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Matrix JavaScript/ECMAScript Style Guide
The intention of this guide is to make Matrix's JavaScript codebase clean, consistent with other popular JavaScript styles and consistent with the rest of the Matrix codebase. For reference, the Matrix Python style guide can be found at https://github.com/matrix-org/synapse/blob/master/docs/code_style.rst
This document reflects how we would like Matrix JavaScript code to look, with acknowledgement that a significant amount of code is written to older standards.
Write applications in modern ECMAScript and use a transpiler where necessary to target older platforms. When writing library code, consider carefully whether to write in ES5 to allow all JavaScript application to use the code directly or writing in modern ECMAScript and using a transpile step to generate the file that applications can then include. There are significant benefits in being able to use modern ECMAScript, although the tooling for doing so can be awkward for library code, especially with regard to translating source maps and line number throgh from the original code to the final application.
General Style
- 4 spaces to indent, for consistency with Matrix Python.
- Max line width: 79 chars (with flexibility to overflow by a "few chars" if the overflowing content is not semantically significant and avoids an explosion of vertical whitespace).
- No trailing whitespace at end of lines.
- Don't indent empty lines.
- One newline at the end of the file.
- Unix newlines, never
\r
- Indent similar to our python code: break up long lines at logical boundaries, more than one argument on a line is OK
- Use semicolons, for consistency with node.
- UpperCamelCase for class and type names
- lowerCamelCase for functions and variables.
- Single line ternary operators are fine.
- UPPER_CAMEL_CASE for constants
- Single quotes for strings by default, for consistency with most JavaScript styles:
"bad" // Bad 'good' // Good
- Use parentheses or ``` instead of '\' for line continuation where ever possible
- Open braces on the same line (consistent with Node):
if (x) { console.log("I am a fish"); // Good } if (x) { console.log("I am a fish"); // Bad }
- Spaces after
if
,for
,else
etc, no space around the condition:if (x) { console.log("I am a fish"); // Good } if(x) { console.log("I am a fish"); // Bad } if ( x ) { console.log("I am a fish"); // Bad }
- Declare one variable per var statement (consistent with Node). Unless they
are simple and closely related. If you put the next declaration on a new line,
treat yourself to another
var
:var key = "foo", comparator = function(x, y) { return x - y; }; // Bad var key = "foo"; var comparator = function(x, y) { return x - y; }; // Good var x = 0, y = 0; // Fine var x = 0; var y = 0; // Also fine
- A single line
if
is fine, all others have braces. This prevents errors when adding to the code.:if (x) return true; // Fine if (x) { return true; // Also fine } if (x) return true; // Not fine
- Terminate all multi-line lists, object literals, imports and ideally function calls with commas (if using a transpiler). Note that trailing function commas require explicit configuration in babel at time of writing:
var mascots = [ "Patrick", "Shirley", "Colin", "Susan", "Sir Arthur David" // Bad ]; var mascots = [ "Patrick", "Shirley", "Colin", "Susan", "Sir Arthur David", // Good ];
- Use
null
,undefined
etc consistently with node: Boolean variables and functions should always be either true or false. Don't set it to 0 unless it's supposed to be a number. When something is intentionally missing or removed, set it to null. If returning a boolean, type coerce:
Don't set things to undefined. Reserve that value to mean "not yet set to anything." Boolean objects are verboten.function hasThings() { return !!length; // bad return new Boolean(length); // REALLY bad return Boolean(length); // good }
- Use JSDoc
ECMAScript
- Use
let
for variables andconst
for constants. This sounds obvious, but it isn't: the ES6const
keyword could be used for assign-once variables, however this guide advises against doing so on the grounds that it confuses them with constants. - Be careful migrating files to newer syntax.
- Don't mix
require
andimport
in the same file. Either stick to the old style or change them all. - Likewise, don't mix things like class properties and
MyClass.prototype.MY_CONSTANT = 42;
- Be careful mixing arrow functions and regular functions, eg. if one function in a promise chain is an arrow function, they probably all should be.
- Don't mix
- Apart from that, newer ES features should be used whenever the author deems them to be appropriate.
- Flow annotations are welcome and encouraged.
React
- Use ES6 classes, although bear in mind a lot of code uses createClass.
- Pull out functions in props to the class, generally as specific event handlers:
<Foo onClick={function(ev) {doStuff();}}> // Bad <Foo onClick={(ev) => {doStuff();}}> // Equally bad <Foo onClick={this.doStuff}> // Better <Foo onClick={this.onFooClick}> // Best, if onFooClick would do anything other than directly calling doStuff
- Think about whether your component really needs state: are you duplicating information in component state that could be derived from the model?