Here are a few suggestions to make it easier for you to contribute!
Please add a description of your proposed code changes. It does not need to be an exhaustive essay, however a PR with no description or just a few words might not get accepted, simply because very basic information is missing.
A good description helps us to review and understand your proposed changes. For example, you could say a few words about
- what you try to achieve (new feature, fixing a bug, refactoring, security enhancements, etc.)
- how your code works (short technical summary - focus on important aspects that might not be obvious when reading the code)
- testing you performed, known limitations, open ends you possibly could not solve.
- any areas where you like to get help from an experienced maintainer (yes WLEDMM has become big 😉)
When in doubt, it is easiest to replicate the code style you find in the files you want to edit :) Below are the guidelines we use in the WLED repository.
We use tabs for Indentation in Web files (.html/.css/.js) and spaces (2 per indentation level) for all other files.
You are all set if you have enabled Editor: Detect Indentation
in VS Code.
Whether the opening bracket of e.g. an if
block is in the same line as the condition or in a separate line is up to your discretion. If there is only one statement, leaving out block braces is acceptable.
Good:
if (a == b) {
doStuff(a);
} else {
doOtherStuff(b);
}
if (a == b) doStuff(a);
less readable, but acceptable in some cases:
if (a == b)
{
doStuff(a);
}
There should always be a space between a keyword and its condition and between the condition and brace.
Within the condition, no space should be between the paranthesis and variables.
Spaces between variables and operators are up to the authors discretion.
There should be no space between function names and their argument parenthesis.
Good:
if (a == b) {
doStuff(a);
}
Not good:
if( a==b ){
doStuff ( a);
}
Comments should have a space between the delimiting characters (e.g. //
) and the comment text.
Note: This is a recent change, the majority of the codebase still has comments without spaces.
Good:
// This is a comment.
/* This is a CSS inline comment */
/*
* This is a comment
* wrapping over multiple lines,
* used in WLED for file headers and function explanations
*/
<!-- This is an HTML comment -->
There is no set character limit for a comment within a line, though as a rule of thumb you should wrap your comment if it exceeds the width of your editor window.
Inline comments are OK if they describe that line only and are not exceedingly wide.