Python
Most of our code is written in Python, so this document will concentrate on it.
PEP 8: Official Python Style Guide
Fortunately, with PEP 8 there's an official Style Guide for Python Code. All new Python code you submit should conform to it, unless you have good reasons to deviate from it, for instance readability.
Keep It Simple
The code you write now probably needs to be touched by someone else down the road, and that someone else might be less experienced than you, or have a terrible headache and be under pressure of time. So while a particular construct may be a clever way of doing something, a simple way of doing the same thing can be and often is preferrable.
New-style classes
Python 2 and earlier knows two types of classes, old-style which have no base class, and new-style which have object
as the base class. Because their behavior is slightly different in some places, and some things can't be done with old-style classes, we want to stick to new-style classes wherever possible.
The syntactical difference is that new-style classes have to explicitly be derived from object
or another new-style class.
# old-style classes class OldFoo: pass class OldBar(OldFoo): pass # new-style classes class NewFoo(object): pass class NewBar(NewFoo): pass
Python 3 only knows new-style classes and the requirement to derive from object
was dropped. In projects that will only ever run on Python 3, it's acceptable not to explicitly derive classes without parents from object
, but if in doubt, do it just the same.
Idiomatic code
In Python, it's easy to inadvertently emulate idiomatic styles of other languages like C/C++ or Java. In cases where there are constructs "native" to the language, it's preferrable to use them.
Here are some examples:
Looping
Languages like C normally use incremented indices to loop over arrays:
float pixels[NUMBER_OF_PIXELS] = [...]; for (int i = 0; i < NUMBER_OF_PIXELS; i++) { do_something_with_a_pixel(pixels[i]); }
Implementing the loop like this would give away that you've programmed in C or a similar language before:
pixels = [...] for i in range(len(pixels)): do_something_with_a_pixel(pixels[i])
Here's the "native" way to implement the above loop:
pixels = [...] for p in pixels: do_something_with_a_pixel(p)
It yields pairs of count and the current value like this:
pixels = [...] for i, p in enumerate(pixels): print("Working on pixel no. {}".format(i + 1)) do_something_with_a_pixel(p)
Properties rather than explicit accessor methods
In order to allow future changes in how object attributes (member variables) are set, some languages encourage always using getter and/or setter methods. This is unnecessary in Python, as you can intercept access to an attribute by wrapping it into a property. These allow having accessor methods without making the user of the class have to use them explicitly. This way you can validate values when an attribute is set, or translate back and forth between the interface used on the attribute and an internal representation.
Validating a value when setting an attribute
To ensure that an Employee
object only has positive values for its salary
attribute, you'd put a property in its place which checks values before storing them in an attribute called e.g. _salary
:
class Employee(object): @property def salary(self): return self._salary @salary.setter def salary(self, salary): if salary <= 0: raise ValueError("Salary must be positive.") self._salary = salary
Translating between attribute interface and internal representation
Take these classes of geometric primitives, Point
and Circle
:
class Point(object): def __init__(self, x, y): self.x = x self.y = y class Circle(object): def __init__(self, point, radius): self.point = point self.radius = radius
If you wanted to add a diameter
attribute, you can do so as a property which translates back and forth between it and the existing radius
attribute:
... class Circle(object): def __init__(self, point, radius=None, diameter=None): self.point = point if (radius is None) == (diameter is None): raise ValueError("Exactly one of radius or diameter must be set") if radius is not None: self.radius = radius else: self.diameter = diameter @property def diameter(self): return self.radius * 2 @diameter.setter def diameter(self, diameter): self.radius = diameter / 2.0 ...
Even setting self.diameter
in the constructor goes by way of the property and therefore the setter method.