To keep out codebase clean and persistent we use the slightly tweaked standard Angular + Typescript coding conventions.
All local, public, private and static variables should be camelCased
and descriptive.
Example:
let connType: string;
All class names should be Capitalized
and descriptive and in best case scenario only contains one word.
Example:
export class Connection {
}
Strings should be surrounded with single quotes '
or using the ES2016 template declaration.
Example
let staticString = 'Hello world!';
let worldText = 'world!';
let templateString = `Hello ${worldText}`;
All variables should be declared with it's type. Example:
let connType: string;
Variables that don't change/are constant should always be declared using the const
instead of let
.
Variables should always be declared using either const
or let
, never using var
.
All file names should be camelCased
!
Services should be named using the following template
<serviceName>.service.ts
Classes should be named using the following template
<className>.class.ts
<className>.ts
(If folder name describes it as a folder full of classes)
Components should be named using the following template
<componentName>.component.ts
<componentName>.component.html
<componentName>.component.scss
Requires should always be declared as a const
and using single quotes '
Example
const config = require('./config.json');
Requires should always be declared as a const
and using single quotes '
Example
import { NgModule } from '@angular/core';
Components should be treated like classe and be Capitalised
.
Selectors should be lowercase splitted by a "-" in case it's necessary.
@Component({
selector: 'app-root'
...
Styles should use scss at all times, no use of using double declaration for classes or whatnot. Example:
.block {
font-family: montserrat;
color: black;
&:hover {
color: grey;
}
}
As indentation we represent a tab using 4 spaces.