CodingStyle parenthesis alignment: was: Re: align to open paren

From: Joe Perches
Date: Wed Apr 15 2015 - 17:07:05 EST


On Wed, 2015-04-15 at 20:34 +0000, Hubbe, Allen wrote:
> Hello Andy, Joe,

Hello Allen.

As this is a discussion better suited for linux
development lists I've cc'd LKML and netdev.

> I would like to find the origin of the decision to align to the open
> paren in Linux.

Mostly it's a style decision shared by net/ and
drivers/net/ and a few other directories.

It's a checkpatch --strict only test so it's not on
by default except in net/ and drivers/net/.

> I found the commit where this was added a few years ago, d1fe9c0.
> The email thread just says the style should be that way, but not why
> or how the decision was made. The how and the why is what I'm after,
> since I have a critique of the chosen style.
>
> I realize there is a lot of code written using this stile, and
> changing it would be disruptive. I certainly would not ask for that.
>
> Indenting to the open paren might cause ambiguous indentation between
> the parenthesized expression and the next logical thing. In the
> following, next_thing aligns to the same column as baz, even though
> baz is part of the condition expression, and next_thing is the
> continued statement.
>
> = if (foo(bar,
> = baz))
> = next_thing();
>
> It would be necessary to reindent to maintain style, even though the
> code of the next lines is the same. This has consequences like
> changing the blame, for instance. In the following, 4 + 5 is the bug,
> but whoever replaced the global with an instance variable gets the
> blame.

blame is overrated.
git blame -w ignores most of the whitespace noise.

> = global_variable = foo(bar,
> = baz(1 + 3),
> = baz(4 + 5) + 6);
> with
> = obj->var = foo(bar,
> = baz(1 + 3),
> = baz(4 + 5) + 6);
>
> I'm used to the default in many editors, which is to indent twice
> following each open paren, as opposed to once following each open
> brace or continued statement. It is a simpler rule for automatic
> formatting to implement. It also avoids mixing tabs and spaces, the
> spacing is unambiguous, and to maintain style, there is no need to
> re-indent lines following an edit if the position of the open paren
> changes.
>
> It's interesting to me that this style is only enforced by
> checkpatch.pl --strict. It is not in Documents/CodingStyle. That
> being the case, would it be acceptable to relax the rule in
> checkpatch.pl to accept either style? If not, well, I'll just accept
> the chosen style and fix my code.

I personally don't care much either way.

> If the following looks acceptable to you, I'll submit the patch to the
> list.

The patch most likely wouldn't be appropriate for
net/ and drivers/net/ where the developers seem to
strongly prefer alignment to open parenthesis.

Also I think the open parenthesis count isn't right
as it would ask for multiple indents for code like:

if ((foo(bar)) &&
(baz(bar))) {

I think checkpatch would now want:

if ((foo(bar)) &&
(baz(bar))) {

and the --fix option would be wrong too.

cheers, Joe

> Thanks,
> Allen
>
> diff --git a/scripts/checkpatch.pl b/scripts/checkpatch.pl
> index d124359..8e49125 100755
> --- a/scripts/checkpatch.pl
> +++ b/scripts/checkpatch.pl
> @@ -1834,6 +1834,15 @@ sub pos_last_openparen {
> return length(expand_tabs(substr($line, 0, $last_openparen))) + 1;
> }
>
> +sub count_openparen {
> + my ($line) = @_;
> +
> + my $opens = $line =~ tr/\(/\(/;
> + my $closes = $line =~ tr/\)/\)/;
> +
> + return $opens - $closes;
> +}
> +
> sub process {
> my $filename = shift;
>
> @@ -2539,11 +2548,16 @@ sub process {
> " " x ($pos % 8);
> my $goodspaceindent = $oldindent . " " x $pos;
>
> + my $goodtwotabindent = $oldindent .
> + "\t\t" x count_openparen($rest);
> +
> if ($newindent ne $goodtabindent &&
> - $newindent ne $goodspaceindent) {
> + $newindent ne $goodspaceindent &&
> + $newindent ne $goodtwotabindent) {
>
> if (CHK("PARENTHESIS_ALIGNMENT",
> - "Alignment should match open parenthesis\n" . $hereprev) &&
> + "Alignment should match open parenthesis, " .
> + "or be twice indented for each open parenthesis\n" . $hereprev) &&
> $fix && $line =~ /^\+/) {
> $fixed[$fixlinenr] =~
> s/^\+[ \t]*/\+$goodtabindent/;



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