Man1 - perlstyle.1perl
Table of Contents
NAME
perlstyle - Perl style guide
DESCRIPTION
Each programmer will, of course, have his or her own preferences in regards to formatting, but there are some general guidelines that will make your programs easier to read, understand, and maintain.
The most important thing is to use strict and warnings in all your code
or know the reason why not to. You may turn them off explicitly for
particular portions of code via no warnings
or no strict
, and this
can be limited to the specific warnings or strict features you wish to
disable. The -w flag and $^W
variable should not be used for this
purpose since they can affect code you use but did not write, such as
modules from core or CPAN.
Regarding aesthetics of code lay out, about the only thing Larry cares strongly about is that the closing curly bracket of a multi-line BLOCK should line up with the keyword that started the construct. Beyond that, he has other preferences that aren’t so strong:
- 4-column indent.
- Opening curly on same line as keyword, if possible, otherwise line up.
- Space before the opening curly of a multi-line BLOCK.
- One-line BLOCK may be put on one line, including curlies.
- No space before the semicolon.
- Semicolon omitted in short one-line BLOCK.
- Space around most operators.
- Space around a complex subscript (inside brackets).
- Blank lines between chunks that do different things.
- Uncuddled elses.
- No space between function name and its opening parenthesis.
- Space after each comma.
- Long lines broken after an operator (except
and
andor
). - Space after last parenthesis matching on current line.
- Line up corresponding items vertically.
- Omit redundant punctuation as long as clarity doesn’t suffer.
Larry has his reasons for each of these things, but he doesn’t claim that everyone else’s mind works the same as his does.
Here are some other more substantive style issues to think about:
- Just because you CAN do something a particular way doesn’t mean that you SHOULD do it that way. Perl is designed to give you several ways to do anything, so consider picking the most readable one. For instance open(my $fh, <, $foo) || die “Cant open $foo: $!”; is better than die “Cant open $foo: $!” unless open(my $fh, <, $foo); because the second way hides the main point of the statement in a modifier. On the other hand print “Starting analysis\n” if $verbose; is better than $verbose && print “Starting analysis\n”; because the main point isn’t whether the user typed -v or not. Similarly, just because an operator lets you assume default arguments doesn’t mean that you have to make use of the defaults. The defaults are there for lazy systems programmers writing one-shot programs. If you want your program to be readable, consider supplying the argument. Along the same lines, just because you CAN omit parentheses in many places doesn’t mean that you ought to: return print reverse sort num values %array; return print(reverse(sort num (values(%array)))); When in doubt, parenthesize. At the very least it will let some poor schmuck bounce on the % key in vi. Even if you aren’t in doubt, consider the mental welfare of the person who has to maintain the code after you, and who will probably put parentheses in the wrong place.
- Don’t go through silly contortions to exit a loop at the top or the
bottom, when Perl provides the
last
operator so you can exit in the middle. Just outdent it a little to make it more visible: LINE: for (;;) { statements; last LINE if $foo; next LINE if ^#; statements; } - Don’t be afraid to use loop labelsĪ©-they’re there to enhance readability as well as to allow multilevel loop breaks. See the previous example.
- Avoid using
grep()
(ormap()
) or `backticks` in a void context, that is, when you just throw away their return values. Those functions all have return values, so use them. Otherwise use aforeach()
loop or thesystem()
function instead. - For portability, when using features that may not be implemented on
every machine, test the construct in an eval to see if it fails. If
you know what version or patchlevel a particular feature was
implemented, you can test
$]
($PERL_VERSION
inEnglish
) to see if it will be there. TheConfig
module will also let you interrogate values determined by the Configure program when Perl was installed. - Choose mnemonic identifiers. If you can’t remember what mnemonic means, you’ve got a problem.
- While short identifiers like
$gotit
are probably ok, use underscores to separate words in longer identifiers. It is generally easier to read$var_names_like_this
than$VarNamesLikeThis
, especially for non-native speakers of English. It’s also a simple rule that works consistently withVAR_NAMES_LIKE_THIS
. Package names are sometimes an exception to this rule. Perl informally reserves lowercase module names for pragma modules likeinteger
andstrict
. Other modules should begin with a capital letter and use mixed case, but probably without underscores due to limitations in primitive file systems’ representations of module names as files that must fit into a few sparse bytes. - You may find it helpful to use letter case to indicate the scope or
nature of a variable. For example: $ALL_CAPS_HERE constants only
(beware clashes with perl vars!) $Some_Caps_Here package-wide
global/static $no_caps_here function scope my() or local() variables
Function and method names seem to work best as all lowercase. E.g.,
$obj->as_string()
. You can use a leading underscore to indicate that a variable or function should not be used outside the package that defined it. - If you have a really hairy regular expression, use the
/x
or/xx
modifiers and put in some whitespace to make it look a little less like line noise. Don’t use slash as a delimiter when your regexp has slashes or backslashes. - Use the new
and
andor
operators to avoid having to parenthesize list operators so much, and to reduce the incidence of punctuation operators like&&
and||
. Call your subroutines as if they were functions or list operators to avoid excessive ampersands and parentheses. - Use here documents instead of repeated
print()
statements. - Line up corresponding things vertically, especially if it’d be too long to fit on one line anyway. $IDX = $ST_MTIME; $IDX = $ST_ATIME if $opt_u; $IDX = $ST_CTIME if $opt_c; $IDX = $ST_SIZE if $opt_s; mkdir $tmpdir, 0700 or die “cant mkdir $tmpdir: $!”; chdir($tmpdir) or die “cant chdir $tmpdir: $!”; mkdir tmp, 0777 or die “cant mkdir $tmpdir/tmp: $!”;
- Always check the return codes of system calls. Good error messages
should go to
STDERR
, include which program caused the problem, what the failed system call and arguments were, and (VERY IMPORTANT) should contain the standard system error message for what went wrong. Here’s a simple but sufficient example: opendir(my $dh, $dir) or die “cant opendir $dir: $!”; - Line up your transliterations when it makes sense: tr [abc] [xyz];
- Think about reusability. Why waste brainpower on a one-shot when you
might want to do something like it again? Consider generalizing your
code. Consider writing a module or object class. Consider making your
code run cleanly with
use strict
anduse warnings
in effect. Consider giving away your code. Consider changing your whole world view. Consider… oh, never mind. - Try to document your code and use Pod formatting in a consistent way.
Here are commonly expected conventions:
- use
C<>
for function, variable and module names (and more generally anything that can be considered part of code, like filehandles or specific values). Note that function names are considered more readable with parentheses after their name, that isfunction()
. - use
B<>
for commands names like cat or grep. - use
F<>
orC<>
for file names.F<>
should be the only Pod code for file names, but as most Pod formatters render it as italic, Unix and Windows paths with their slashes and backslashes may be less readable, and better rendered withC<>
.
- use
- Be consistent.
- Be nice.