Difference between revisions of "My Python Coding Conventions"

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= Coding Conventions Etc. =
 
= Coding Conventions Etc. =
  
In reading the code it may be of some use to know what conventions I have ( tried ) to follow.  The code has been developed over quite a period of time so the standards are not uniform.  What I write here are the standards that are in quite a bit of the code and the directions that I am trying to move.  In all of the coding consistency is an important standard.  Here are some areas.
+
In reading the code it may be of some use to know what conventions I have ( tried ) to follow.  The code has been developed over quite a period of time so the standards are not uniform.  What I write here are the standards that are in quite a bit of the code and the directions that I am trying to move.  In all of the coding consistency is an important standard, I have a ways to go.  Here are some types of conventions.
  
 
== Names ==
 
== Names ==

Revision as of 18:30, 10 September 2019

Coding Conventions Etc.

In reading the code it may be of some use to know what conventions I have ( tried ) to follow. The code has been developed over quite a period of time so the standards are not uniform. What I write here are the standards that are in quite a bit of the code and the directions that I am trying to move. In all of the coding consistency is an important standard, I have a ways to go. Here are some types of conventions.

Names

Be consistent: this is good but have not been very successful in standards: I keep changing my mind. Names across classes are pretty consistent. I am avoiding short names and try to make them descriptive enough that they are somewhat self documenting. References are often copied across objects for easy access ( lots of parameters for example ); when this happens the name of the object is generally ( should be always ) the same in both objects.

Formatting

Nothing special here but I like white space and use a lot. This is not standard Python. But this is what I like.

Docstrings

Work towards using them. Not good as of 2017 Jan

Imports

  • In most cases use the format "import xyz" so the name space is not polluted and so it is easy to identify just what an imported class is.
  • In in objects that are almost all GUI then using "from Tkinter import *" is ok but better is: "import Tkinter as Tk"
  • I normally have only one or a few classes in a file so there is a lot of what I call "local imports".
  • Almost all imports are at the top of a file, std library imports first then "local imports".

Object Orientation

Almost everything is a class. Not much in the way of module functions, not many classes in a module. I am trying to have all my classes descend from something be it only Object. And now that I am in Python 3.6 this is how it always works.

Documentation for Class Instance Methods

Look something like this:

   def create_class_from_strings( self, module_name, class_name):
       """
       This will load a class from string names
       It makes it easier to specify classes in the parameter file.
       I believe it is used for both the comm drive and the "processor"
       args:  strings
       ret:   instance of the class
       Side effects Class created 
       """

The comment should give the intent of the method, some hint as to the args ( which hopefully have good names ), and some info. on the return value. zip means nothing, void....

I am moving toward using __ and _ as prefixes for more private methods, but have not gone too far in this direction.


Links

Configuration Files For Python [Category:Python]]