| page.title=Code Style for Contributors |
| @jd:body |
| |
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| <div id="qv-wrapper"> |
| <div id="qv"> |
| <h2>In this document</h2> |
| <ol id="auto-toc"> |
| </ol> |
| </div> |
| </div> |
| |
| <p>The code styles below are strict rules, not guidelines or recommendations. |
| Contributions to Android that do not adhere to these rules are generally <em>not |
| accepted</em>. We recognize that not all existing code follows these rules, but |
| we expect all new code to be compliant.</p> |
| |
| <h2 id="java-language-rules">Java Language Rules</h2> |
| <p>Android follows standard Java coding conventions with the additional rules |
| described below.</p> |
| |
| <h3 id="dont-ignore-exceptions">Don't Ignore Exceptions</h3> |
| <p>It can be tempting to write code that completely ignores an exception, such |
| as:</p> |
| <pre><code>void setServerPort(String value) { |
| try { |
| serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); |
| } catch (NumberFormatException e) { } |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>Do not do this. While you may think your code will never encounter this error |
| condition or that it is not important to handle it, ignoring exceptions as above |
| creates mines in your code for someone else to trigger some day. You must handle |
| every Exception in your code in a principled way; the specific handling varies |
| depending on the case.</p> |
| <p><em>Anytime somebody has an empty catch clause they should have a |
| creepy feeling. There are definitely times when it is actually the correct |
| thing to do, but at least you have to think about it. In Java you can't escape |
| the creepy feeling.</em> -<a href="http://www.artima.com/intv/solid4.html">James Gosling</a></p> |
| <p>Acceptable alternatives (in order of preference) are:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li>Throw the exception up to the caller of your method. |
| <pre><code>void setServerPort(String value) throws NumberFormatException { |
| serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| </li> |
| <li>Throw a new exception that's appropriate to your level of abstraction. |
| <pre><code>void setServerPort(String value) throws ConfigurationException { |
| try { |
| serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); |
| } catch (NumberFormatException e) { |
| throw new ConfigurationException("Port " + value + " is not valid."); |
| } |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| </li> |
| <li>Handle the error gracefully and substitute an appropriate value in the |
| catch {} block. |
| <pre><code>/** Set port. If value is not a valid number, 80 is substituted. */ |
| |
| void setServerPort(String value) { |
| try { |
| serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); |
| } catch (NumberFormatException e) { |
| serverPort = 80; // default port for server |
| } |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| </li> |
| <li>Catch the Exception and throw a new <code>RuntimeException</code>. This is |
| dangerous, so do it only if you are positive that if this error occurs the |
| appropriate thing to do is crash. |
| <pre><code>/** Set port. If value is not a valid number, die. */ |
| |
| void setServerPort(String value) { |
| try { |
| serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); |
| } catch (NumberFormatException e) { |
| throw new RuntimeException("port " + value " is invalid, ", e); |
| } |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| <p class="note"><strong>Note</strong> The original exception is passed to the |
| constructor for RuntimeException. If your code must compile under Java 1.3, you |
| must omit the exception that is the cause.</p> |
| </li> |
| <li>As a last resort, if you are confident that ignoring the exception is |
| appropriate then you may ignore it, but you must also comment why with a good |
| reason: |
| <pre><code>/** If value is not a valid number, original port number is used. */ |
| void setServerPort(String value) { |
| try { |
| serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); |
| } catch (NumberFormatException e) { |
| // Method is documented to just ignore invalid user input. |
| // serverPort will just be unchanged. |
| } |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| </li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <h3 id="dont-catch-generic-exception">Don't Catch Generic Exception</h3> |
| <p>It can also be tempting to be lazy when catching exceptions and do |
| something like this:</p> |
| <pre><code>try { |
| someComplicatedIOFunction(); // may throw IOException |
| someComplicatedParsingFunction(); // may throw ParsingException |
| someComplicatedSecurityFunction(); // may throw SecurityException |
| // phew, made it all the way |
| } catch (Exception e) { // I'll just catch all exceptions |
| handleError(); // with one generic handler! |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>Do not do this. In almost all cases it is inappropriate to catch generic |
| Exception or Throwable (preferably not Throwable because it includes Error |
| exceptions). It is very dangerous because it means that Exceptions |
| you never expected (including RuntimeExceptions like ClassCastException) get |
| caught in application-level error handling. It obscures the failure handling |
| properties of your code, meaning if someone adds a new type of Exception in the |
| code you're calling, the compiler won't help you realize you need to handle the |
| error differently. In most cases you shouldn't be handling different types of |
| exception the same way.</p> |
| <p>The rare exception to this rule is test code and top-level code where you |
| want to catch all kinds of errors (to prevent them from showing up in a UI, or |
| to keep a batch job running). In these cases you may catch generic Exception |
| (or Throwable) and handle the error appropriately. Think very carefully before |
| doing this, though, and put in comments explaining why it is safe in this place.</p> |
| <p>Alternatives to catching generic Exception:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li> |
| <p>Catch each exception separately as separate catch blocks after a single |
| try. This can be awkward but is still preferable to catching all Exceptions. |
| Beware repeating too much code in the catch blocks.</li></p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p>Refactor your code to have more fine-grained error handling, with multiple |
| try blocks. Split up the IO from the parsing, handle errors separately in each |
| case.</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p>Rethrow the exception. Many times you don't need to catch the exception at |
| this level anyway, just let the method throw it.</p> |
| </li> |
| </ul> |
| <p>Remember: exceptions are your friend! When the compiler complains you're |
| not catching an exception, don't scowl. Smile: the compiler just made it |
| easier for you to catch runtime problems in your code.</p> |
| <h3 id="dont-use-finalizers">Don't Use Finalizers</h3> |
| <p>Finalizers are a way to have a chunk of code executed when an object is |
| garbage collected. While they can be handy for doing cleanup (particularly of |
| external resources), there are no guarantees as to when a finalizer will be |
| called (or even that it will be called at all).</p> |
| <p>Android doesn't use finalizers. In most cases, you can do what |
| you need from a finalizer with good exception handling. If you absolutely need |
| it, define a close() method (or the like) and document exactly when that |
| method needs to be called (see InputStream for an example). In this case it is |
| appropriate but not required to print a short log message from the finalizer, |
| as long as it is not expected to flood the logs.</p> |
| |
| <h3 id="fully-qualify-imports">Fully Qualify Imports</h3> |
| <p>When you want to use class Bar from package foo,there |
| are two possible ways to import it:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><code>import foo.*;</code> |
| <p>Potentially reduces the number of import statements.</p></li> |
| <li><code>import foo.Bar;</code> |
| <p>Makes it obvious what classes are actually used and the code is more readable |
| for maintainers.</p></li></ul> |
| <p>Use <code>import foo.Bar;</code> for importing all Android code. An explicit |
| exception is made for java standard libraries (<code>java.util.*</code>, |
| <code>java.io.*</code>, etc.) and unit test code |
| (<code>junit.framework.*</code>).</p> |
| |
| <h2 id="java-library-rules">Java Library Rules</h2> |
| <p>There are conventions for using Android's Java libraries and tools. In some |
| cases, the convention has changed in important ways and older code might use a |
| deprecated pattern or library. When working with such code, it's okay to |
| continue the existing style. When creating new components however, never use |
| deprecated libraries.</p> |
| |
| <h2 id="java-style-rules">Java Style Rules</h2> |
| |
| <h3 id="use-javadoc-standard-comments">Use Javadoc Standard Comments</h3> |
| <p>Every file should have a copyright statement at the top, followed by package |
| and import statements (each block separated by a blank line) and finally the |
| class or interface declaration. In the Javadoc comments, describe what the class |
| or interface does.</p> |
| <pre><code>/* |
| * Copyright (C) 2015 The Android Open Source Project |
| * |
| * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| * You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| * |
| * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| * |
| * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| * limitations under the License. |
| */ |
| |
| package com.android.internal.foo; |
| |
| import android.os.Blah; |
| import android.view.Yada; |
| |
| import java.sql.ResultSet; |
| import java.sql.SQLException; |
| |
| /** |
| * Does X and Y and provides an abstraction for Z. |
| */ |
| |
| public class Foo { |
| ... |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>Every class and nontrivial public method you write <em>must</em> contain a |
| Javadoc comment with at least one sentence describing what the class or method |
| does. This sentence should start with a third person descriptive verb.</p> |
| <p>Examples:</p> |
| <pre><code>/** Returns the correctly rounded positive square root of a double value. */ |
| static double sqrt(double a) { |
| ... |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>or</p> |
| <pre><code>/** |
| * Constructs a new String by converting the specified array of |
| * bytes using the platform's default character encoding. |
| */ |
| public String(byte[] bytes) { |
| ... |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>You do not need to write Javadoc for trivial get and set methods such as |
| <code>setFoo()</code> if all your Javadoc would say is "sets Foo". If the method |
| does something more complex (such as enforcing a constraint or has an important |
| side effect), then you must document it. If it's not obvious what the property |
| "Foo" means, you should document it. |
| <p>Every method you write, public or otherwise, would benefit from Javadoc. |
| Public methods are part of an API and therefore require Javadoc. Android does |
| not currently enforce a specific style for writing Javadoc comments, but you |
| should follow the instructions <a |
| href="http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/java/javase/documentation/index-137868.html">How |
| to Write Doc Comments for the Javadoc Tool</a>.</p> |
| |
| <h3 id="write-short-methods">Write Short Methods</h3> |
| <p>When feasible, keep methods small and focused. We recognize that long methods |
| are sometimes appropriate, so no hard limit is placed on method length. If a |
| method exceeds 40 lines or so, think about whether it can be broken up without |
| harming the structure of the program.</p> |
| |
| <h3 id="define-fields-in-standard-places">Define Fields in Standard Places</h3> |
| <p>Define fields either at the top of the file or immediately before the |
| methods that use them.</p> |
| |
| <h3 id="limit-variable-scope">Limit Variable Scope</h3> |
| <p>Keep the scope of local variables to a minimum. By doing so, you |
| increase the readability and maintainability of your code and reduce the |
| likelihood of error. Each variable should be declared in the innermost block |
| that encloses all uses of the variable.</p> |
| <p>Local variables should be declared at the point they are first used. Nearly |
| every local variable declaration should contain an initializer. If you don't |
| yet have enough information to initialize a variable sensibly, postpone the |
| declaration until you do.</p> |
| <p>The exception is try-catch statements. If a variable is initialized with the |
| return value of a method that throws a checked exception, it must be initialized |
| inside a try block. If the value must be used outside of the try block, then it |
| must be declared before the try block, where it cannot yet be sensibly |
| initialized:</p> |
| <pre><code>// Instantiate class cl, which represents some sort of Set |
| Set s = null; |
| try { |
| s = (Set) cl.newInstance(); |
| } catch(IllegalAccessException e) { |
| throw new IllegalArgumentException(cl + " not accessible"); |
| } catch(InstantiationException e) { |
| throw new IllegalArgumentException(cl + " not instantiable"); |
| } |
| |
| // Exercise the set |
| s.addAll(Arrays.asList(args)); |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>However, even this case can be avoided by encapsulating the try-catch block |
| in a method:</p> |
| <pre><code>Set createSet(Class cl) { |
| // Instantiate class cl, which represents some sort of Set |
| try { |
| return (Set) cl.newInstance(); |
| } catch(IllegalAccessException e) { |
| throw new IllegalArgumentException(cl + " not accessible"); |
| } catch(InstantiationException e) { |
| throw new IllegalArgumentException(cl + " not instantiable"); |
| } |
| } |
| |
| ... |
| |
| // Exercise the set |
| Set s = createSet(cl); |
| s.addAll(Arrays.asList(args)); |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>Loop variables should be declared in the for statement itself unless there |
| is a compelling reason to do otherwise:</p> |
| <pre><code>for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) { |
| doSomething(i); |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>and</p> |
| <pre><code>for (Iterator i = c.iterator(); i.hasNext(); ) { |
| doSomethingElse(i.next()); |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| |
| <h3 id="order-import-statements">Order Import Statements</h3> |
| <p>The ordering of import statements is:</p> |
| <ol> |
| <li> |
| <p>Android imports</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p>Imports from third parties (<code>com</code>, <code>junit</code>, |
| <code>net</code>, <code>org</code>)</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p><code>java</code> and <code>javax</code></p> |
| </li> |
| </ol> |
| <p>To exactly match the IDE settings, the imports should be:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li> |
| <p>Alphabetical within each grouping, with capital letters before lower case |
| letters (e.g. Z before a).</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p>Separated by a blank line between each major grouping (<code>android</code>, |
| <code>com</code>, <code>junit</code>, <code>net</code>, <code>org</code>, |
| <code>java</code>, <code>javax</code>).</p> |
| </li> |
| </ul> |
| <p>Originally, there was no style requirement on the ordering, meaning IDEs were |
| either always changing the ordering or IDE developers had to disable the |
| automatic import management features and manually maintain the imports. This was |
| deemed bad. When java-style was asked, the preferred styles varied wildly and it |
| came down to Android needing to simply "pick an ordering and be consistent." So |
| we chose a style, updated the style guide, and made the IDEs obey it. We expect |
| that as IDE users work on the code, imports in all packages will match this |
| pattern without extra engineering effort.</p> |
| <p>This style was chosen such that:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li> |
| <p>The imports people want to look at first tend to be at the top |
| (<code>android</code>).</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p>The imports people want to look at least tend to be at the bottom |
| (<code>java</code>).</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p>Humans can easily follow the style.</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p>IDEs can follow the style.</p> |
| </li> |
| </ul> |
| <p>The use and location of static imports have been mildly controversial |
| issues. Some people prefer static imports to be interspersed with the |
| remaining imports, while some prefer them to reside above or below all |
| other imports. Additionally, we have not yet determined how to make all IDEs use |
| the same ordering. Since many consider this a low priority issue, just use your |
| judgement and be consistent.</p> |
| |
| <h3 id="use-spaces-for-indentation">Use Spaces for Indentation</h3> |
| <p>We use four (4) space indents for blocks and never tabs. When in doubt, be |
| consistent with the surrounding code.</p> |
| <p>We use eight (8) space indents for line wraps, including function calls and |
| assignments. For example, this is correct:</p> |
| <pre><code>Instrument i = |
| someLongExpression(that, wouldNotFit, on, one, line); |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>and this is not correct:</p> |
| <pre><code>Instrument i = |
| someLongExpression(that, wouldNotFit, on, one, line); |
| </code></pre> |
| |
| <h3 id="follow-field-naming-conventions">Follow Field Naming Conventions</h3> |
| <ul> |
| <li> |
| <p>Non-public, non-static field names start with m.</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p>Static field names start with s.</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p>Other fields start with a lower case letter.</p> |
| </li> |
| <li> |
| <p>Public static final fields (constants) are ALL_CAPS_WITH_UNDERSCORES.</p> |
| </li> |
| </ul> |
| <p>For example:</p> |
| <pre><code>public class MyClass { |
| public static final int SOME_CONSTANT = 42; |
| public int publicField; |
| private static MyClass sSingleton; |
| int mPackagePrivate; |
| private int mPrivate; |
| protected int mProtected; |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| <h3 id="use-standard-brace-style">Use Standard Brace Style</h3> |
| <p>Braces do not go on their own line; they go on the same line as the code |
| before them:</p> |
| <pre><code>class MyClass { |
| int func() { |
| if (something) { |
| // ... |
| } else if (somethingElse) { |
| // ... |
| } else { |
| // ... |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>We require braces around the statements for a conditional. Exception: If the |
| entire conditional (the condition and the body) fit on one line, you may (but |
| are not obligated to) put it all on one line. For example, this is acceptable:</p> |
| <pre><code>if (condition) { |
| body(); |
| } |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>and this is acceptable:</p> |
| <pre><code>if (condition) body(); |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>but this is not acceptable:</p> |
| <pre><code>if (condition) |
| body(); // bad! |
| </code></pre> |
| |
| <h3 id="limit-line-length">Limit Line Length</h3> |
| <p>Each line of text in your code should be at most 100 characters long. While |
| much discussion has surrounded this rule, the decision remains that 100 |
| characters is the maximum <em>with the following exceptions</em>:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li>If a comment line contains an example command or a literal URL |
| longer than 100 characters, that line may be longer than 100 characters for |
| ease of cut and paste.</li> |
| <li>Import lines can go over the limit because humans rarely see them (this also |
| simplifies tool writing).</li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <h3 id="use-standard-java-annotations">Use Standard Java Annotations</h3> |
| <p>Annotations should precede other modifiers for the same language element. |
| Simple marker annotations (e.g. @Override) can be listed on the same line with |
| the language element. If there are multiple annotations, or parameterized |
| annotations, they should each be listed one-per-line in alphabetical |
| order.</p> |
| <p>Android standard practices for the three predefined annotations in Java are:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><code>@Deprecated</code>: The @Deprecated annotation must be used whenever |
| the use of the annotated element is discouraged. If you use the @Deprecated |
| annotation, you must also have a @deprecated Javadoc tag and it should name an |
| alternate implementation. In addition, remember that a @Deprecated method is |
| <em>still supposed to work</em>. If you see old code that has a @deprecated |
| Javadoc tag, please add the @Deprecated annotation. |
| </li> |
| <li><code>@Override</code>: The @Override annotation must be used whenever a |
| method overrides the declaration or implementation from a super-class. For |
| example, if you use the @inheritdocs Javadoc tag, and derive from a class (not |
| an interface), you must also annotate that the method @Overrides the parent |
| class's method.</li> |
| <li><code>@SuppressWarnings</code>: The @SuppressWarnings annotation should be |
| used only under circumstances where it is impossible to eliminate a warning. If |
| a warning passes this "impossible to eliminate" test, the @SuppressWarnings |
| annotation <em>must</em> be used, so as to ensure that all warnings reflect |
| actual problems in the code. |
| <p>When a @SuppressWarnings annotation is necessary, it must be prefixed with |
| a TODO comment that explains the "impossible to eliminate" condition. This |
| will normally identify an offending class that has an awkward interface. For |
| example:</p> |
| <pre><code>// TODO: The third-party class com.third.useful.Utility.rotate() needs generics |
| @SuppressWarnings("generic-cast") |
| List<String> blix = Utility.rotate(blax); |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>When a @SuppressWarnings annotation is required, the code should be |
| refactored to isolate the software elements where the annotation applies.</p> |
| </li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <h3 id="treat-acronyms-as-words">Treat Acronyms as Words</h3> |
| <p>Treat acronyms and abbreviations as words in naming variables, methods, and |
| classes to make names more readable:</p> |
| <table> |
| <thead> |
| <tr> |
| <th>Good</th> |
| <th>Bad</th> |
| </tr> |
| </thead> |
| <tbody> |
| <tr> |
| <td>XmlHttpRequest</td> |
| <td>XMLHTTPRequest</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td>getCustomerId</td> |
| <td>getCustomerID</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td>class Html</td> |
| <td>class HTML</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td>String url</td> |
| <td>String URL</td> |
| </tr> |
| <tr> |
| <td>long id</td> |
| <td>long ID</td> |
| </tr> |
| </tbody> |
| </table> |
| <p>As both the JDK and the Android code bases are very inconsistent around |
| acronyms, it is virtually impossible to be consistent with the surrounding |
| code. Therefore, always treat acronyms as words.</p> |
| |
| <h3 id="use-todo-comments">Use TODO Comments</h3> |
| <p>Use TODO comments for code that is temporary, a short-term solution, or |
| good-enough but not perfect. TODOs should include the string TODO in all caps, |
| followed by a colon:</p> |
| <pre><code>// TODO: Remove this code after the UrlTable2 has been checked in. |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>and</p> |
| <pre><code>// TODO: Change this to use a flag instead of a constant. |
| </code></pre> |
| <p>If your TODO is of the form "At a future date do something" make sure that |
| you either include a very specific date ("Fix by November 2005") or a very |
| specific event ("Remove this code after all production mixers understand |
| protocol V7.").</p> |
| |
| <h3 id="log-sparingly">Log Sparingly</h3> |
| <p>While logging is necessary, it has a significantly negative impact on |
| performance and quickly loses its usefulness if not kept reasonably |
| terse. The logging facilities provides five different levels of logging:</p> |
| <ul> |
| <li><code>ERROR</code>: |
| Use when something fatal has happened, i.e. something will have user-visible |
| consequences and won't be recoverable without explicitly deleting some data, |
| uninstalling applications, wiping the data partitions or reflashing the entire |
| device (or worse). This level is always logged. Issues that justify some logging |
| at the ERROR level are typically good candidates to be reported to a |
| statistics-gathering server.</li> |
| <li><code>WARNING</code>: |
| Use when something serious and unexpected happened, i.e. something that will |
| have user-visible consequences but is likely to be recoverable without data loss |
| by performing some explicit action, ranging from waiting or restarting an app |
| all the way to re-downloading a new version of an application or rebooting the |
| device. This level is always logged. Issues that justify some logging at the |
| WARNING level might also be considered for reporting to a statistics-gathering |
| server.</li> |
| <li><code>INFORMATIVE:</code> |
| Use to note that something interesting to most people happened, i.e. when a |
| situation is detected that is likely to have widespread impact, though isn't |
| necessarily an error. Such a condition should only be logged by a module that |
| reasonably believes that it is the most authoritative in that domain (to avoid |
| duplicate logging by non-authoritative components). This level is always logged. |
| </li> |
| <li><code>DEBUG</code>: |
| Use to further note what is happening on the device that could be relevant to |
| investigate and debug unexpected behaviors. You should log only what is needed |
| to gather enough information about what is going on about your component. If |
| your debug logs are dominating the log then you probably should be using verbose |
| logging. |
| <p>This level will be logged, even on release builds, and is required to be |
| surrounded by an <code>if (LOCAL_LOG)</code> or <code>if (LOCAL_LOGD)</code> |
| block, where <code>LOCAL_LOG[D]</code> is defined in your class or subcomponent, |
| so that there can exist a possibility to disable all such logging. There must |
| therefore be no active logic in an <code>if (LOCAL_LOG)</code> block. All the |
| string building for the log also needs to be placed inside the <code>if |
| (LOCAL_LOG)</code> block. The logging call should not be re-factored out into a |
| method call if it is going to cause the string building to take place outside |
| of the <code>if (LOCAL_LOG)</code> block.</p> |
| <p>There is some code that still says <code>if (localLOGV)</code>. This is |
| considered acceptable as well, although the name is nonstandard.</p> |
| </li> |
| <li><code>VERBOSE</code>: |
| Use for everything else. This level will only be logged on debug builds and |
| should be surrounded by an <code>if (LOCAL_LOGV)</code> block (or equivalent) so |
| it can be compiled out by default. Any string building will be stripped out of |
| release builds and needs to appear inside the <code>if (LOCAL_LOGV)</code> block. |
| </li> |
| </ul> |
| <p><em>Notes:</em> </p> |
| <ul> |
| <li>Within a given module, other than at the VERBOSE level, an |
| error should only be reported once if possible. Within a single chain of |
| function calls within a module, only the innermost function should return the |
| error, and callers in the same module should only add some logging if that |
| significantly helps to isolate the issue.</li> |
| <li>In a chain of modules, other than at the VERBOSE level, when a |
| lower-level module detects invalid data coming from a higher-level module, the |
| lower-level module should only log this situation to the DEBUG log, and only |
| if logging provides information that is not otherwise available to the caller. |
| Specifically, there is no need to log situations where an exception is thrown |
| (the exception should contain all the relevant information), or where the only |
| information being logged is contained in an error code. This is especially |
| important in the interaction between the framework and applications, and |
| conditions caused by third-party applications that are properly handled by the |
| framework should not trigger logging higher than the DEBUG level. The only |
| situations that should trigger logging at the INFORMATIVE level or higher is |
| when a module or application detects an error at its own level or coming from |
| a lower level.</li> |
| <li>When a condition that would normally justify some logging is |
| likely to occur many times, it can be a good idea to implement some |
| rate-limiting mechanism to prevent overflowing the logs with many duplicate |
| copies of the same (or very similar) information.</li> |
| <li>Losses of network connectivity are considered common, fully expected, and |
| should not be logged gratuitously. A loss of network connectivity |
| that has consequences within an app should be logged at the DEBUG or VERBOSE |
| level (depending on whether the consequences are serious enough and unexpected |
| enough to be logged in a release build).</li> |
| <li>Having a full filesystem on a filesystem that is accessible to or on |
| behalf of third-party applications should not be logged at a level higher than |
| INFORMATIVE.</li> |
| <li>Invalid data coming from any untrusted source (including any |
| file on shared storage, or data coming through just about any network |
| connection) is considered expected and should not trigger any logging at a |
| level higher than DEBUG when it's detected to be invalid (and even then |
| logging should be as limited as possible).</li> |
| <li>Keep in mind that the <code>+</code> operator, when used on Strings, |
| implicitly creates a <code>StringBuilder</code> with the default buffer size (16 |
| characters) and potentially other temporary String objects, i.e. |
| that explicitly creating StringBuilders isn't more expensive than relying on |
| the default '+' operator (and can be a lot more efficient in fact). Keep |
| in mind that code that calls <code>Log.v()</code> is compiled and executed on |
| release builds, including building the strings, even if the logs aren't being |
| read.</li> |
| <li>Any logging that is meant to be read by other people and to be |
| available in release builds should be terse without being cryptic, and should |
| be reasonably understandable. This includes all logging up to the DEBUG |
| level.</li> |
| <li>When possible, logging should be kept on a single line if it |
| makes sense. Line lengths up to 80 or 100 characters are perfectly acceptable, |
| while lengths longer than about 130 or 160 characters (including the length of |
| the tag) should be avoided if possible.</li> |
| <li>Logging that reports successes should never be used at levels |
| higher than VERBOSE.</li> |
| <li>Temporary logging used to diagnose an issue that is hard to reproduce should |
| be kept at the DEBUG or VERBOSE level and should be enclosed by if blocks that |
| allow for disabling it entirely at compile time.</li> |
| <li>Be careful about security leaks through the log. Private |
| information should be avoided. Information about protected content must |
| definitely be avoided. This is especially important when writing framework |
| code as it's not easy to know in advance what will and will not be private |
| information or protected content.</li> |
| <li><code>System.out.println()</code> (or <code>printf()</code> for native code) |
| should never be used. System.out and System.err get redirected to /dev/null, so |
| your print statements will have no visible effects. However, all the string |
| building that happens for these calls still gets executed.</li> |
| <li><em>The golden rule of logging is that your logs may not |
| unnecessarily push other logs out of the buffer, just as others may not push |
| out yours.</em></li> |
| </ul> |
| |
| <h3 id="be-consistent">Be Consistent</h3> |
| <p>Our parting thought: BE CONSISTENT. If you're editing code, take a few |
| minutes to look at the surrounding code and determine its style. If that code |
| uses spaces around the if clauses, you should too. If the code comments have |
| little boxes of stars around them, make your comments have little boxes of stars |
| around them too.</p> |
| <p>The point of having style guidelines is to have a common vocabulary of |
| coding, so people can concentrate on what you're saying, rather than on how |
| you're saying it. We present global style rules here so people know the |
| vocabulary, but local style is also important. If the code you add to a file |
| looks drastically different from the existing code around it, it throws |
| readers out of their rhythm when they go to read it. Try to avoid this.</p> |
| |
| <h2 id="javatests-style-rules">Javatests Style Rules</h2> |
| <p>Follow test method naming conventions and use an underscore to separate what |
| is being tested from the specific case being tested. This style makes it easier |
| to see exactly what cases are being tested. For example:</p> |
| <pre><code>testMethod_specificCase1 testMethod_specificCase2 |
| |
| void testIsDistinguishable_protanopia() { |
| ColorMatcher colorMatcher = new ColorMatcher(PROTANOPIA) |
| assertFalse(colorMatcher.isDistinguishable(Color.RED, Color.BLACK)) |
| assertTrue(colorMatcher.isDistinguishable(Color.X, Color.Y)) |
| } |
| </code></pre> |