CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2012/ch1 1w23 ph: Difference between revisions
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The debugger can do all the usual things one would expect it to, such as set breakpoints, step into and over code, print out the call stack, etc. | The debugger can do all the usual things one would expect it to, such as set breakpoints, step into and over code, print out the call stack, etc. | ||
While tools for the mainstream languages such as Java and C++ have reached a certain maturity, tools for Ruby are still growing. And they might be needed more and more as Ruby's usage spreads from early adopters to the early majority, and SLOC (Source Lines Of Code) continues to increase. Automatic tools<ref>http://www. | While tools for the mainstream languages such as Java and C++ have reached a certain maturity, tools for Ruby are still growing. And they might be needed more and more as Ruby's usage spreads from early adopters to the early majority, and SLOC (Source Lines Of Code) continues to increase. Automatic tools<ref>http://www.ruby-toolbox.com/categories/code_metrics</ref> can be used to detect several types of problems including inconsistent style, long methods and repeated code. | ||
*[ | *[http://github.com/roodi/roodi/tree/master '''Roodi'''] (Ruby Object Oriented Design Inferometer) - this parses Ruby code and warns about design issues from the list configured, ie: Class line count check, for loop check, parameter number check, cyclomatic checks and 10 other checks | ||
*[ | *[http://github.com/troessner/reek '''Reek'''] - similar in concept to Roodi | ||
*[ | *[http://saikuro.rubyforge.org/ '''Saikuro'''] - designed to check cyclomatic complexity | ||
*[ | *[http://ruby.sadi.st/Flog.html '''Flog'''] - created by Ryan Davis, this computes a score of code written: the higher the score is, the worse your code is. ABC metrics (Assignments, Branches and Calls) are taken into account to compute the score | ||
*[http://www.harukizaemon.com/simian/ '''Simian'''] - a similarity analyzer, this can be used for duplication identification (a $99 license is needed for commercial use) | *[http://www.harukizaemon.com/simian/ '''Simian'''] - a similarity analyzer, this can be used for duplication identification (a $99 license is needed for commercial use) | ||
*[ | *[http://ruby.sadi.st/Flay.html '''Flay'''] - this is another free tool from Ryan Davis that finds structural similarities in code | ||
[[File:Code Analysis Outputs.png|frame|none|alt=Code Analysis Tool Results|Code Analysis Tool Results]] | [[File:Code Analysis Outputs.png|frame|none|alt=Code Analysis Tool Results|Code Analysis Tool Results]] | ||
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== '''See Also''' == | == '''See Also''' == | ||
*http://www.caliban.org/ruby/rubyguide.shtml | *http://www.caliban.org/ruby/rubyguide.shtml | ||
* | *http://github.com/styleguide/ruby | ||
*http://www.ruby-doc.org/docs/ProgrammingRuby/ | *http://www.ruby-doc.org/docs/ProgrammingRuby/ | ||
* | *http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/documentation/ | ||
*http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Ruby_programming_language | *http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Ruby_programming_language | ||
== '''References''' == | == '''References''' == | ||
<references/> | <references/> |
Latest revision as of 20:24, 24 September 2013
Ruby Coding Guidelines
Ruby Coding Guidelines include best practices followed generally for most of the object oriented programming languages as Ruby is entirely 'Object Oriented'. Also known as 'Ruby Coding conventions', these are a set of guidelines that recommend programming style, practices and methods for each aspect of a piece of program written in Ruby.
Software programmers are highly recommended to follow these guidelines to help improve the readability of their source code and make software maintenance easier. Naming conventions, class and member design principles, maintainability, performance, documentation and layout are the important areas where these guidelines have to be followed. More important than the reasons for having a guideline is actually adhering to it consistently. Having a coding guideline documented and available means nothing if developers are not using it consistently.
Types of Guidelines
Coding guidelines in Ruby can be defined individually for major sections that code consists of. Naming , Class Design , Member Design , Maintainability, Performance, Documentation and Layout guidelines are illustrated below. These guidelines contain sections common to all of these as well as sections which apply to each one individually.
Naming Guidelines<ref>http://itsignals.cascadia.com.au/?p=7</ref>
Ruby uses the first character of the name to help it determine it’s intended use. The standard Ruby file extension is .rb, although many people working on UNIX-like systems don't bother with it for stand-alone scripts. Whether or not one uses it for scripts is up to them, but they will need to use it for library files or they will not be found by the interpreter.
- Local Variables
- Should use lowercase letter followed by other characters. Naming convention states that it is better to use underscores rather than camelBack for multiple word names, e.g. average, variable_xyz
- Instance Variables
- Instance variables are defined using the single "at" sign (@) followed by a name. It is suggested that a lowercase letter should succeed @, e.g. @color
- Instance Methods
- Method names should start with a lowercase letter, and may be followed by digits, underscores, and letters. The name should possibly be a verb e.g. move, display_details
- Class Variables
- Class variable names start with a double "at" sign (@@) and may be followed by digits, underscores, and letters, e.g. @@color
- Constant
- Constant names usually start with an uppercase letter followed by other characters. Constant objects are by convention named using all uppercase letters and underscores between words, e.g. THIS_IS_A_CONSTANT
- Class and Module
- Class names are recommended to be be nouns. In the case of modules, it's harder to make a clear recommendation. The names of mix-ins (which are just modules), however, should probably be adjectives, such as the standard Enumerable and Comparable modules. Class and module names starts with an uppercase letter, by convention they are named using MixedCase, e.g. module Encryption, class MixedCase
- Global Variables
- Starts with a dollar ($) sign followed by other characters, e.g. $global
Considering customer order information as the data being used for an application, below naming guidelines give an idea of good class/table/file names.
- Model Naming Convention
Table: orders Class: Order File: /app/models/order.rb Primary Key: id Foreign Key: customer_id Link Tables: items_orders
- Controller Naming Convention
Class: OrdersController File: /app/controllers/orders_controller.rb Layout: /app/layouts/orders.html.erb
- View Naming Convention
Helper: /app/helpers/orders_helper.rb Helper Module: OrdersHelper Views: /app/views/orders/… (list.html.erb for example)
- Tests Naming Convention
Unit: /test/unit/order_test.rb Functional: /test/functional/orders_controller_test.rb Fixtures: /test/fixtures/orders.yml
Class Design Guidelines
A class in Ruby always starts with the keyword class followed by the name of the class. The name should always be in initial capitals. Class Customer can be displayed as:
class Customer end
A class is terminated by using the keyword end. All the data members in the class are between the class definition and the end keyword.
Ruby blurs the distinction between design and implementation. Ideas that have to be expressed at the design level in other languages can be implemented directly in Ruby. To help in this process, Ruby has support for some design-level strategies. These strategies can be used to design classes accordingly as suitable for different types of applications.
- The Visitor pattern is a way of traversing a collection without having to know the internal organization of that collection.
- Delegation is a way of composing classes more flexibly and dynamically than can be done using standard inheritance.
- The Singleton pattern is a way of ensuring that only one instantiation of a particular class exists at a time.
- The Observer pattern implements a protocol allowing one object to notify a set of interested objects when certain changes have occurred.
Normally, all four of these strategies require explicit code each time they're implemented. With Ruby, they can be abstracted into a library and reused freely and transparently.
Member Design Guidelines
While defining class members, it is very important to keep in mind the access restrictions. Scope and life-time of class members are different for different restrictions, as illustrated below.
public totally accessible. protected accessible only by instances of class and direct descendants. Even through hasA relationships. (see below) private accessible only by instances of class (must be called nekkid no “self.” or anything else). class A # Restriction used w/o arguments set the default access control. protected def protected_method # nothing end end class B < A def test_protected myA = A.new myA.protected_method end # Used with arguments, sets the access of the named methods and constants. public :test_protected end b = B.new.test_protected
Maintainability Guidelines
Maintainability guidelines are important to programmers for a number of reasons:
- 40%-80% of the lifetime cost of a piece of software goes to maintenance.
- Hardly any software is maintained for its whole life by the original author.
- Code conventions improve the readability of the software, allowing engineers to understand new code more quickly and thoroughly.
- If you ship your source code as a product, you need to make sure it is as well packaged and clean as any other product you create.
The following guidelines are to be followed to improve the software maintainability
- Profile your code regularly
- If you profile your code regularly you’ll be able to tell if the latest change to the code will have an adverse effect on performance. Integrate profiling into your testing process and make it automated to ensure that it’s not forgotten. Like unit testing and BDD(Behavior-driven development) profiling goes a long way.
Performance Guidelines<ref>http://blog.monitis.com/index.php/2012/02/08/20-ruby-performance-tips/</ref>
The key parameter on which a software application is rated is by its performance. It is the time taken by the application to respond to a user's request. Performance of ruby can be improved significantly by following certain coding guidelines, as below.
- Avoid nesting loops more than three levels deep
- Nesting affects the performance of the code proportionally with the increasing levels in loops. Limiting nesting to three levels is one good practice to keep the code's performance well.
- Avoid unnecessary variable assignments
- New programmers, often use unwanted variables in code. A great example is when someone defines a variable to store a return value and then returns that variable; just return the value directly.
- Reduce usage of disk I/O
- Disk I/O is a very costly operation as far as computing is concerned. Keeping it to the minimal improves the application response time drastically. Using disk I/O, makes the application extremely slow. Using storage systems such as memcached reduces disk I/O operations to a great extent as lot of data is kept in memory. The speed improvement while using a memory caching system is tremendous.
- Use Ruby Enterprise Edition
- Ruby Enterprise edition provides up to 33% lower memory usage. Though, to get benefited by this performance one needs to follow their guidelines.
- Avoid method calls as much as possible
- Method calls are expensive operations in ruby. They should be avoided to keep up the performance of the application.
- Use interpolated strings instead of concatenated strings
- Concatenated strings calls a method to get executed. So, it affects the performance as it is one of the most frequently used operation. Its better to replace them with Interpolated strings which runs faster as it doesn't invoke a method call.
put “Hello there, #{name}!”vs.puts “Hello there, ” << name = “!”
- Destructive operations are faster
- Ruby’s in-place methods that which modifies the actual value than working on a copy of the data are much faster. But this should be handled carefully as original data gets disturbed.
- Avoid unnecessary calls to uniq on arrays
- In many cases methods are already calling uniq on an array and there’s no need for you to call it yet again.
- For loops are faster than .each
- .each uses an enumeration object behind the scene which adds a delay in execution. Using for instead of .each would improve performance but for short loops only.<ref>http://stackoverflow.com/questions/6406112/why-are-ruby-method-calls-particularly-slow-in-comparison-to-other-languages</ref>
- Use x.blank? over x.nil? || x.empty?
- When using ActionPack there’s no need for x.nil? or x.empty?; x.blank? checks for both of these.
- Avoid calls to parse_date and strftime
- Both these calls are very expensive. using regular expressions would improve the time.
- Know your gems
- All libraries are not efficient. Many gems may need to be removed to problem to fix a problem with the code. This is a common scenario when many gems are installed. So performing bench marking and testing a gem with others that perform same task would help in picking the right gem.
- Improve your algorithms before you try to improve your code
- Algorithmic improvements results in evident improvements in performance of the code. It is always ideal to design an efficient algorithm without unwanted method calls.
- Test the most frequently occurring case first
- While using if statements or a case statement always test the cases that occur most frequently. This allows less code to run before a decision is made. It may not seem like much but over several hundred or thousand runs through the decision logic you’ll notice a definite performance gain.
- Optimize the way you access global constants
- While accessing the global constants one should use namespace before the constants to avoid entire library search for the constant.
- Use explicit returns
- Even though the result of last operation is returned for a method, using explicit returns would speed up the code. Explicit returns are faster, especially in older Ruby versions such as 1.8.x.
Documentation Guidelines<ref>http://guides.rubyonrails.org/api_documentation_guidelines.html</ref>
Documentation comments<ref>http://www.jetbrains.com/ruby/webhelp/documenting-source-code-in-rubymine.html</ref> can be created in accordance with RDoc and YARD syntax. Note that RDoc highlighting in documentation comments can be turned enabled or disabled in the Appearance page of the editor settings.
The most common Documentation guidelines are listed below.
- Write simple, declarative sentences. Brevity is a plus: get to the point.
- Write in present tense: "Returns a hash that...", rather than "Returned a hash that..." or "Will return a hash that...".
- Start comments in upper case. Follow regular punctuation rules:
# Declares an attribute reader backed by an internally-named # instance variable. def attr_internal_reader(*attrs) ... end
- Communicate to the reader the current way of doing things, both explicitly and implicitly. Use the idioms recommended in edge. Reorder sections to emphasize favored approaches if needed, etc. The documentation should be a model for best practices and canonical, modern Rails usage.
Documentation has to be concise but comprehensive. Explore and document edge cases.
Layout Guidelines<ref>http://www.caliban.org/ruby/rubyguide.shtml</ref>
Designing the layout of any application determines the readability factor for other developers. Most followed order of code is as follows:
header block with author's name, Perforce Id tag and a brief description of what the program or library is for. require statements include statements class and module definitions main program section
- Spreading Code Out and Lining it Up
- This is very important for readability. Basically the principle is to:
- separate each component part by white space.
- align everything meaningfully.
- As such one can easily scan up and down the code and see the patterns. This is very important not only for understanding the code, but also for looking for anomalies and as a tool for rationalizing and consolidating the code.
- Code that has a lot of 'noise' - a lot of unnecessary variation and untidiness - is code that one can waste a lot of time working on. Well written and formatted code is code that is easy and quick to work with. It is code that allows one to easily 'see the wood from the trees'.
Code Analysis Tools
Ruby itself goes a long way towards helping developers write clear code.
- The Ruby debugger is a library loaded into Ruby at run-time.
This is done as follows:
ruby -r debug [ options ] [ programfile ] [ arguments ]
The debugger can do all the usual things one would expect it to, such as set breakpoints, step into and over code, print out the call stack, etc.
While tools for the mainstream languages such as Java and C++ have reached a certain maturity, tools for Ruby are still growing. And they might be needed more and more as Ruby's usage spreads from early adopters to the early majority, and SLOC (Source Lines Of Code) continues to increase. Automatic tools<ref>http://www.ruby-toolbox.com/categories/code_metrics</ref> can be used to detect several types of problems including inconsistent style, long methods and repeated code.
- Roodi (Ruby Object Oriented Design Inferometer) - this parses Ruby code and warns about design issues from the list configured, ie: Class line count check, for loop check, parameter number check, cyclomatic checks and 10 other checks
- Reek - similar in concept to Roodi
- Saikuro - designed to check cyclomatic complexity
- Flog - created by Ryan Davis, this computes a score of code written: the higher the score is, the worse your code is. ABC metrics (Assignments, Branches and Calls) are taken into account to compute the score
- Simian - a similarity analyzer, this can be used for duplication identification (a $99 license is needed for commercial use)
- Flay - this is another free tool from Ryan Davis that finds structural similarities in code
Summary
Ruby developers should follow a certain criteria or guidelines during software development. Coding standards are set of rules, guidelines and regulations on the manner of writing a code that helps programmers and developers read and understand quickly the source code that conforms to style and help avoid introducing misunderstanding and faults.
Particularly in Ruby development, coding standards are extremely important; therefore Ruby developers should put an importance to them. This is because these standards offer higher uniformity and consistency when writing code by different programmers. This could result in a code that's simple to know and preserve, thus reducing the project’s overall expenses.
Some of the benefits of using coding standards are:
- Easy to understand and maintained
- Boost the code’s readability
- Maintainable applications
- Eradicates complexity
- Separate documents look more appropriate
See Also
- http://www.caliban.org/ruby/rubyguide.shtml
- http://github.com/styleguide/ruby
- http://www.ruby-doc.org/docs/ProgrammingRuby/
- http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/documentation/
- http://en.wikibooks.org/wiki/Ruby_programming_language
References
<references/>