This is the coding style guide we use at FreeAgent for our Ruby apps. We encourage you to set up one that works for your own team.
Much of this was based on the GitHub Ruby Style Guide. Feel free to fork the guide but we won't accept pull requests from non-FreeAgent staff, unless they're for typos etc.
- Use two spaces per indentation level (aka soft tabs). No hard tabs.
# bad - four spaces
def some_method
do_something
end
# good
def some_method
do_something
end
-
Keep lines equal to or fewer than 115 characters. (Width of github's diff view without wrapping.)
-
Never leave trailing whitespace.
-
End each file with a blank newline.
-
Use spaces around operators, after commas, colons and semicolons. Use spaces around
{
and before}
in blocks.
sum = 1 + 2
a, b = 1, 2
1 > 2 ? true : false; puts "Hi"
[1, 2, 3].each { |e| puts e }
- No spaces after
(
,[
or before]
,)
. No spaces after{
and before}
in hash declarations.
some(arg).other
[1, 2, 3].length
some_hash = {one: 1, two: 2, three: 3}
- No spaces after
!
.
!array.include?(element)
- Use spaces inside
<%
...%>
.
<% if condition %>
<% else %>
<% end %>
- Indent
when
as deep as the correspondingend
.
case
when song.name == "Misty"
puts "Not again!"
when song.duration > 120
puts "Too long!"
when Time.now.hour > 21
puts "It's too late"
else
song.play
end
kind = case year
when 1850..1889 then "Blues"
when 1890..1909 then "Ragtime"
when 1910..1929 then "New Orleans Jazz"
when 1930..1939 then "Swing"
when 1940..1950 then "Bebop"
else "Jazz"
end
- Use empty lines between method (
def
) blocks, and within methods to break up method code into logical paragraphs.
def some_method
data = initialize(options)
data.manipulate!
data.result
end
def some_method
result
end
- Last line of a multiline array or hash should end with a trailing comma. It keeps diffs much smaller when adding or deleting lines in future.
[
"one",
"two",
]
- Last element of an array or hash on a single line should omit the trailing comma however.
# Bad
["one", 2,]
# Good
["one", 2]
Use TomDoc to the best of your ability. It's pretty sweet:
# Public: Duplicate some text an arbitrary number of times.
#
# text - The String to be duplicated.
# count - The Integer number of times to duplicate the text.
#
# Examples
#
# multiplex("Tom", 4)
# # => "TomTomTomTom"
#
# Returns the duplicated String.
def multiplex(text, count)
text * count
end
To check and generate documentation install Yard with TomDoc Plugin
gem install yard yard-tomdoc
Run your isolated file through the documentation parser
yard doc --plugin tomdoc $FILENAME
open doc/index.html
You do not need to commit the generated ./doc
or .yardoc
files.
- Use
def
with parentheses when there are arguments. Omit the parentheses when the method doesn't accept any arguments.
def some_method
# body omitted
end
def some_method_with_arguments(arg1, arg2)
# body omitted
end
- Never use
for
, unless you know exactly why. Most of the time iterators should be used instead.for
is implemented in terms ofeach
(so you're adding a level of indirection), but with a twist -for
doesn't introduce a new scope (unlikeeach
) and variables defined in its block will be visible outside it.
arr = [1, 2, 3]
# bad
for elem in arr do
puts elem
end
# good
arr.each { |elem| puts elem }
- Never use
then
for multi-lineif/unless
.
# bad
if some_condition then
# body omitted
end
# good
if some_condition
# body omitted
end
- Avoid the ternary operator (
?:
) except in cases where all expressions are extremely trivial. However, do use the ternary operator(?:
) overif/then/else/end
constructs for single line conditionals.
# bad
result = if some_condition then something else something_else end
# good
result = some_condition ? something : something_else
- Use one expression per branch in a ternary operator. This also means that ternary operators must not be nested. Prefer
if/else
constructs in these cases.
# bad
some_condition ? (nested_condition ? nested_something : nested_something_else) : something_else
# good
if some_condition
nested_condition ? nested_something : nested_something_else
else
something_else
end
-
The
and
andor
keywords are banned. It's just not worth it. Always use&&
and||
instead. -
Avoid multi-line
?:
(the ternary operator), useif/unless
instead. -
Favor modifier
if/unless
usage when you have a single-linebody.
# bad
if some_condition
do_something
end
# good
do_something if some_condition
- Never use
unless
withelse
. Rewrite these with the positive case first.
# bad
unless success?
puts "failure"
else
puts "success"
end
# good
if success?
puts "success"
else
puts "failure"
end
- Don't use parentheses around the condition of an
if/unless/while
.
# bad
if (x > 10)
# body omitted
end
# good
if x > 10
# body omitted
end
- Prefer
{...}
overdo...end
for single-line blocks. Avoid using{...}
for multi-line blocks (multiline chaining is always ugly). Always usedo...end
for "control flow" and "method definitions" (e.g. in Rakefiles and certain DSLs). Avoiddo...end
when chaining.
names = ["Bozhidar", "Steve", "Sarah"]
# good
names.each { |name| puts name }
# bad
names.each do |name|
puts name
end
# good
names.select { |name| name.start_with?("S") }.map { |name| name.upcase }
# bad
names.select do |name|
name.start_with?("S")
end.map { |name| name.upcase }
Some will argue that multiline chaining would look OK with the use of {...}, but they should ask themselves - is this code really readable and can't the block's contents be extracted into nifty methods?
- Avoid
return
where not required.
# bad
def some_method(some_arr)
return some_arr.size
end
# good
def some_method(some_arr)
some_arr.size
end
- Use spaces around the
=
operator when assigning default values to method parameters:
# bad
def some_method(arg1=:default, arg2=nil, arg3=[])
# do something...
end
# good
def some_method(arg1 = :default, arg2 = nil, arg3 = [])
# do something...
end
While several Ruby books suggest the first style, the second is much more prominent in practice (and arguably a bit more readable).
- Using the return value of
=
(an assignment) is ok.
# bad
if (v = array.grep(/foo/)) ...
# good
if v = array.grep(/foo/) ...
# also good - has correct precedence.
if (v = next_value) == "hello" ...
- Use
||=
freely to initialize variables.
# set name to Bozhidar, only if it's nil or false
name ||= "Bozhidar"
- Don't use
||=
to initialize boolean variables. (Consider what would happen if the current value happened to befalse
.)
# bad - would set enabled to true even if it was false
enabled ||= true
# good
enabled = true if enabled.nil?
-
Avoid using Perl-style special variables (like
$0-9
,$
,etc. ). They are quite cryptic and their use in anything but one-liner scripts is discouraged. Prefer long form versions such as$PROGRAM_NAME
. -
Never put a space between a method name and the opening parenthesis.
# bad
f (3 + 2) + 1
# good
f(3 + 2) + 1
-
If the first argument to a method begins with an open parenthesis, always use parentheses in the method invocation. For example, write
f((3 + 2) + 1)
. -
Prefix with
_
unused block parameters and local variables. It's also acceptable to use just_
(although it's a bit less descriptive). This convention is recognized by the Ruby interpreter and tools like RuboCop and will suppress their unused variable warnings.# bad result = hash.map { |k, v| v + 1 } def something(x) unused_var, used_var = something_else(x) # ... end # good result = hash.map { |_k, v| v + 1 } def something(x) _unused_var, used_var = something_else(x) # ... end # good result = hash.map { |_, v| v + 1 } def something(x) _, used_var = something_else(x) # ... end
-
Don't use the
===
(threequals) operator to check types.===
is mostly an implementation detail to support Ruby features likecase
, and it's not commutative. For example,String === "hi"
is true and"hi" === String
is false. Instead, useis_a?
orkind_of?
if you must.
Refactoring is even better. It's worth looking hard at any code that explicitly checks types.
- Avoid
::
when nesting modules (at least in the application)
# not good
module Foo; end
module Foo::Bar; end
module Foo::Bar::Baz
def self.n
puts Module.nesting.inspect # => [Foo::Bar::Baz]
end
end
# good
module Foo; end
module Foo
module Bar; end
end
module Foo
module Bar
module Baz
def self.n
puts Module.nesting.inspect # => [Foo::Bar::Baz, Foo::Bar, Foo]
end
end
end
end
This can prevent complications when it comes to constant lookup.
-
Use
snake_case
for methods and variables. -
Use
CamelCase
for classes and modules. (Keep acronyms like HTTP, RFC, XML uppercase.) -
Use
SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE
for other constants. -
The names of predicate methods (methods that return a boolean value) should end in a question mark. (i.e.
Array#empty?
). -
The names of potentially "dangerous" methods (i.e. methods that modify
self
or the arguments,exit!
, etc.) should end with an exclamation mark. Bang methods should only exist if a non-bang method exists. (More on this).
- Avoid the usage of class (
@@
) variables due to their unusual behavior in inheritance.
class Parent
@@class_var = "parent"
def self.print_class_var
puts @@class_var
end
end
class Child < Parent
@@class_var = "child"
end
Parent.print_class_var # => will print "child"
As you can see all the classes in a class hierarchy actually share oneclass variable. Class instance variables should usually be preferred over class variables.
- Use
def self.method
to define singleton methods. This makes the methods more resistant to refactoring changes.
class TestClass
# bad
def TestClass.some_method
# body omitted
end
# good
def self.some_other_method
# body omitted
end
end
- Avoid
class << self
except when necessary, e.g. single accessors and aliased attributes.
class TestClass
# bad
class << self
def first_method
# body omitted
end
def second_method_etc
# body omitted
end
end
# good
class << self
attr_accessor :per_page
alias_method :nwo, :find_by_name_with_owner
end
def self.first_method
# body omitted
end
def self.second_method_etc
# body omitted
end
end
- Indent the
public
,protected
, andprivate
methods as much the method definitions they apply to. Leave one blank line above and below them.
class SomeClass
def public_method
# ...
end
private
def private_method
# ...
end
end
- Avoid explicit use of
self
as the recipient of internal class or instance messages unless to specify a method shadowed by a variable.
class SomeClass
attr_accessor :message
def greeting(name)
message = "Hi #{name}" # local variable in Ruby, not attribute writer
self.message = message
end
end
- Avoid explicit use of instance variables
# bad
class SomeClass
def initialize(foo)
@foo = foo
end
end
def foo?
@foo == "Foo"
end
# good
class SomeClass
attr_reader :foo
def initialize(foo)
@foo = foo
end
def foo?
foo == "Foo"
end
end
# better (if `foo` doesn't need to be public)
class SomeClass
def initialize(foo)
@foo = foo
end
def foo?
foo == "Foo"
end
private
attr_reader :foo
end
- Avoid complex logic in the initialiser
# bad
class SomeClass
def initialize(foo)
@foo = foo
@bar = some_method(foo)
end
end
# good
class SomeClass
def initialize(foo)
@foo = foo
end
def bar
@bar ||= some_method(foo)
end
end
# good (using a class method)
class SomeClass
attr_reader :foo
def self.from_id(id)
new(Foo.find(id))
end
def initialize(foo)
@foo = foo
end
end
# good (using an instance method)
class SomeClass
def initialize(foo_id)
@foo_id = foo_id
end
def foo
@foo ||= Foo.find(foo_id)
end
private
attr_reader :foo_id
end
- Don't use exceptions for flow of control.
# bad
begin
n / d
rescue ZeroDivisionError
puts "Cannot divide by 0!"
end
# good
if d.zero?
puts "Cannot divide by 0!"
else
n / d
end
- Don't use bare rescues or rescue the
Exception
class.
# bad
begin
# an exception occurs here
rescue Exception => e
# exception handling
end
# bad
begin
# an exception occurs here
rescue => e
# exception handling
end
# good
begin
# an exception occurs here
rescue StandardError => e
# error handling here
end
- Use the letter
e
for your short rescue variable.
# bad
begin
# an exception occurs here
rescue StandardError => ex
# exception handling
end
# good
begin
# an exception occurs here
rescue StandardError => e
# error handling here
end
- Skip the rescue variable if you aren't going to use it.
# bad
begin
# an exception occurs here
rescue StandardError => e
Rails.logger.error("A problem happened!")
end
# good
begin
# an exception occurs here
rescue StandardError
Rails.logger.error("A problem happened!")
end
- Prefer
%w
to the literal array syntax when you need an array of strings.
# bad
STATES = ["draft", "open", "closed"]
# good
STATES = %w(draft open closed)
-
Use
Set
instead ofArray
when dealing with unique elements.Set
implements a collection of unordered values with no duplicates. This is a hybrid ofArray
's intuitive inter-operation facilities andHash
's fast lookup. -
Use symbols instead of strings as hash keys, and use the Ruby 1.9 hash syntax rather than hash rockets where possible.
# bad
hash = {"one" => 1, "two" => 2, "three" => 3}
# good
hash = {one: 1, two: 2, three: 3}
-
When splitting a hash over multiple lines, place one key/value pair per line with the closing brace on the line after the last key/value pair.
-
Indent the contents of multiline hashes one level deeper than the preceeding code, don't line the hash up with the braces.
# bad
hash = Contact.create(first_name: "Robert",
last_name: "Burns",
email: "haggis@burns.net")
# good
hash = Contact.create(
first_name: "Robert",
last_name: "Burns",
email: "haggis@burns.net",
)
- Drop
{}
around arguments when the there is only one hash as the argument, whether parens are included or not
# bad
hash = Contact.create({first_name: "Robert", last_name: "Burns"})
# good
hash = Contact.create(first_name: "Robert", last_name: "Burns")
# also good
hash = Contact.create first_name: "Robert", last_name: "Burns"
-
Add spacing to line up the hash rockets and/or values in columns if it helps readability.
-
Don't use symbols where you have dynamic key names.
# bad
hash = {:"user_#{id}" => "fred"}
- Prefer string interpolation instead of string concatenation:
# bad
email_with_name = user.name + " <" + user.email + ">"
# good
email_with_name = "#{user.name} <#{user.email}>"
- Prefer double-quoted strings. Interpolation and escaped characters will always work without a delimiter change, and
'
is a lot more common than"
in string literals.
# bad
name = 'Bozhidar'
# good
name = "Bozhidar"
- Avoid using
String#+
when you need to construct large data chunks. Instead, useString#<<
. Concatenation mutates the string instance in-place and is always faster thanString#+
, which creates a bunch of new string objects.
# good and also fast
html = ""
html << "<h1>Page title</h1>"
paragraphs.each do |paragraph|
html << "<p>#{paragraph}</p>"
end
- Add the
# frozen_string_literal: true
to the top of all files. This implicitly freezes all the string literals created in that file, which puts less pressure on garbage collection.
# frozen_string_literal: true
class Foo
def initialize
string = "I'm frozen!"
end
end
- Avoid using
$1-9
as it can be hard to track what they contain. Named groups can be used instead.
# bad
/(regexp)/ =~ string
...
process $1
# good
/(?<meaningful_var>regexp)/ =~ string
...
process meaningful_var
- Be careful with
^
and$
as they match start/end of line, not string endings. If you want to match the whole string use:\A
and\z
.
string = "some injection\nusername"
string[/^username$/] # matches
string[/\Ausername\z/] # don't match
- Use
x
modifier for complex regexps. This makes them more readable and you can add some useful comments. Just be careful as spaces are ignored.
regexp = %r{
start # some text
\s # white space char
(group) # first group
(?:alt1|alt2) # some alternation
end
}x
- Use
%w
freely.
STATES = %w(draft open closed)
- Use
%()
for single-line strings which require both interpolation and embedded double-quotes. For multi-line strings, prefer heredocs.
# bad (no interpolation needed)
%(<div class="text">Some text</div>)
# should be "<div class=\"text\">Some text</div>"
# bad (no double-quotes)
%(This is #{quality} style)
# should be "This is #{quality} style"
# bad (multiple lines)
%(<div>\n<span class="big">#{exclamation}</span>\n</div>)
# should be a heredoc.
# good (requires interpolation, has quotes, single line)
%(<tr><td class="name">#{name}</td>)
- Use
%r
only for regular expressions matching more than one '/' character.
# bad
%r(\s+)
# still bad
%r(^/(.*)$)
# should be /^\/(.*)$/
# good
%r(^/blog/2011/(.*)$)
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