel at time of writing:
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```javascript
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var mascots = [
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"Patrick",
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"Shirley",
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"Colin",
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"Susan",
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"Sir Arthur David" // Bad
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];
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var mascots = [
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"Patrick",
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"Shirley",
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"Colin",
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"Susan",
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"Sir Arthur David", // Good
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];
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```
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- Use `null`, `undefined` etc consistently with node:
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Boolean variables and functions should always be either true or false. Don't set it to 0 unless it's supposed to be a number.
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When something is intentionally missing or removed, set it to null.
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If returning a boolean, type coerce:
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```javascript
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function hasThings() {
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return !!length; // bad
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return new Boolean(length); // REALLY bad
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return Boolean(length); // good
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}
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```
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Don't set things to undefined. Reserve that value to mean "not yet set to anything."
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Boolean objects are verboten.
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- Use JSDoc
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- Use switch-case statements where there are 5 or more branches running against the same variable.
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ECMAScript
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----------
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- Use `const` unless you need a re-assignable variable. This ensures things you don't want to be re-assigned can't be.
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- Be careful migrating files to newer syntax.
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- Don't mix `require` and `import` in the same file. Either stick to the old style or change them all.
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- Likewise, don't mix things like class properties and `MyClass.prototype.MY_CONSTANT = 42;`
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- Be careful mixing arrow functions and regular functions, eg. if one function in a promise chain is an
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arrow function, they probably all should be.
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- Apart from that, newer ES features should be used whenever the author deems them to be appropriate.
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TypeScript
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----------
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- TypeScript is preferred over the use of JavaScript
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- It's desirable to convert existing JavaScript files to TypeScript. TypeScript conversions should be done in small
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chunks without functional changes to ease the review process.
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- Use full type definitions for function parameters and return values.
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- Avoid `any` types and `any` casts
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React
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-----
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- Pull out functions in props to the class, generally as specific event handlers:
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```jsx
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<Foo onClick={function(ev) {doStuff();}}> // Bad
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<Foo onClick={(ev) => {doStuff();}}> // Equally bad
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<Foo onClick={this.doStuff}> // Better
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<Foo onClick={this.onFooClick}> // Best, if onFooClick would do anything other than directly calling doStuff
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```
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- Prefer classes that extend `React.Component` (or `React.PureComponent`) instead of `React.createClass`
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- You can avoid the need to bind handler functions by using [property initializers](https://reactjs.org/docs/react-component.html#constructor):
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```js
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class Widget extends React.Component
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onFooClick = () => {
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...
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}
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}
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```
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- To define `propTypes`, use a static property:
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```js
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class Widget extends React.Component
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static propTypes = {
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...
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}
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}
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```
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- If you need to specify initial component state, [assign it](https://reactjs.org/docs/react-component.html#constructor) to `this.state` in the constructor:
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```js
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constructor(props) {
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super(props);
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// Don't call this.setState() here!
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this.state = { counter: 0 };
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}
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```
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- Prefer class components over function components and hooks (not a strict rule though)
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- Think about whether your component really needs state: are you duplicating
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information in component state that could be derived from the model?
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- Avoid things marked as Legacy or Deprecated in React 16 (e.g string refs and legacy contexts)
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