93 lines
2.8 KiB
Text
93 lines
2.8 KiB
Text
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If you do nothing else, avoid use of partial functions from the Prelude!
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`import Utility.PartialPrelude` helps avoid this by defining conflicting
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functions for all the common ones. Also avoid `!!`, it's partial too.
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Use tabs for indentation. The one exception to this rule are
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the Hamlet format files in `templates/*`. Hamlet, infuriatingly, refuses
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to allow tabs to be used for indentation.
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Code should make sense with any tab stop setting, but 8 space tabs are
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the default. With 8 space tabs, code should not exceed 80 characters
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per line. (With larger tabs, it may of course.)
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Use spaces for layout. For example, here spaces (indicated with `.`)
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are used after the initial tab to make the third test line up with
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the others.
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when (foo_test || bar_test ||
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......some_other_long_test)
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print "hi"
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As a special Haskell-specific rule, "where" clauses are indented with two
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spaces, rather than a tab. This makes them stand out from the main body
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of the function, and avoids excessive indentation of the where cause content.
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The definitions within the where clause should be put on separate lines,
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each indented with a tab.
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main = do
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foo
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bar
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foo
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where
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foo = ...
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bar = ...
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Where clauses for instance definitions and modules tend to appear at the end
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of a line, rather than on a separate line.
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module Foo (Foo, mkFoo, unFoo) where
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instance MonadBaseControl IO Annex where
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When a function's type signature needs to be wrapped to another line,
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it's typical to switch to displaying one parameter per line.
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foo :: Bar -> Baz -> (Bar -> Baz) -> IO Baz
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foo'
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:: Bar
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-> Baz
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-> (Bar -> Baz)
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-> IO Baz
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Note that the "::" then starts its own line. It is not put on the same
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line as the function name because then it would not be guaranteed to line
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up with the "->" at all tab width settings. Similarly, guards are put
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on their own lines:
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splat i
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| odd i = error "splat!"
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| otherwise = i
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Multiline lists and record syntax are written with leading commas,
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that line up with the open and close punctuation.
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list =
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[ item1
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, item2
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, item3
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]
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foo = DataStructure
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{ name = "bar"
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, address = "baz"
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}
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Module imports are separated into two blocks, one for third-party modules,
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and one for modules that are part of git-annex. (Additional blocks can be used
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if it makes sense.)
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Using tabs for indentation makes use of `let .. in` particularly tricky.
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There's no really good way to bind multiple names in a let clause with
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tab indentation. Instead, a where clause is typically used. To bind a single
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name in a let clause, this is sometimes used:
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foo = let x = 42
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in x + (x-1) + x
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-----
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If you feel that this coding style leads to excessive amounts of horizontal
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or vertical whitespace around your code, making it hard to fit enough of it
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on the screen, consider finding a better abstraction, so the code that
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does fit on the screen is easily understandable. ;)
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