Mercurial > pylearn
view doc/v2_planning/coding_style.txt @ 1119:81ea57c6716d
clarification to plugin.txt
author | Yoshua Bengio <bengioy@iro.umontreal.ca> |
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date | Tue, 14 Sep 2010 17:22:25 -0400 |
parents | 60ef81fe1825 |
children | 1a1c0c3adcca |
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Discussion of Coding-Style ========================== Participants ------------ - Dumitru - Fred - David - Olivier D [leader] Open for public debate ---------------------- * Use imports for packages and modules only. I.e. avoid from foo import * from foo import Bar OD: Overall I agree with this. However we probably want to allow some exceptions, like: from itertools import imap, izip Also, some people may want to have shortcuts like from theano import tensor as T but I would prefer to forbid this. It is handy when trying stuff in the interactive interpreter, but in real code it can easily get messy when you want to copy / paste different pieces of code and they use different conventions. Typing tensor.* is a bit longer, but a lot more portable. JB: I thought that these are nice: - "from foo import Bar" - "from foo import Bar, Blah" What's wrong with them? They keep the code listing short and readable. I would discourage these forms when symbols 'Bar' and 'Blah' are ambiguous, in which case the parent module prefix serves to disambiguate them in the code. I agree that the "import A as B" form should be discouraged in general, because that's just confusing and makes code less grep-friendly. * Imports should usually be on separate lines. OD: I would add an exception, saying it is ok to group multiple imports from the standard library on a single line, e.g. import os, sys, time I just don't see much benefit in putting them on separate lines (for third-party imports I agree it is best to keep them separate, as it makes dependencies clearer, and diffs look better when someone adds / removes an import). Does anyone see a good reason to keep standard library imports on different lines? JB: what does 'usually' mean here? The guideline seems vacuous. * The BDFL recommends inserting a blank line between the last paragraph in a multi-line docstring and its closing quotes, placing the closing quotes on a line by themselves. This way, Emacs' fill-paragraph command can be used on it. OD: I think it is ugly and I have not seen it used much. Any Emacs user believes it is a must? * Avoid contractions in code comments (particularly in documentation): "We do not add blue to red because it does not look good" rather than "We don't add blue to red because it doesn't look good". OD: I mostly find it to be cleaner (been used to it while writing scientific articles too). JB: +1 * Imperative vs. third-person comments. # Return the sum of elements in x. <-- imperative # Returns the sum of elements in x. <-- third-person OD: I am used to the imperative form and like it better only because it typically saves one letter (the 's') and is easier to conjugate. JB: What about being compatible with markup formats that have a :returns: tag? * OD: I like always doing the following when subclassing a class A: class B(A): def __init__(self, b_arg_1, b_arg_2, **kw): super(B, self).__init__(**kw) ... The point here is that the constructor always allow for extra keyword arguments (except for the class at the very top of the hierarchy), which are automatically passed to the parent class. Pros: - You do not need to repeat the parent class arguments whenever you write a new subclass. - Whenever you add an argument to the parent class, all child classes can benefit from it without modifying their code. Cons: - One needs to look at the parent classes to see what these arguments are. - You cannot use a **kw argument in your constructor for your own selfish purpose. - I have no clue whether one could do this with multiple inheritance. - More? Question: Should we encourage this in Pylearn? JB: +0.5 * JB: How should we combine capitalization and underscores to name classes and functions related to an algorithm like 'SGD' or a model like 'RBM' whose common name is capitalized? Case in point: How should I name a Hybrid Monte Carlo Sampler? Should I use the common HMC abbreviation? Note about warnings ------------------- Fred: This is a refactored thing from James email of what we should put in message that we send to the user: 1) Hint where in the code this log come from. 2) Hint how to hide this message? or we should this into documentation. 3) Tell explicitly if the user can ignore it and the consequence. Existing Python coding style specifications and guidelines ---------------------------------------------------------- * Must-read * Official Python coding style guide: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008 * Official docstring conventions: http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0257 * Google Python Style Guide: http://google-styleguide.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/pyguide.html * Interesting * Code Like a Pythonista: http://python.net/~goodger/projects/pycon/2007/idiomatic/handout.html * Can skip * Python style for university class: http://www.cs.caltech.edu/courses/cs11/material/python/misc/python_style_guide.html * Mailman coding style: http://barry.warsaw.us/software/STYLEGUIDE.txt * Some company coding style: http://self.maluke.com/style * Chandler coding style: http://chandlerproject.org/Projects/ChandlerCodingStyleGuidelines * Outdated recommendations: http://lists.osafoundation.org/pipermail/dev/2003-March/000479.html * Mostly some beginners tips: http://learnpython.pbworks.com/PythonTricks * More beginners tips: http://eikke.com/how-not-to-write-python-code/ * Cogent coding guidelines: http://jaynes.colorado.edu/PythonGuidelines.html * Djangoo coding guidelines: http://docs.djangoproject.com/en/dev/internals/contributing/#coding-style * Numpy documentation style guidelines: http://projects.scipy.org/numpy/wiki/CodingStyleGuidelines * Some random guy guidelines (nothing special): http://www.voidspace.org.uk/python/articles/python_style_guide.shtml We will probably want to take PEP-8 as starting point, and read what other people think about it / how other coding guidelines differ from it. Dumi: we should also try to find tools that automate these processes: pylint, pyflakes, pychecker, pythontidy OD: Things about PEP 8 I don't like (but it may be just me): * If necessary, you can add an extra pair of parentheses around an expression, but sometimes using a backslash looks better. --> I rarely find that backslash looks better. In most situations you can get rid of them. Typically I prefer: if (cond_1 and cond_2 and cond_3): to if cond_1 and \ cond_2 and \ cond_3: * You should use two spaces after a sentence-ending period. --> Looks weird to me. (DWF: This is an old convention from the typewriter era. It has more or less been wiped out by HTML's convention of ignoring extra whitespace: see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sentence_spacing for more detail. I think it's okay to drop this convention in source code.) OD: Cool, thanks, I guess we can drop it then. * Missing in PEP 8: - How to indent multi-line statements? E.g. do we want x = my_func(a, b, c, d, e, f) or x = my_func(a, b, c, d, e, f) or x = my_func( a, b, c, d, e, f) --> Probably depends on the specific situation, but we could have a few typical examples (and the same happens with multi-lines lists) (Fred: I would do 2 or 3, but not 1. I find it more redable when the indent is broken after a paranthesis then at any point. OD: After thinking about it, I agreee as well. My recommendation would be to go with 2 when it can fit on two lines, and 3 otherwise. Same with lists. Documentation ------------- How do we write doc? Compatibility with various Python versions ------------------------------------------ * Which Python 2.x version do we want to support? * Is it reasonable to have coding guidelines that would make the code as compatible as possible with Python 3? C coding style -------------- We also need a c-style coding style. Meeting 2010/09/09 ------------------ * Coding guidelines PEP 8 & Google should be a good basis to start with. Task: Highlight the most important points in them (OD). * Documentation Use RST with Sphinx. Task: Provide specific examples on how to document a class, method, and some specific classes like Op (DE). Modify the theano documentation to include that. OD: May want to check out http://projects.scipy.org/numpy/wiki/CodingStyleGuidelines * Python versions to be supported Support 2.4 (because some of the clusters are still running 2.4) and write code that can be converted to 3.x with 2to3 in a straightforward way. Task: Write to-do's and to-not-do's to avoid compatibility issues. (OD) (DWF: Pauli Virtanen and others have put together extensive documentation in the process of porting NumPy to Py3K, see his notes at http://projects.scipy.org/numpy/browser/trunk/doc/Py3K.txt -- this is the most complete resource for complicated combinations of Python and C). * C coding style How to write C code (in particular for Numpy / Cuda), and how to mix C and Python. Task: See if there would be a sensible C code style to follow (maybe look how Numpy does it), and how projects that mix C and Python deal with it (e.g. use separate files, or be able to have mixed syntax highlighting?) (FB) * Program output Use the warning and logging modules. Avoid print as much as possible. Task: Look into these modules to define general guidelines e.g. to decide when to use warning instead of logging. (DWF) * Automatized code verification Use pychecker & friends to make sure everything is fine. Task: Look into the various options available (DE) * Tests Force people to write tests. Automatic email reminder of code lines not covered by tests (see if we can get this from nosetests). Decorator to mark some classes / methods as not being tested yet, so as to be able to automatically warn the user when he is using untested stuff (and to remind ourselves we should add a test). Task: See feasibility. (OD) * VIM / Emacs plugins / config files To enforce good coding style automatically. Task: Look for existing options. (FB) (DWF: I have put some time into this for vim, I will send around my files) Suggestion by PV ---------------- Have a sample code that showcases everything one should comply to. Some coding guidelines (work-in-progress from OD) ------------------------------------------------- * Avoid using lists if all you care about is iterating on something. Using lists: - uses more memory (and possibly more CPU if the code may break out of the iteration) - can lead to ugly code when converted to Python 3 with 2to3 - can have a different behavior if evaluating elements in the list has side effects (if you want these side effects, make it explicit by assigning the list to some variable before iterating on it) Iterative version List version my_dict.iterkeys() my_dict.keys() my_dict.itervalues() my_dict.values() my_dict.iteritems() my_dict.items() itertools.imap map itertools.ifilter filter itertools.izip zip xrange range * Use `in` on container objects instead of using class-specific methods. It is easier to read and may allow you to use your code with different container types. Yes No --- -- key in my_dict my_dict.has_key(key) sub_string in my_string my_string.find(sub_string) >= 0 * Generally prefer list comprehensions to map / filter, as the former are easier to read. Yes: non_comments = [line.strip() for line in my_file.readlines() if not line.startswith('#')] No: non_comments = map(str.strip, filter(lambda line: not line.startswith('#'), my_file.readlines())) * Use the `key` argument instead of `cmp` when sorting (for Python 3 compatibility). Yes: my_list.sort(key=abs) No: my_list.sort(cmp=lambda x, y: cmp(abs(x), abs(y))) * Use // for integer division (for readability and Python 3 compatibility). Yes: n_samples_per_split = n_samples // n_splits No: n_samples_per_split = n_samples / n_splits * Only use ASCII characters in code files. * Code indent must be done with four blank characters (not with tabs). * Limit lines to 79 characters. * Comments should start with a capital letter (unless the first word is a code identifier) and end with a period (very short inline comments may ignore this rule). * Whenever you read / write binary files, specify it in the mode ('rb' for reading, 'wb' for writing). This is important for cross-platform and Python 3 compatibility (e.g. when pickling / unpickling objects). * Avoid tuple parameter unpacking to avoid very ugly code when converting to Python 3. Yes: def f(x, y_z): y, z = y_z No: def f(x, (y, z)) * Only use cPickle, not pickle. * Always raise exception with raise MyException(args) where MyException inherits from Exception. * Imports should be listed in alphabetical order. It makes it easier to verify that something is imported, and avoids duplicated imports. * Use a leading underscore '_' for internal attributes / methods, but avoid the double underscore '__' unless you know what you are doing. * A script's only top-level code should be something like: if __name__ == '__main__': sys.exit(main()) Mercurial commits ----------------- * How to write good commit messages? OD: Check Django's guidelines (link above) * Standardize the merge commit text (what is the message from fetch?)