CS106B Style Guide

These are some of the general style qualities that we expect your programs to have in order to receive full credit. This is not an exhaustive list; please also refer to each assignment spec for other style practices to follow. Certainly it is possible to write good code that violates these guidelines, and you may feel free to contact us if you are unclear about or disagree with some of them. But we do expect you to follow these rules (unless there is an error in this document). In most professional work environments you are expected to follow that company's style standards. Learning to carefully obey a style guide, and writing code with a group of other developers where the style is consistent among them, are valuable job skills.

This document is a work in progress.
Any guidelines written here are in addition to what is mentioned in the given assignment's spec, so you are responsible for reading that spec and following its instructions. If there is ever a conflict between this style guide and an assignment spec, follow the assignment spec.

Last updated Wed 2014/10/29


Whitespace and Indentation
  • Indenting: Increase your indentation by one increment on each brace {, and decrease it once on each closing brace }.

  • Place a line break after every { .

  • Do not place more than one statement on the same line.

    // bad
    int x = 3, y = 7;  double z = 4.25;  x++;
    if (a == b) { foo(); }
    
    // good
    int x = 3;
    int y = 7;
    double z = 4.25;
    
    x++;
    if (a == b) {
        foo();
    }
    
  • Long lines: When any line is longer than 100 characters, break it into two lines by pressing Enter after an operator and resuming on the next line. Indent the trailing second part of the line by two increments (e.g. two tabs). For example:

    int result = reallyLongFunctionOne() + reallyLongFunctionTwo() + 
            reallyLongFunctionThree() + reallyLongFunctionFour();
    
    int result2 = reallyLongFunction(parameterOne, parameterTwo, parameterThree,
            parameterFour, parameterFive, parameterSix);
    
  • Expressions: Place a space between operators and their operands.

    int x = (a + b) * c / d + foo();
    
  • Blank lines: Place a blank line between functions and between groups of statements.

    void foo() {
        ...
    }
                              // this blank line here
    void bar() {
        ...
    }
    
Naming and Variables
  • Names: Give variables descriptive names, such as firstName or homeworkScore. Avoid one-letter names like x or c, except for loop counter variables such as i.

  • Capitalization: Name variables and functions with camel-casing likeThis, name classes with Pascal casing LikeThis, and name constants in uppercase LIKE_THIS.

  • Scope: Declare variables in the narrowest possible scope. For example, if a variable is used only inside a specific if statement, declare it inside that if statement rather than at the top of the function or at the top of the file.

  • Types: Choose appropriate data types for your variables. If a given variable can store only integers, give it type int rather than double.

  • Containers: If you declare a variable or parameter that is a container, declare it using the ADT interface type, not the specific implementation type.

    ArrayList<String> names = new ArrayList<String>();  // bad
    List<String> names = new ArrayList<String>();  // good
    
  • Generics: If you declare a variable or parameter that is a collection, always write the type of its elements in < >.

    List names = new ArrayList();  // bad
    List<String> names = new ArrayList<String>;  // good
    
  • Favor C++ strings over C strings: C++ confusingly features two kinds of strings: the string class from C++, and the older char* (array of characters) from C. As much as possible, you should use the C++ string type over the older C string type.

    // bad: C-style string
    char* str = "Hello there";
    
    // good: C++-style string
    string str = "Hello there";
    
  • Constants: If a particular constant value is used frequently in your code, declare it as a const constant, and always refer to the constant in the rest of your code rather than referring to the corresponding value.

    const int VOTING_AGE = 18;
    
  • Avoid global variables: Never declare a modifiable global variable. The only global named values in your code should be const constants. Instead of making a value global, pass it as a parameter and/or return it as needed.

    // bad
    int count;  // global variable; bad!
    
    void func1() {
        count = 42;
    }
    
    void func2() {
        count++;
    }
    
    int main() {
        func1();
        func2();
    }
    
    // better
    int func1() {
        return 42;
    }
    
    void func2(int& count) {
        count++;
    }
    
    int main() {
        int count = func1();
        func2(count);
    }
    
Basic C++ Statements
  • favor C++ idioms over C idioms: Since C++ is based on C, there is often a "C++ way" to do a given task and also a "C way" to do a given task. For example, when printing output to the system console, the "C++ way" is to use the global output stream cout, while the "C way" is to use global functions like printf. You should always favor the "C++ way" when possible.

    // bad
    printf("Hello, world!\n");
    
    // good
    cout << "Hello, world!" << endl;
    
  • for vs while: Use a for loop when the number of repetitions is known (definite); use a while loop when the number of repetitions is unknown (indefinite).

    // repeat exactly 'size' times
    for (int i = 0; i < size; i++) {
        ...
    }
    
    // repeat until there are no more lines
    string str;
    while (input >> str) {
        ...
    }
    
  • break and continue: In general, you should avoid using the break or continue statements in loops unless absolutely necessary.

  • exit(): C++ contains an exit function that immediately exits your entire program. You should never call this function in our assignments. Your program should always exit naturally by reaching the end of your main function and returning.

  • always include {} on control statements: When using control statements like if/else, for, while, etc., always include {} and proper line breaks, even if the body of the control statement is only a single line.

    // bad
    if (size == 0) return;
    else
        for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) cout << "ok" << endl;
    
    // good
    if (size == 0) {
        return;
    } else {
        for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
            cout << "ok" << endl;
        }
    }
    
  • if/else patterns: When using if/else statements, properly choose between various if and else patterns depending on whether the conditions are related to each other. Avoid redundant or unnecessary if tests.

    // bad
    if (grade >= 90) {
        cout << "You got an A!";
    }
    if (grade >= 80 && grade < 90) {
        cout << "You got a B!";
    }
    if (grade >= 70 && grade < 80) {
        cout << "You got a C!";
    }
    ...
    
    // good
    if (grade >= 90) {
        cout << "You got an A!";
    } else if (grade >= 80) {
        cout << "You got a B!";
    } else if (grade >= 70) {
        cout << "You got a C!";
    }
    ...
    
  • Boolean zen 1: If you have an if/else statement that returns a bool value based on a test, just directly return the test's result instead.

    // bad
    if (score1 == score2) {
        return true;
    } else {
        return false;
    }
    
    // good
    return score1 == score2;
    
  • Boolean zen 2: Don't ever test whether a bool value is == or != to true or false.

    // bad
    if (x == true) {
        ...
    } else if (x != true) {
        ...
    }
    
    // good
    if (x) {
        ...
    } else {
        ...
    }
    
  • Exception handling: Don't ever catch an exception with an empty catch block.

    // bad
    try {
        foo();
        bar();
    } catch (exception e) {}
    

    Also, don't use try/catch as a kludge to cover up an error that your program is generating. Debug and sidestep the error to prevent it from happening instead.

    // bad
    try {
        myFunctionThatCrashesForSomeReason();
    } catch (exception e) {
        // LOL no crash now
    }
    

    Similarly, don't ever catch (...) unless told explicitly to do so, because this is overly aggressive and will suppress important system error messages.

    // bad
    try {
        foo();
        bar();
    } catch (...) {}
    
Redundancy
  • Minimize redundant code: If you repeat the same code two or more times, find a way to remove the redundant code so that it appears only once. For example, place it into a helper function that is called from both places. If the repeated code is nearly but not entirely the same, try making your helper function accept a parameter to represent the differing part.

    // bad
    foo();
    x = 10;
    y++;
    ...
    
    foo();
    x = 15;
    y++;
    
    // good
    helper(10);
    helper(15);
    ...
    
    void helper(int newX) {
        foo();
        x = newX;
        y++;
    }
    
  • if/else factoring: Move common code out of if/else statements so that it is not repeated.

    // bad
    if (x < y) {
        foo();
        x++;
        cout << "hi";
    } else {
        foo();
        y++;
        cout << "hi";
    }
    
    // good
    foo();
    if (x < y) {
        x++;
    } else {
        y++;
    }
    cout << "hi";
    
  • Function structure: If you have a single function that is very long, break it apart into smaller sub-functions. The definition of "very long" is vague, but let's say a function longer than 40-50 lines is pushing it. If you try to describe the function's purpose and find yourself using the word "and" a lot, that probably means the function does too many things and should be split into sub-functions.

Efficiency
  • Save expensive call results in a variable: If you are calling an expensive function and using its result multiple times, save that result in a variable rather than having to call the function multiple times.

    // bad
    if (reallySlowSearchForIndex("abc") >= 0) {
        remove(reallySlowSearchForIndex("abc"));
    }
    
    // good
    int index = reallySlowSearchForIndex("abc");
    if (index >= 0) {
        remove(index);
    }
    
Comments
  • Class header: Place a descriptive comment heading on the top of every file describing that file's purpose. Assume that the reader of your comments is an intelligent programmer but not someone who has seen this assignment before. Your comment header should include at least your name, course/section, and a brief description of the assignment. If the assignment asks you to submit multiple files, each file's comment header should describe that file/class and its main purpose in the program.

  • Citing sources: If you look at any resources that help you create your program (a book, lecture slides, section example, web page, another person's advice, etc.), you should list all of them in your comments at the start of the file. When in doubt about whether to cite a source, be liberal and cite it. It is important to cite all relevant sources

  • Function/constructor headers: Place a comment heading on each constructor and function of your file. The heading should describe the function's behavior.

  • Parameters/return: If your function accepts parameters, briefly describe their purpose and meaning. If your function returns a value, briefly describe what it returns.

  • Preconditions/assumptions: If your function makes any assumptions, such as assuming that parameters will have certain values, mention this in your comments.

  • Exceptions: If your function intentionally throws any exceptions for various expected error cases, mention this in your comments. Be specific about what kind of exception you are throwing and under what conditions it is thrown. (e.g. "Throws an IllegalArgumentException if the student ID passed is negative.")

  • Inline comments: Inside the interiors of your various functions, if you have sections of code that are lengthy or complex or non-trivial, place a small amount of inline comments near these lines of complex code describing what they are doing.

  • Implementation details: Comment headers at the top of a function, class, or file should describe the function's behavior, but not great detail about how it is implemented. Do not mention language-specific details like the fact that the function uses a if/else statement, that the function declares an array, that the function loops over a list and counts various elements, etc.

  • Wording: Your comment headers should be written in complete sentences, and should be written in your own words, not copied from other sources (such as copied verbatim from the homework spec document).

  • TODOs: You should remove any // TODO: comments from a program before turning it in.

  • Commented-out code: It is considered bad style to turn in a program with chunks of code "commented out". It's fine to comment out code as you are working on a program, but if the program is done and such code is not needed, just remove it.

  • Doc comments: You can use "doc" style (/** ... */) comment style if you like, but it is not required for this class. A style of commenting using // or /* ... */ is just fine.

Here is a decent overall example of a good comment header on a function. Not every comment header needs to be this long, but since this function takes a parameter and returns something, it needs to mention several things.

class Person {
    public:
        bool engageTo(Person& other);
    ...
}

/*
 * Sets this person to be engaged to the given other person.
 * If either this person or other were previously engaged, their previous
 * engagement is called off and the previous partner is set to be single.
 * Returns true if this person was previously engaged before the call.
 * Assumes that other != null and other is of the opposite gender.
 */
bool Person::engageTo(Person& other) {
    ...
}
Functions and Procedural Design
  • Designing a good function: A well-designed function exhibits properties such as the following:

    • Fully performs a single coherent task.
    • Does not do too large a share of the work.
    • Is not unnecessarily connected to other functions.
    • Stores data at the narrowest scope possible.
    • Helps indicate and subdivide the structure of the overall program.
    • Helps remove redundancy that would otherwise be present in the overall program.
  • Value vs. reference parameters: Use reference parameters to send information 'out' from a function, or when the function may want to change the value of the parameter passed in, or when the function needs to return multiple values. Don't use reference parameters when it is not necessary or beneficial. Notice that a, b, and c are not reference parameters in the following function because they don't need to be.

    /* 
     * Solves a quadratic equation ax^2 + bx + c = 0,
     * storing the results in output parameters root1 and root2.
     * Assumes that the given equation has two real roots.
     */
    void quadratic(double a, double b, double c,
                   double& root1, double& root2) {
        double d = sqrt(b * b - 4 * a * c);
        root1 = (-b + d) / (2 * a);
        root2 = (-b - d) / (2 * a);
    }
    
  • Reference 'out' parameter vs. return: When a single value needs to be sent back from a function and it could be provided by a reference 'out' parameter or a return value, favor using a return value.

    // bad
    void max(int a, int b, int& result) {
        if (a > b) {
            result = a;
        } else {
            result = b;
        }
    }
    
    // good
    int max(int a, int b) {
        if (a > b) {
            return a;
        } else {
            return b;
        }
    }
    
  • Pass objects by reference: When sending an object as a parameter to a function, you should usually pass it by reference because if it is passed by value, the entire object must be copied. Copying objects is expensive.

    // bad
    void process(BankAccount account) {
        ...
    }
    
    void computeSomething(Vector<Foo> data) {
        ...
    }
    
    // good
    void process(BankAccount& account) {
        ...
    }
    
    void computeSomething(Vector<Foo>& data) {
        ...
    }
  • Reference vs. pointer: If you have learned about C/C++ pointers from your previous programming experience, favor passing references rather than pointers as much as possible in most cases. (CS 106B covers pointers later in the course.) One reason for this is because a reference, unlike a pointer, cannot be NULL.

    // bad
    // accepts a pointer to an account
    void process(BankAccount* account) {
        ...
    }
    
    // good
    // accepts a reference to an account
    void process(BankAccount& account) {
        ...
    }
    
  • Functions that create/build collections: If you have a function whose task is to fill in the contents of a collection, such as a function to read an input file and store the lines into a Vector, the preferred C++ way to do this is to have the client pass in a reference to the collection for your function to fill, rather than having your function create and return the collection. This is because returning an entire collection makes a full copy of the state of that collection, which is inefficient.

    // bad
    Vector<string> readFile(string filename) {
        Vector<string> v;
        // put some data in v
        ...
        return v;
    }
    
    // good
    void readFile(string filename, Vector<string>& v) {
        // put some data in v
        ...
    }
    
  • const reference parameters: If you are passing an object to a function and your code will not modify the state of that object, pass it as a const reference.

    // bad
    // accepts a pointer to an account
    void display(BankAccount account) {
        ...
    }
    
    // good
    // accepts a const reference to an account
    void display(const BankAccount& account) {
        ...
    }
    
  • Avoid "chaining" calls, where many functions call each other in a chain without ever returning to main. Make sure that main is a concise summary of your overall program. Here is a rough diagram of call flow with (left) and without (right) chaining:

    // bad
    main
    |
    +-- function1
        |
        +-- function2
            |
            +-- function3
                |
                +-- function4
                |
                +-- function5
                    |
                    +-- function6
    
    // good
    main
    |
    +-- function1
    |
    +-- function2
    |   |
    |   +-- function3
    |       |
    |       +-- function4
    |
    +-- function5
    |   |
    |   +-- function6
    
Class Design
  • Encapsulation: Properly encapsulate your objects by making any data fields in your class private.

    class Student {
    private:
        int homeworkScore;
            ...
    
  • .h vs. .cpp: Always place the declaration of a class and its members into its own file, ClassName.h. Place the implementation bodies of those members into their own file, ClassName.cpp. Always wrap the .h file's class declaration in an #ifndef/define/endif preprocessor block to avoid multiple declarations of the same class.

    // Point.h
    #ifndef _point_h
    #define _point_h
    class Point {
    public:
        Point(int x, int y);
        int getX() const;
        int getY() const;
        void translate(int dx, int dy);
    
    private:
        int m_x;
        int m_y;
    };
    #endif
    
    // Point.cpp
    #include "Point.h"
    
    Point::Point(int x, int y) {
        m_x = x;
        m_y = y;
    }
    
    void Point::translate(int dx, int dy) {
        m_x += dx;
        m_y += dy;
    }
    ...
    
  • class vs. struct: Always favor using a class unless you are creating a very small and simple data type that just needs a few public member variables and perhaps a constructor to initialize them. Examples of such small struct types might be Point or LinkedListNode.

  • Avoid unnecessary fields; use fields to store important data of your objects but not to store temporary values only used within a single call to one function.

  • Helper functions: If you add a member function to a class that is not part of the homework spec, make it private so that other external code cannot call it.

    class Student {
        ...
    private:
        double computeTuitionHelper();
    
  • const members: If a given member function does not modify the state of the object upon which it is called, declare it const.

    class Student {
    public:
        int getID() const;
        double getGPA(int year) const;
        void payTuition(Course& course);
        string toString() const;
        ...
    
This document and its content are copyright © Marty Stepp, 2015. All rights reserved. Any redistribution, reproduction, transmission, or storage of part or all of the contents in any form is prohibited without the authors' expressed written permission.