153 lines
4.0 KiB
Markdown
153 lines
4.0 KiB
Markdown
# Cerc Python Style Guide
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## What's coding style and why it matters.
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Coding style is just how the code looks, it's incredibly personal, and everyone has their style.
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Your preferred architectures, variable and function naming style all of then impacts in your code style and how the others read and understand it, so it could become a significant burden if everyone is coding on his own.
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At CERC, we are following the [PEP8](https://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/) with two spaces indentation instead of four.
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## Tools.
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We use [PyCharm](https://www.jetbrains.com/pycharm/) as an integrated development environment and follow the tool's overall advice but the space indentation, which we set to two spaces instead of default four spaces.
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For code analysis, we enforce the usage of [pylint](https://www.pylint.org/) with our own [custom style definition](pylintrc).
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## Naming convention.
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* Name your folders and files in lowercase.
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* Your class names must start in capital letters and follow the python CapWords pattern.
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* Methods and properties that return lists must end in "s".
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* Methods and variables should be lowercase and use _ (underscore) as a word separator.
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* Constant names must be all capitals.
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* Avoid the usage of "get_" and "set_" methods whenever possible, by using @property and @variable.setter decorators instead.
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* "Private" methods, variables and properties start with _ (underscore)
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## Imports.
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Place your imports at the top of the file, after the license and contact information
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comment.
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```python
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"""
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MyClass module
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SPDX - License - Identifier: LGPL - 3.0 - or -later
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Copyright © 2022 Concordia CERC group
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Project Coder name name@concordia.ca
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"""
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import sys
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```
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Ensure that your imports are used and remove any unused.
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## Object attributes and methods.
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Use properties whenever possible and encapsulate the access to all the calculated object attributes into properties, as shown in the following example.
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```python
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@property
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def object_attribute(self):
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if self._object_attribute is None:
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self._object_attribute = ...
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...
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return self._object_attribute
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```
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And like in the following example for read and write properties.
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```python
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@property
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def object_changeable_attribute(self):
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return self._object_changeable_attribute
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@object_changeable_attribute.setter
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def object_changeable_attribute(self, value):
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self._object_changeable_attribute = value
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```
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If your method or attribute returns a complex object use type hints as in this example.
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```python
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@property
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def complex_object(self) -> ComplexObject:
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return self._object_changeable_attribute
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def new_complex_object(self, first_param, second_param) -> ComplexObject:
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return ComplexObject(first_param, second_param, self.property)
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```
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Always access your variable through the method and avoid to access directly.
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```python
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@property
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def object_attribute(self):
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return self._object_attribute
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def operation(self, first_param, second_param):
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return self.object_attribute * 2
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```
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### Coments.
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#### Code documentation.
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All public classes, properties, and methods must have code comments.
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```python
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class MyClass
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"""
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MyClass class perform models class operations
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"""
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def __init__(self):
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@property
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def object_attribute(self):
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"""
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My class object attributes
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:return: int
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"""
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return self._object_attribute
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def operation(self, first_param, second_param):
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"""
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multiplies object_attribute by two
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:return: int
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"""
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return self.object_attribute * 2
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```
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Attributes with known units should be explicit in method's comment.
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```python
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@property
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def distance(self):
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"""
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My class distance in meters
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:return: float
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"""
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return self._distance
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```
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#### To do's.
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Pending to implement operations should be indicated with ToDo comments to highlight the missing functionality.
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```python
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# ToDo: right now extracted at the city level, in the future should be extracted also at building level if exist
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```
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