From 36d22d82aa202bb199967e9512281e9a53db42c9 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sun, 7 Apr 2024 21:33:14 +0200 Subject: Adding upstream version 115.7.0esr. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- .../docs/contributor/contributing/javascript.md | 87 ++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 87 insertions(+) create mode 100644 devtools/docs/contributor/contributing/javascript.md (limited to 'devtools/docs/contributor/contributing/javascript.md') diff --git a/devtools/docs/contributor/contributing/javascript.md b/devtools/docs/contributor/contributing/javascript.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..25d1f1c251 --- /dev/null +++ b/devtools/docs/contributor/contributing/javascript.md @@ -0,0 +1,87 @@ +# JavaScript coding standards + +Probably the best piece of advice is **to be consistent with the rest of the code in the file**. + +We use [ESLint](http://eslint.org/) to analyse JavaScript files automatically, either from within a code editor or from the command line. Here's [our guide to install and configure it](./eslint.md). + +For quick reference, here are some of the main code style rules: + +* file references to browser globals such as `window` and `document` need `/* eslint-env browser */` at the top of the file, +* lines should be 90 characters maximum, +* indent with 2 spaces (no tabs!), +* `camelCasePlease`, +* don't open braces on the next line, +* don't name function expressions: `let o = { doSomething: function doSomething() {} };`, +* use a space before opening paren for anonymous functions, but don't use one for named functions: + * anonymous functions: `function () {}` + * named functions: `function foo() {}` + * anonymous generators: `function* () {}` + * named generators: `function* foo() {}` +* aim for short functions, 24 lines max (ESLint has a rule that checks for function complexity too), +* `aArguments aAre the aDevil` (don't use them please), +* `"use strict";` globally per module, +* `semicolons; // use them`, +* no comma-first, +* consider using async/await for nice-looking asynchronous code instead of formatting endless `.then` chains, +* use ES6 syntax: + * `function setBreakpoint({url, line, column}) { ... }`, + * `(...args) => { }` rest args are awesome, no need for `arguments`, + * `for..of` loops, +* don't use non-standard SpiderMonkey-only syntax: + * no `for each` loops, + * no `function () implicitReturnVal`, + * getters / setters require { }, +* only import specific, explicitly-declared symbols into your namespace: + * `const { foo, bar } = require("foo/bar");`, + * `const { foo, bar } = ChromeUtils.import("...");`, +* use Maps, Sets, WeakMaps when possible, +* use [template strings](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Template_literals) whenever possible to avoid concatenation, allow multi-line strings, and interpolation. + + +## Comments + +Commenting code is important, but bad comments can hurt too, so it's important to have a few rules in mind when commenting: + +* If the code can be rewritten to be made more readable, then that should be preferred over writing an explanation as a comment. +* Instead of writing a comment to explain the meaning of a poorly chosen variable name, then rename that variable. +* Avoid long separator comments like `// ****************** another section below **********`. They are often a sign that you should split a file in multiple files. +* Line comments go above the code they are commenting, not at the end of the line. +* Sentences in comments start with a capital letter and end with a period. +* Watch out for typos. +* Obsolete copy/pasted code hurts, make sure you update comments inside copy/pasted code blocks. +* A global comment at the very top of a file explaining what the file is about and the major types/classes/functions it contains is a good idea for quickly browsing code. +* If you are forced to employ some kind of hack in your code, and there's no way around it, then add a comment that explains the hack and why it is needed. The reviewer is going to ask for one anyway. +* Bullet points in comments should use stars aligned with the first comment to format each point +```javascript +// headline comment +// * bullet point 1 +// * bullet point 2 +``` + +## Asynchronous code + +A lot of code in DevTools is asynchronous, because a lot of it relies on connecting to the DevTools server and getting information from there in an asynchronous fashion. + +It's easy to make mistakes with asynchronous code, so here are a few guidelines that should help: + +* Prefer [promises](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Global_Objects/Promise) over callbacks. +* Use the `new Promise(() => {})` syntax. +* Don't forget to catch rejections by defining a rejection handler: `promise.then(() => console.log("resolved"), () => console.log("rejected"));` or `promise.catch(() => console.log("rejected"));`. +* Make use of [async and await](https://developer.mozilla.org/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/Statements/async_function). + +## React & Redux + +There are React-specific code style rules in the .eslintrc file. + +### Components + +* Default to creating components as [stateless function components](https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/reusable-components.html#stateless-functions). +* If you need local state or lifecycle methods, use `React.createClass` instead of functions. +* Use React.DOM to create native elements. Assign it to a variable named `dom`, and use it like `dom.div({}, dom.span({}))`. You may also destructure specific elements directly: `const { div, ul } = React.DOM`. + +### PropTypes + +* Use [PropTypes](https://facebook.github.io/react/docs/reusable-components.html#prop-validation) to define the expected properties of your component. Each directly accessed property (or child of a property) should have a corresponding PropType. +* Use `isRequired` for any required properties. +* Place the propTypes definition at the top of the component. If using a stateless function component, place it above the declaration of the function. +* Where the children property is used, consider [validating the children](http://www.mattzabriskie.com/blog/react-validating-children). -- cgit v1.2.3