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Coding style guide
MOHIT GUPTA edited this page May 9, 2023
·
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Please follow the following style rules when writing code, in order to minimize unnecessary back-and-forth during code review.
- We follow the Kotlin Android style guide.
- Use 2 spaces for indentation and 4 spaces for continuation, per https://google.github.io/styleguide/javaguide.html#s4.2-block-indentation. (This should be configured at the project level for Kotlin. Ensure that you're using the project configuration for Kotlin in your IDE, so that you can reformat the code via the IDE if needed.)
- Never commit a PR which includes commented-out code.
- Ensure that your code looks consistent with the code surrounding it.
- Ensure that the indentation of your code is correct.
- In general, avoid leaving multiple consecutive blank lines. Collapse them into a single one.
- The last character in each file should always be a newline. (If it's not, you'll see a red symbol at the end of the file when you look at the "Files Changed" tab in GitHub.)
- Make sure to remove temporary code (e.g. log statements or toasts to help with local debugging) before pushing to GitHub.
- Do not check any build artifacts into GitHub.
Reformat all edited files automatically in android studio using the following command.
- Windows:
Ctrl + Alt + L
- Linux:
Ctrl + Shift + Alt + L
- macOS:
Option + Command + L
- Ubuntu users might face issue because
Ctrl + Alt + L
locks the screen by default nature. Refer to this stackoverflow-link on how to solve this.
Alternatively, you can also use the in-built Android Studio option to reformat by selecting to Code -> Reformat Code/File
.
NOTE: This does not guarantee 100% formatting of code as per guidelines but will be very helpful in indentation and extra spaces.
- Ensure that comments have correct grammar, spelling and capitalization.
- Vertically align the
*
s on the left side of a multi-line comment. - Wrap Javadoc comments to the 120 character limit.
- Put new lines between Javadoc paragraphs.
- Do not leave any spaces between a Javadoc and the class/method/field that it's documenting.
- When writing TODOs, refer to an issue number on the GitHub issue tracker. E.g.
TODO(#1234): Do X, Y and Z.
- Do not declare values directly in the XML file. Declare them in the corresponding resource file and use that variable.
For example:
- For a dimension, declare it in dimens.xml file.
- For a string, declare it in strings.xml file.
- For a color, declare it in colors.xml file.
In general, avoid using hard-coded strings.
- Separate adjacent functions or blocks of code by a single blank line.
- Do not use "magic numbers" in code. Declare constants instead (typically at the module level).
- Order imports alphabetically. Remove unused imports. You can make use of the in-built Android Studio option to optimise imports by selecting
Code -> Optimise Imports
.
- Each layout file should be named according to how they are used, where all layouts fall in the following buckets:
- Activities: screen_name_activity.xml (all end with
_activity.xml
) - Fragments: subscreen_name_fragment.xml (all end with
_fragment.xml
) - Custom views: custom_widget_name_view.xml (all end with
_view.xml
) - RecyclerView items: element_name_item.xml (all end with
_item.xml
) - Toolbars: screen_location_toolbar.xml (all end with
_toolbar.xml
)
- Activities: screen_name_activity.xml (all end with
- Any layouts not associated with the above that should be shared across multiple layouts should instead be associated with a custom view (including a corresponding Kotlin file). This means the
include
directive won't be included in any layouts. - Since widget IDs within layout files are global scoped, they should be named based on their location, value, and widget type.
- The general format for this is: <parent_file_name>_<view_name>_<widget_type>
- The following are some recognized widget types (this list is not comprehensive):
TextView
EditText
RecyclerView
Button
View
- Custom views (the full name of the view should be spelled out for the widget type in identifiers)
- Layout elements should be named as follows:
-
container
: if the element contains other elements within the same layout -
placeholder
: if the element will be replaced at runtime with new elements (such as a fragment layout)
-
- Here are some examples of valid IDs:
-
recently_played_activity_recently_played_fragment_placeholder
(aFrameLayout
inrecently_played_activity.xml
) -
recently_played_fragment_ongoing_story_recycler_view
(aRecyclerView
inrecently_played_fragment.xml
)
-
- Arrange lists in alphabetical order unless there's a good reason not to.
- Combine
implementation
,androidTestImplementation
andtestImplementation
to declare all similar dependencies in one block.
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Core documentation
Developing Oppia
- Contributing to Oppia Android
- Bazel
- Key Workflows
- Testing
- Developing Skills
- Frequent Errors and Solutions
- RTL Guidelines
- Working on UI
- Writing Design Docs
Developer Reference
- Code style
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- Buf Guide
- Firebase Console Guide
- Platform Parameters & Feature Flags
- Work Manager
- Dependency Injection with Dagger
- Revert & regression policy
- Upgrading target SDK version
- Spotlight Guide
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- Bazel
- Internationalization
- Terminology in Oppia
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