This guide presents a collection of best-practices and coding conventions for the CoffeeScript programming language.
This guide is intended to be community-driven, and contributions are highly encouraged.
Please note that this is a work-in-progress: there is much more that can be specified, and some of the guidelines that have been specified may not be deemed to be idiomatic by the community (in which case, these offending guidelines will be modified or removed, as appropriate).
The details in this guide have been very heavily inspired by several existing style guides and other resources. In particular:
- PEP-8: Style Guide for Python Code
- Bozhidar Batsov's Ruby Style Guide
- Google's JavaScript Style Guide
- Common CoffeeScript Idioms
- Thomas Reynolds' CoffeeScript-specific Style Guide
- Jeremy Ashkenas' code review of Spine
- The CoffeeScript FAQ
- The CoffeeScript Style Guide
Use spaces only, with 2 spaces per indentation level. Never mix tabs and spaces.
### Maximum Line LengthLimit all lines to a maximum of 100 characters.
### Blank LinesSeparate top-level function and class definitions with a single blank line.
Separate method definitions inside of a class with a single blank line.
Use a single blank line within the bodies of methods or functions in cases where this improves readability (e.g., for the purpose of delineating logical sections).
# Bad
class Model extends Base
set: (data) -> _.extend(@data, data)
save: (data) -> @set(data) and @sync("save", @data)
# Good
class Model extends Base
set: (data) ->
_.extend(@data, data)
save: (data) ->
@set(data)
@sync("save", @data)
Do not include trailing whitespace on any lines.
### Optional CommasAvoid the use of commas before newlines when properties or elements of an Object or Array are listed on separate lines.
# Yes
foo = [
'some'
'string'
'values'
]
bar:
label: 'test'
value: 87
# No
foo = [
'some',
'string',
'values'
]
bar:
label: 'test',
value: 87
UTF-8 is the preferred source file encoding.
## Module ImportsIf using a module system (CommonJS Modules, AMD, etc.), require
statements should be placed on separate lines.
require 'lib/setup'
Backbone = require 'backbone'
These statements should be grouped in the following order:
- Standard library imports (if a standard library exists)
- Third party library imports
- Local imports (imports specific to this application or library)
Avoid extraneous whitespace in the following situations:
-
Immediately inside parentheses, brackets or braces
($ 'body') # Yes ( $ 'body' ) # No
-
Immediately before a comma
console.log x, y # Yes console.log x , y # No
Additional recommendations:
-
Always surround these binary operators with a single space on either side
-
assignment:
=
-
Note that this also applies when indicating default parameter value(s) in a function declaration
test: (param = null) -> # Yes test: (param=null) -> # No
-
-
augmented assignment:
+=
,-=
, etc. -
comparisons:
==
,<
,>
,<=
,>=
,unless
, etc. -
arithmetic operators:
+
,-
,*
,/
, etc. -
(Do not use more than one space around these operators)
# Yes x = 1 y = 1 fooBar = 3 # No x = 1 y = 1 fooBar = 3
-
If modifying code that is described by an existing comment, update the comment such that it accurately reflects the new code. (Ideally, improve the code to obviate the need for the comment, and delete the comment entirely.)
The first word of the comment should be capitalized, unless the first word is an identifier that begins with a lower-case letter.
If a comment is short, the period at the end can be omitted.
### Block CommentsBlock comments apply to the block of code that follows them.
###
This is a block comment. Note that if this were a real block
comment, we would actually be describing the proceeding code.
This is the second paragraph of the same block comment.
###
init()
start()
stop()
Inline comments are placed on the line immediately above the statement that they are describing. If the inline comment is sufficiently short, it can be placed on the same line as the statement (separated by a single space from the end of the statement).
All inline comments should start with a #
and a single space.
The use of inline comments should be limited, because their existence is typically a sign of a code smell.
Do not use inline comments when they state the obvious:
# No
x = x + 1 # Increment x
However, inline comments can be useful in certain scenarios:
# Yes
x = x + 1 # Compensate for border
Use camelCase
(with a leading lowercase character) to name all variables, methods, and object properties.
Use CamelCase
(with a leading uppercase character) to name all classes. (This style is also commonly referred to as PascalCase
, CamelCaps
, or CapWords
, among other alternatives.)
(The official CoffeeScript convention is camelcase, because this simplifies interoperability with JavaScript. For more on this decision, see here.)
For constants, use all uppercase with underscores:
CONSTANT_LIKE_THIS
Methods and variables that are intended to be "private" should begin with a leading underscore:
_privateMethod: ->
(These guidelines also apply to the methods of a class.)
When declaring a function that takes arguments, always use a single space after the closing parenthesis of the arguments list:
foo = (arg1, arg2) -> # Yes
foo = (arg1, arg2)-> # No
Do not use parentheses when declaring functions that take no arguments:
bar = -> # Yes
bar = () -> # No
In cases where method calls are being chained and the code does not fit on a single line, each call should be placed on a separate line and indented by one level (i.e., two spaces), with a leading .
.
[1..3]
.map((x) -> x * x)
.concat([10..12])
.filter((x) -> x < 11)
.reduce((x, y) -> x + y)
When calling functions, choose to omit or include parentheses in such a way that optimizes for readability. Keeping in mind that "readability" can be subjective, the following examples demonstrate cases where parentheses have been omitted or included in a manner that the community deems to be optimal:
baz 12
brush.ellipse {x: 10, y: 20} # Always use braces around inlined object parameters
# Alternatively, pass in objects on a new line (without braces)
brush.ellipse
x: 10
y: 20
foo(4).bar(8)
obj.value(10, 20) / obj.value(20, 10)
print inspect value
new Tag(new Value(a, b), new Arg(c))
Use string interpolation instead of string concatenation:
"this is an #{adjective} string" # Yes
"this is an " + adjective + " string" # No
Prefer double quoted strings (""
) instead of single quoted (''
) strings
Favor if not
over unless
for negative conditions.
Instead of using if not...else
, use if...else
:
# Yes
if true
...
else
...
# No
unless false
...
else
...
Multi-line if/else clauses should use indentation:
# Yes
if true
...
else
...
# No
if true then ...
else ...
Avoid placing the if clause at the end of the line
#Yes
if isReady then start()
#No
start() if isReady
Use functional style code instead of language based iteration where possible:
# Yes (assuming you have ramda available)
result = R.pluck 'name', array
#No
result = (item.name for item in array)
# No
results = []
for item in array
results.push item.name
To filter:
# Yes
result = R.filter ((item) -> item.name is "test"), array
# No
result = (item for item in array when item.name is "test")
Do not modify native objects.
For example, do not modify Array.prototype
to introduce Array#forEach
.
Do not suppress exceptions.
## Miscellaneousand
is preferred over &&
.
or
is preferred over ||
.
is
is preferred over ==
.
not
is preferred over !
.
Prefer shorthand notation (::
) for accessing an object's prototype:
Array::slice # Yes
Array.prototype.slice # No
Prefer @property
over this.property
.
return @property # Yes
return this.property # No
However, avoid the use of standalone @
:
return this # Yes
return @ # No
Avoid return
where not required, unless the explicit return increases clarity.
Use splats (...
) when working with functions that accept variable numbers of arguments:
console.log args... # Yes
(a, b, c, rest...) -> # Yes