OC Coding Style
The following rules apply to all developers who contribute source code to the Opencaching.de project. This documentation is incomplete / work in progress.
General rules
All source code files must
- not contain TAB characters,
- use 4-char indenting columns,
- be UTF-8 encoded without byte order marks,
- use only LF as line ends, with the current exception of email templates, which have RFC-822 CR/LF line ends.
There are some tools in the local/devel directory for verifying and fixing these things.
PHP
All contributed or modified code sections must fully comply to the PSR-2 standard (which includes PSR-1), with these exceptions:
- When referencing identifiers (e.g. class and function names) that are defined in non-PSR-2-compliant source code files, their names need not be PSR-2 compliant.
- When writing standalone scripts like those in the 'local', 'util' and 'util2' directories, they need not to comply to the PSR-1 "Side Effects" rule.
Only <?php
and <?=
open tags must be used. <?
(short open tags) must not be used.
SQL
See also: Entwicklung/Codedoku#Datenbank
All SQL language elements are written in CAPS, and all user-defined identifiers in `backticks`. Inner joins are coded as JOIN and not as WHERE. All variable values inserted into SQLs must be escaped, either via placeholders like '&1'
or via function sql_escape()
.
SQL code inserted into PHP code is enclosed in double quotes and generally formatted like this:
$result = sql( "SELECT `cache_id`, `wp_oc` FROM `caches` JOIN `cache_logs` ON `cache_logs`.`cache_id` = `caches`.`cache_id` WHERE `caches`.`status` IN ('&1', '&2')", $status1, $status2 );
Note that the opening " is on a tab position, while the following lines start one column to the right.
If lines get too long, the parameters are moved to the next line(s) and indented to the next indent column (which is three chars right of the preceding line's keyword):
$result = sql( "SELECT `caches`.`cache_id`, `caches`.`type` AS `cache_type`, `cache_logs`.`date` AS `log_date`, `cache_logs`.`type` AS `log_type` FROM `caches` JOIN `cache_logs` ON `cache_logs`.`cache_id` = `caches`.`cache_id` AND `cache_logs`.`type` = '&1' WHERE `caches`.`status` = '&2' AND `cache_logs`.`user_id` = '&3'", $logType, $cacheStatus, $userId );