1 page.title=Code Style Guidelines for Contributors 2 @jd:body 3 4 <!-- 5 Copyright 2010 The Android Open Source Project 6 7 Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); 8 you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 9 You may obtain a copy of the License at 10 11 http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 12 13 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 14 distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 15 WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 16 See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 17 limitations under the License. 18 --> 19 <div id="qv-wrapper"> 20 <div id="qv"> 21 <h2>In this document</h2> 22 <ol id="auto-toc"> 23 </ol> 24 </div> 25 </div> 26 27 <p>The rules below are not guidelines or recommendations, but strict rules. 28 Contributions to Android generally <em>will not be accepted</em> if they do not 29 adhere to these rules.</p> 30 31 <p>Not all existing code follows these rules, but all new code is expected to.</p> 32 33 <h2 id="java-language-rules">Java Language Rules</h2> 34 <p>We follow standard Java coding conventions. We add a few rules:</p> 35 <h3 id="dont-ignore-exceptions">Don't Ignore Exceptions</h3> 36 <p>Sometimes it is tempting to write code that completely ignores an exception 37 like this:</p> 38 <pre><code>void setServerPort(String value) { 39 try { 40 serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); 41 } catch (NumberFormatException e) { } 42 } 43 </code></pre> 44 <p>You must never do this. While you may think that your code will never 45 encounter this error condition or that it is not important to handle it, 46 ignoring exceptions like above creates mines in your code for someone else to 47 trip over some day. You must handle every Exception in your code in some 48 principled way. The specific handling varies depending on the case.</p> 49 <p><em>Anytime somebody has an empty catch clause they should have a 50 creepy feeling. There are definitely times when it is actually the correct 51 thing to do, but at least you have to think about it. In Java you can't escape 52 the creepy feeling.</em> -<a href="http://www.artima.com/intv/solid4.html">James Gosling</a></p> 53 <p>Acceptable alternatives (in order of preference) are:</p> 54 <ul> 55 <li> 56 <p>Throw the exception up to the caller of your method.</p> 57 <pre><code>void setServerPort(String value) throws NumberFormatException { 58 serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); 59 } 60 </code></pre> 61 </li> 62 <li> 63 <p>Throw a new exception that's appropriate to your level of abstraction.</p> 64 <pre><code>void setServerPort(String value) throws ConfigurationException { 65 try { 66 serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); 67 } catch (NumberFormatException e) { 68 throw new ConfigurationException("Port " + value + " is not valid."); 69 } 70 } 71 </code></pre> 72 </li> 73 <li> 74 <p>Handle the error gracefully and substitute an appropriate value in the 75 catch {} block.</p> 76 <pre><code>/** Set port. If value is not a valid number, 80 is substituted. */ 77 78 void setServerPort(String value) { 79 try { 80 serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); 81 } catch (NumberFormatException e) { 82 serverPort = 80; // default port for server 83 } 84 } 85 </code></pre> 86 </li> 87 <li> 88 <p>Catch the Exception and throw a new <code>RuntimeException</code>. This is dangerous: 89 only do it if you are positive that if this error occurs, the appropriate 90 thing to do is crash.</p> 91 <pre><code>/** Set port. If value is not a valid number, die. */ 92 93 void setServerPort(String value) { 94 try { 95 serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); 96 } catch (NumberFormatException e) { 97 throw new RuntimeException("port " + value " is invalid, ", e); 98 } 99 } 100 </code></pre> 101 <p>Note that the original exception is passed to the constructor for 102 RuntimeException. If your code must compile under Java 1.3, you will need to 103 omit the exception that is the cause.</p> 104 </li> 105 <li> 106 <p>Last resort: if you are confident that actually ignoring the exception is 107 appropriate then you may ignore it, but you must also comment why with a good 108 reason:</p> 109 <pre><code>/** If value is not a valid number, original port number is used. */ 110 void setServerPort(String value) { 111 try { 112 serverPort = Integer.parseInt(value); 113 } catch (NumberFormatException e) { 114 // Method is documented to just ignore invalid user input. 115 // serverPort will just be unchanged. 116 } 117 } 118 </code></pre> 119 </li> 120 </ul> 121 <h3 id="dont-catch-generic-exception">Don't Catch Generic Exception</h3> 122 <p>Sometimes it is tempting to be lazy when catching exceptions and do 123 something like this:</p> 124 <pre><code>try { 125 someComplicatedIOFunction(); // may throw IOException 126 someComplicatedParsingFunction(); // may throw ParsingException 127 someComplicatedSecurityFunction(); // may throw SecurityException 128 // phew, made it all the way 129 } catch (Exception e) { // I'll just catch all exceptions 130 handleError(); // with one generic handler! 131 } 132 </code></pre> 133 <p>You should not do this. In almost all cases it is inappropriate to catch 134 generic Exception or Throwable, preferably not Throwable, because it includes 135 Error exceptions as well. It is very dangerous. It means that Exceptions you 136 never expected (including RuntimeExceptions like ClassCastException) end up 137 getting caught in application-level error handling. It obscures the failure 138 handling properties of your code. It means if someone adds a new type of 139 Exception in the code you're calling, the compiler won't help you realize you 140 need to handle that error differently. And in most cases you shouldn't be 141 handling different types of exception the same way, anyway.</p> 142 <p>There are rare exceptions to this rule: certain test code and top-level 143 code where you want to catch all kinds of errors (to prevent them from showing 144 up in a UI, or to keep a batch job running). In that case you may catch 145 generic Exception (or Throwable) and handle the error appropriately. You 146 should think very carefully before doing this, though, and put in comments 147 explaining why it is safe in this place.</p> 148 <p>Alternatives to catching generic Exception:</p> 149 <ul> 150 <li> 151 <p>Catch each exception separately as separate catch blocks after a single 152 try. This can be awkward but is still preferable to catching all Exceptions. 153 Beware repeating too much code in the catch blocks.</li></p> 154 </li> 155 <li> 156 <p>Refactor your code to have more fine-grained error handling, with multiple 157 try blocks. Split up the IO from the parsing, handle errors separately in each 158 case.</p> 159 </li> 160 <li> 161 <p>Rethrow the exception. Many times you don't need to catch the exception at 162 this level anyway, just let the method throw it.</p> 163 </li> 164 </ul> 165 <p>Remember: exceptions are your friend! When the compiler complains you're 166 not catching an exception, don't scowl. Smile: the compiler just made it 167 easier for you to catch runtime problems in your code.</p> 168 <h3 id="dont-use-finalizers">Don't Use Finalizers</h3> 169 <p>Finalizers are a way to have a chunk of code executed 170 when an object is garbage collected.</p> 171 <p>Pros: can be handy for doing cleanup, particularly of external resources.</p> 172 <p>Cons: there are no guarantees as to when a finalizer will be called, 173 or even that it will be called at all.</p> 174 <p>Decision: we don't use finalizers. In most cases, you can do what 175 you need from a finalizer with good exception handling. If you absolutely need 176 it, define a close() method (or the like) and document exactly when that 177 method needs to be called. See InputStream for an example. In this case it is 178 appropriate but not required to print a short log message from the finalizer, 179 as long as it is not expected to flood the logs.</p> 180 <h3 id="fully-qualify-imports">Fully Qualify Imports</h3> 181 <p>When you want to use class Bar from package foo,there 182 are two possible ways to import it:</p> 183 <ol> 184 <li><code>import foo.*;</code></li> 185 </ol> 186 <p>Pros: Potentially reduces the number of import statements.</p> 187 <ol> 188 <li><code>import foo.Bar;</code></li> 189 </ol> 190 <p>Pros: Makes it obvious what classes are actually used. Makes 191 code more readable for maintainers. </p> 192 <p>Decision: Use the latter for importing all Android code. An explicit 193 exception is made for java standard libraries (<code>java.util.*</code>, <code>java.io.*</code>, etc.) 194 and unit test code (<code>junit.framework.*</code>)</p> 195 <h2 id="java-library-rules">Java Library Rules</h2> 196 <p>There are conventions for using Android's Java libraries and tools. In some 197 cases, the convention has changed in important ways and older code might use a 198 deprecated pattern or library. When working with such code, it's okay to 199 continue the existing style (see <a href="#consistency">Consistency</a>). When 200 creating new components never use deprecated libraries.</p> 201 <h2 id="java-style-rules">Java Style Rules</h2> 202 <h3 id="use-javadoc-standard-comments">Use Javadoc Standard Comments</h3> 203 <p>Every file should have a copyright statement at the top. Then a package 204 statement and import statements should follow, each block separated by a blank 205 line. And then there is the class or interface declaration. In the Javadoc 206 comments, describe what the class or interface does.</p> 207 <pre><code>/* 208 * Copyright (C) 2010 The Android Open Source Project 209 * 210 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); 211 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. 212 * You may obtain a copy of the License at 213 * 214 * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 215 * 216 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software 217 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, 218 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. 219 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and 220 * limitations under the License. 221 */ 222 223 package com.android.internal.foo; 224 225 import android.os.Blah; 226 import android.view.Yada; 227 228 import java.sql.ResultSet; 229 import java.sql.SQLException; 230 231 /** 232 * Does X and Y and provides an abstraction for Z. 233 */ 234 235 public class Foo { 236 ... 237 } 238 </code></pre> 239 <p>Every class and nontrivial public method you write <em>must</em> contain a 240 Javadoc comment with at least one sentence describing what the class or method 241 does. This sentence should start with a 3rd person descriptive verb.</p> 242 <p>Examples:</p> 243 <pre><code>/** Returns the correctly rounded positive square root of a double value. */ 244 static double sqrt(double a) { 245 ... 246 } 247 </code></pre> 248 <p>or</p> 249 <pre><code>/** 250 * Constructs a new String by converting the specified array of 251 * bytes using the platform's default character encoding. 252 */ 253 public String(byte[] bytes) { 254 ... 255 } 256 </code></pre> 257 <p>You do not need to write Javadoc for trivial get and set methods such as 258 <code>setFoo()</code> if all your Javadoc would say is "sets Foo". If the method does 259 something more complex (such as enforcing a constraint or having an important 260 side effect), then you must document it. And if it's not obvious what the 261 property "Foo" means, you should document it.</p> 262 <p>Every method you write, whether public or otherwise, would benefit from 263 Javadoc. Public methods are part of an API and therefore require Javadoc.</p> 264 <p>Android does not currently enforce a specific style for writing Javadoc 265 comments, but you should follow the 266 <a href="http://java.sun.com/j2se/javadoc/writingdoccomments/">Sun Javadoc conventions</a>.</p> 267 <h3 id="write-short-methods">Write Short Methods</h3> 268 <p>To the extent that it is feasible, methods should be kept small and 269 focused. It is, however, recognized that long methods are sometimes 270 appropriate, so no hard limit is placed on method length. If a method exceeds 271 40 lines or so, think about whether it can be broken up without harming the 272 structure of the program.</p> 273 <h3 id="define-fields-in-standard-places">Define Fields in Standard Places</h3> 274 <p>Fields should be defined either at the top of the file, or immediately before the methods that use them.</p> 275 <h3 id="limit-variable-scope">Limit Variable Scope</h3> 276 <p>The scope of local variables should be kept to a minimum (<em>Effective 277 Java</em> Item 29). By doing so, you increase the readability and 278 maintainability of your code and reduce the likelihood of error. Each variable 279 should be declared in the innermost block that encloses all uses of the 280 variable.</p> 281 <p>Local variables should be declared at the point they are first used. Nearly 282 every local variable declaration should contain an initializer. If you don't 283 yet have enough information to initialize a variable sensibly, you should 284 postpone the declaration until you do.</p> 285 <p>One exception to this rule concerns try-catch statements. If a variable is 286 initialized with the return value of a method that throws a checked exception, 287 it must be initialized inside a try block. If the value must be used outside 288 of the try block, then it must be declared before the try block, where it 289 cannot yet be sensibly initialized:</p> 290 <pre><code>// Instantiate class cl, which represents some sort of Set 291 Set s = null; 292 try { 293 s = (Set) cl.newInstance(); 294 } catch(IllegalAccessException e) { 295 throw new IllegalArgumentException(cl + " not accessible"); 296 } catch(InstantiationException e) { 297 throw new IllegalArgumentException(cl + " not instantiable"); 298 } 299 300 // Exercise the set 301 s.addAll(Arrays.asList(args)); 302 </code></pre> 303 <p>But even this case can be avoided by encapsulating the try-catch block in a method:</p> 304 <pre><code>Set createSet(Class cl) { 305 // Instantiate class cl, which represents some sort of Set 306 try { 307 return (Set) cl.newInstance(); 308 } catch(IllegalAccessException e) { 309 throw new IllegalArgumentException(cl + " not accessible"); 310 } catch(InstantiationException e) { 311 throw new IllegalArgumentException(cl + " not instantiable"); 312 } 313 } 314 315 ... 316 317 // Exercise the set 318 Set s = createSet(cl); 319 s.addAll(Arrays.asList(args)); 320 </code></pre> 321 <p>Loop variables should be declared in the for statement itself unless there 322 is a compelling reason to do otherwise:</p> 323 <pre><code>for (int i = 0; i < n; i++) { 324 doSomething(i); 325 } 326 </code></pre> 327 <p>and</p> 328 <pre><code>for (Iterator i = c.iterator(); i.hasNext(); ) { 329 doSomethingElse(i.next()); 330 } 331 </code></pre> 332 <h3 id="order-import-statements">Order Import Statements</h3> 333 <p>The ordering of import statements is:</p> 334 <ol> 335 <li> 336 <p>Android imports</p> 337 </li> 338 <li> 339 <p>Imports from third parties (<code>com</code>, <code>junit</code>, <code>net</code>, <code>org</code>)</p> 340 </li> 341 <li> 342 <p><code>java</code> and <code>javax</code></p> 343 </li> 344 </ol> 345 <p>To exactly match the IDE settings, the imports should be:</p> 346 <ul> 347 <li> 348 <p>Alphabetical within each grouping, with capital letters before lower case letters (e.g. Z before a).</p> 349 </li> 350 <li> 351 <p>There should be a blank line between each major grouping (<code>android</code>, <code>com</code>, <code>junit</code>, <code>net</code>, <code>org</code>, <code>java</code>, <code>javax</code>).</p> 352 </li> 353 </ul> 354 <p>Originally there was no style requirement on the ordering. This meant that 355 the IDE's were either always changing the ordering, or IDE developers had to 356 disable the automatic import management features and maintain the imports by 357 hand. This was deemed bad. When java-style was asked, the preferred styles 358 were all over the map. It pretty much came down to our needing to "pick an 359 ordering and be consistent." So we chose a style, updated the style guide, and 360 made the IDEs obey it. We expect that as IDE users work on the code, the 361 imports in all of the packages will end up matching this pattern without any 362 extra engineering effort.</p> 363 <p>This style was chosen such that:</p> 364 <ul> 365 <li> 366 <p>The imports people want to look at first tend to be at the top (<code>android</code>)</p> 367 </li> 368 <li> 369 <p>The imports people want to look at least tend to be at the bottom (<code>java</code>)</p> 370 </li> 371 <li> 372 <p>Humans can easily follow the style</p> 373 </li> 374 <li> 375 <p>IDEs can follow the style</p> 376 </li> 377 </ul> 378 <p>The use and location of static imports have been mildly controversial 379 issues. Some people would prefer static imports to be interspersed with the 380 remaining imports, some would prefer them reside above or below all other 381 imports. Additionally, we have not yet come up with a way to make all IDEs use 382 the same ordering.</p> 383 <p>Since most people consider this a low priority issue, just use your 384 judgement and please be consistent.</p> 385 <h3 id="use-spaces-for-indentation">Use Spaces for Indentation</h3> 386 <p>We use 4 space indents for blocks. We never use tabs. When in doubt, be 387 consistent with code around you.</p> 388 <p>We use 8 space indents for line wraps, including function calls and 389 assignments. For example, this is correct:</p> 390 <pre><code>Instrument i = 391 someLongExpression(that, wouldNotFit, on, one, line); 392 </code></pre> 393 <p>and this is not correct:</p> 394 <pre><code>Instrument i = 395 someLongExpression(that, wouldNotFit, on, one, line); 396 </code></pre> 397 <h3 id="follow-field-naming-conventions">Follow Field Naming Conventions</h3> 398 <ul> 399 <li> 400 <p>Non-public, non-static field names start with m.</p> 401 </li> 402 <li> 403 <p>Static field names start with s.</p> 404 </li> 405 <li> 406 <p>Other fields start with a lower case letter.</p> 407 </li> 408 <li> 409 <p>Public static final fields (constants) are ALL_CAPS_WITH_UNDERSCORES.</p> 410 </li> 411 </ul> 412 <p>For example:</p> 413 <pre><code>public class MyClass { 414 public static final int SOME_CONSTANT = 42; 415 public int publicField; 416 private static MyClass sSingleton; 417 int mPackagePrivate; 418 private int mPrivate; 419 protected int mProtected; 420 } 421 </code></pre> 422 <h3 id="use-standard-brace-style">Use Standard Brace Style</h3> 423 <p>Braces do not go on their own line; they go on the same line as the code 424 before them. So:</p> 425 <pre><code>class MyClass { 426 int func() { 427 if (something) { 428 // ... 429 } else if (somethingElse) { 430 // ... 431 } else { 432 // ... 433 } 434 } 435 } 436 </code></pre> 437 <p>We require braces around the statements for a conditional. Except, if the 438 entire conditional (the condition and the body) fit on one line, you may (but 439 are not obligated to) put it all on one line. That is, this is legal:</p> 440 <pre><code>if (condition) { 441 body(); 442 } 443 </code></pre> 444 <p>and this is legal:</p> 445 <pre><code>if (condition) body(); 446 </code></pre> 447 <p>but this is still illegal:</p> 448 <pre><code>if (condition) 449 body(); // bad! 450 </code></pre> 451 <h3 id="limit-line-length">Limit Line Length</h3> 452 <p>Each line of text in your code should be at most 100 characters long.</p> 453 <p>There has been lots of discussion about this rule and the decision remains 454 that 100 characters is the maximum.</p> 455 <p>Exception: if a comment line contains an example command or a literal URL 456 longer than 100 characters, that line may be longer than 100 characters for 457 ease of cut and paste.</p> 458 <p>Exception: import lines can go over the limit because humans rarely see 459 them. This also simplifies tool writing.</p> 460 <h3 id="use-standard-java-annotations">Use Standard Java Annotations</h3> 461 <p>Annotations should precede other modifiers for the same language element. 462 Simple marker annotations (e.g. @Override) can be listed on the same line with 463 the language element. If there are multiple annotations, or parameterized 464 annotations, they should each be listed one-per-line in alphabetical 465 order.<</p> 466 <p>Android standard practices for the three predefined annotations in Java are:</p> 467 <ul> 468 <li> 469 <p><code>@Deprecated</code>: The @Deprecated annotation must be used whenever the use of the annotated 470 element is discouraged. If you use the @Deprecated annotation, you must also 471 have a @deprecated Javadoc tag and it should name an alternate implementation. 472 In addition, remember that a @Deprecated method is <em>still supposed to 473 work.</em></p> 474 <p>If you see old code that has a @deprecated Javadoc tag, please add the @Deprecated annotation.</p> 475 </li> 476 <li> 477 <p><code>@Override</code>: The @Override annotation must be used whenever a method overrides the 478 declaration or implementation from a super-class.</p> 479 <p>For example, if you use the @inheritdocs Javadoc tag, and derive from a 480 class (not an interface), you must also annotate that the method @Overrides 481 the parent class's method.</p> 482 </li> 483 <li> 484 <p><code>@SuppressWarnings</code>: The @SuppressWarnings annotation should only be used under circumstances 485 where it is impossible to eliminate a warning. If a warning passes this 486 "impossible to eliminate" test, the @SuppressWarnings annotation <em>must</em> be 487 used, so as to ensure that all warnings reflect actual problems in the 488 code.</p> 489 <p>When a @SuppressWarnings annotation is necessary, it must be prefixed with 490 a TODO comment that explains the "impossible to eliminate" condition. This 491 will normally identify an offending class that has an awkward interface. For 492 example:</p> 493 <pre><code>// TODO: The third-party class com.third.useful.Utility.rotate() needs generics 494 @SuppressWarnings("generic-cast") 495 List<String> blix = Utility.rotate(blax); 496 </code></pre> 497 <p>When a @SuppressWarnings annotation is required, the code should be 498 refactored to isolate the software elements where the annotation applies.</p> 499 </li> 500 </ul> 501 <h3 id="treat-acronyms-as-words">Treat Acronyms as Words</h3> 502 <p>Treat acronyms and abbreviations as words in naming variables, methods, and classes. The names are much more readable:</p> 503 <table> 504 <thead> 505 <tr> 506 <th>Good</th> 507 <th>Bad</th> 508 </tr> 509 </thead> 510 <tbody> 511 <tr> 512 <td>XmlHttpRequest</td> 513 <td>XMLHTTPRequest</td> 514 </tr> 515 <tr> 516 <td>getCustomerId</td> 517 <td>getCustomerID</td> 518 </tr> 519 <tr> 520 <td>class Html</td> 521 <td>class HTML</td> 522 </tr> 523 <tr> 524 <td>String url</td> 525 <td>String URL</td> 526 </tr> 527 <tr> 528 <td>long id</td> 529 <td>long ID</td> 530 </tr> 531 </tbody> 532 </table> 533 <p>Both the JDK and the Android code bases are very inconsistent with regards 534 to acronyms, therefore, it is virtually impossible to be consistent with the 535 code around you. Bite the bullet, and treat acronyms as words.</p> 536 <p>For further justifications of this style rule, see <em>Effective Java</em> 537 Item 38 and <em>Java Puzzlers</em> Number 68.</p> 538 <h3 id="use-todo-comments">Use TODO Comments</h3> 539 <p>Use TODO comments for code that is temporary, a short-term solution, or 540 good-enough but not perfect.</p> 541 <p>TODOs should include the string TODO in all caps, followed by a colon:</p> 542 <pre><code>// TODO: Remove this code after the UrlTable2 has been checked in. 543 </code></pre> 544 <p>and</p> 545 <pre><code>// TODO: Change this to use a flag instead of a constant. 546 </code></pre> 547 <p>If your TODO is of the form "At a future date do something" make sure that 548 you either include a very specific date ("Fix by November 2005") or a very 549 specific event ("Remove this code after all production mixers understand 550 protocol V7.").</p> 551 <h3 id="log-sparingly">Log Sparingly</h3> 552 <p>While logging is necessary it has a significantly negative impact on 553 performance and quickly loses its usefulness if it's not kept reasonably 554 terse. The logging facilities provides five different levels of logging. Below 555 are the different levels and when and how they should be used.</p> 556 <ul> 557 <li> 558 <p><code>ERROR</code>: 559 This level of logging should be used when something fatal has happened, 560 i.e. something that will have user-visible consequences and won't be 561 recoverable without explicitly deleting some data, uninstalling applications, 562 wiping the data partitions or reflashing the entire phone (or worse). This 563 level is always logged. Issues that justify some logging at the ERROR level 564 are typically good candidates to be reported to a statistics-gathering 565 server.</p> 566 </li> 567 <li> 568 <p><code>WARNING</code>: 569 This level of logging should used when something serious and unexpected 570 happened, i.e. something that will have user-visible consequences but is 571 likely to be recoverable without data loss by performing some explicit action, 572 ranging from waiting or restarting an app all the way to re-downloading a new 573 version of an application or rebooting the device. This level is always 574 logged. Issues that justify some logging at the WARNING level might also be 575 considered for reporting to a statistics-gathering server.</p> 576 </li> 577 <li> 578 <p><code>INFORMATIVE:</code> 579 This level of logging should used be to note that something interesting to 580 most people happened, i.e. when a situation is detected that is likely to have 581 widespread impact, though isn't necessarily an error. Such a condition should 582 only be logged by a module that reasonably believes that it is the most 583 authoritative in that domain (to avoid duplicate logging by non-authoritative 584 components). This level is always logged.</p> 585 </li> 586 <li> 587 <p><code>DEBUG</code>: 588 This level of logging should be used to further note what is happening on the 589 device that could be relevant to investigate and debug unexpected behaviors. 590 You should log only what is needed to gather enough information about what is 591 going on about your component. If your debug logs are dominating the log then 592 you probably should be using verbose logging. </p> 593 <p>This level will be logged, even 594 on release builds, and is required to be surrounded by an <code>if (LOCAL_LOG)</code> or <code>if 595 (LOCAL_LOGD)</code> block, where <code>LOCAL_LOG[D]</code> is defined in your class or 596 subcomponent, so that there can exist a possibility to disable all such 597 logging. There must therefore be no active logic in an <code>if (LOCAL_LOG)</code> block. 598 All the string building for the log also needs to be placed inside the <code>if 599 (LOCAL_LOG)</code> block. The logging call should not be re-factored out into a 600 method call if it is going to cause the string building to take place outside 601 of the <code>if (LOCAL_LOG)</code> block. </p> 602 <p>There is some code that still says <code>if 603 (localLOGV)</code>. This is considered acceptable as well, although the name is 604 nonstandard.</p> 605 </li> 606 <li> 607 <p><code>VERBOSE</code>: 608 This level of logging should be used for everything else. This level will only 609 be logged on debug builds and should be surrounded by an <code>if (LOCAL_LOGV)</code> block 610 (or equivalent) so that it can be compiled out by default. Any string building 611 will be stripped out of release builds and needs to appear inside the <code>if (LOCAL_LOGV)</code> block.</p> 612 </li> 613 </ul> 614 <p><em>Notes:</em> </p> 615 <ul> 616 <li> 617 <p>Within a given module, other than at the VERBOSE level, an 618 error should only be reported once if possible: within a single chain of 619 function calls within a module, only the innermost function should return the 620 error, and callers in the same module should only add some logging if that 621 significantly helps to isolate the issue.</p> 622 </li> 623 <li> 624 <p>In a chain of modules, other than at the VERBOSE level, when a 625 lower-level module detects invalid data coming from a higher-level module, the 626 lower-level module should only log this situation to the DEBUG log, and only 627 if logging provides information that is not otherwise available to the caller. 628 Specifically, there is no need to log situations where an exception is thrown 629 (the exception should contain all the relevant information), or where the only 630 information being logged is contained in an error code. This is especially 631 important in the interaction between the framework and applications, and 632 conditions caused by third-party applications that are properly handled by the 633 framework should not trigger logging higher than the DEBUG level. The only 634 situations that should trigger logging at the INFORMATIVE level or higher is 635 when a module or application detects an error at its own level or coming from 636 a lower level.</p> 637 </li> 638 <li> 639 <p>When a condition that would normally justify some logging is 640 likely to occur many times, it can be a good idea to implement some 641 rate-limiting mechanism to prevent overflowing the logs with many duplicate 642 copies of the same (or very similar) information.</p> 643 </li> 644 <li> 645 <p>Losses of network connectivity are considered common and fully 646 expected and should not be logged gratuitously. A loss of network connectivity 647 that has consequences within an app should be logged at the DEBUG or VERBOSE 648 level (depending on whether the consequences are serious enough and unexpected 649 enough to be logged in a release build).</p> 650 </li> 651 <li> 652 <p>A full filesystem on a filesystem that is acceessible to or on 653 behalf of third-party applications should not be logged at a level higher than 654 INFORMATIVE.</p> 655 </li> 656 <li> 657 <p>Invalid data coming from any untrusted source (including any 658 file on shared storage, or data coming through just about any network 659 connections) is considered expected and should not trigger any logging at a 660 level higher then DEBUG when it's detected to be invalid (and even then 661 logging should be as limited as possible).</p> 662 </li> 663 <li> 664 <p>Keep in mind that the <code>+</code> operator, when used on Strings, 665 implicitly creates a <code>StringBuilder</code> with the default buffer size (16 666 characters) and potentially quite a few other temporary String objects, i.e. 667 that explicitly creating StringBuilders isn't more expensive than relying on 668 the default '+' operator (and can be a lot more efficient in fact). Also keep 669 in mind that code that calls <code>Log.v()</code> is compiled and executed on release 670 builds, including building the strings, even if the logs aren't being 671 read.</p> 672 </li> 673 <li> 674 <p>Any logging that is meant to be read by other people and to be 675 available in release builds should be terse without being cryptic, and should 676 be reasonably understandable. This includes all logging up to the DEBUG 677 level.</p> 678 </li> 679 <li> 680 <p>When possible, logging should be kept on a single line if it 681 makes sense. Line lengths up to 80 or 100 characters are perfectly acceptable, 682 while lengths longer than about 130 or 160 characters (including the length of 683 the tag) should be avoided if possible.</p> 684 </li> 685 <li> 686 <p>Logging that reports successes should never be used at levels 687 higher than VERBOSE.</p> 688 </li> 689 <li> 690 <p>Temporary logging that is used to diagnose an issue that's 691 hard to reproduce should be kept at the DEBUG or VERBOSE level, and should be 692 enclosed by if blocks that allow to disable it entirely at compile-time.</p> 693 </li> 694 <li> 695 <p>Be careful about security leaks through the log. Private 696 information should be avoided. Information about protected content must 697 definitely be avoided. This is especially important when writing framework 698 code as it's not easy to know in advance what will and will not be private 699 information or protected content.</p> 700 </li> 701 <li> 702 <p><code>System.out.println()</code> (or <code>printf()</code> for native code) should 703 never be used. System.out and System.err get redirected to /dev/null, so your 704 print statements will have no visible effects. However, all the string 705 building that happens for these calls still gets executed.</p> 706 </li> 707 <li> 708 <p><em>The golden rule of logging is that your logs may not 709 unnecessarily push other logs out of the buffer, just as others may not push 710 out yours.</em></p> 711 </li> 712 </ul> 713 <h3 id="be-consistent">Be Consistent</h3> 714 <p>Our parting thought: BE CONSISTENT. If you're editing code, take a few 715 minutes to look at the code around you and determine its style. If they use 716 spaces around their if clauses, you should too. If their comments have little 717 boxes of stars around them, make your comments have little boxes of stars 718 around them too.</p> 719 <p>The point of having style guidelines is to have a common vocabulary of 720 coding, so people can concentrate on what you're saying, rather than on how 721 you're saying it. We present global style rules here so people know the 722 vocabulary. But local style is also important. If code you add to a a file 723 looks drastically different from the existing code around it, it throws 724 readers out of their rhythm when they go to read it. Try to avoid this.</p></p> 725 <h2 id="javatests-style-rules">Javatests Style Rules</h2> 726 <h3 id="follow-test-method-naming-conventions">Follow Test Method Naming Conventions</h3> 727 <p>When naming test methods, you can use an underscore to seperate what is 728 being tested from the specific case being tested. This style makes it easier 729 to see exactly what cases are being tested.</p> 730 <p>For example:</p> 731 <pre><code>testMethod_specificCase1 testMethod_specificCase2 732 733 void testIsDistinguishable_protanopia() { 734 ColorMatcher colorMatcher = new ColorMatcher(PROTANOPIA) 735 assertFalse(colorMatcher.isDistinguishable(Color.RED, Color.BLACK)) 736 assertTrue(colorMatcher.isDistinguishable(Color.X, Color.Y)) 737 } 738 </code></pre> 739