Regarding aesthetics of code lay out, about the only thing Larry
cares strongly about is that the closing curly brace 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:
- *
-
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(FOO,$foo) || die "Can't open $foo: $!";
is better than
die "Can't open $foo: $!" unless open(FOO,$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";
since 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
parens 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 labels--they're there to enhance
readability as well as to allow multi-level loop breaks. See the
previous example.
- *
-
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 in English) to see if it
will be there. The Config 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.
- *
-
If you have a really hairy regular expression, use the /x modifier 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" and "or" operators to avoid having to parenthesize
list operators so much, and to reduce the incidence of punctuational
operators like && and ||. Call your subroutines as if they were
functions or list operators to avoid excessive ampersands and parens.
- *
-
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 "can't mkdir $tmpdir: $!";
chdir($tmpdir) or die "can't chdir $tmpdir: $!";
mkdir 'tmp', 0777 or die "can't mkdir $tmpdir/tmp: $!";
- *
-
Line up your translations 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 and
-w
in effect. Consider giving away
your code. Consider changing your whole world view. Consider... oh,
never mind.
- *
-
Be consistent.
- *
-
Be nice.