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You can now run `nix fmt` (or `make format-changed`) to reformat Nix files. This is not enforced by CI. PR-URL: https://github.com/hasura/graphql-engine-mono/pull/4754 GitOrigin-RevId: a2e7cbe6c037d68ba6303278616314de60b6aa72
435 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
435 lines
13 KiB
Markdown
# Code conventions and style guide
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This is a short document describing the preferred coding style for this
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project. We've tried to cover the major areas of formatting and naming. When
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something isn't covered by this guide, err on the side of consistency with
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existing code.
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### Formatting
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We use [ormolu](https://github.com/tweag/ormolu) to format our code. The
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top-level `Makefile` has targets `format` and `check-format` that can be
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used for this. These targets will also format Nix files if `nixpkgs-fmt`
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is installed, but this is optional.
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#### Line Length
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We do not enforce a hard limit on line length, but we try to keep lines under
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80 characters where possible to make it easier to tile files horizontally.
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It’s okay if long lines spill into the 80–100 character range if wrapping
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them would harm readability. In particular, we don’t want to discourage
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descriptive variable names, nor do we want to discourage introducing local
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variables, so consider 80 characters a target length rather than a limit.
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One exception to the above is multiline comments, which should almost always
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be wrapped to 80 characters. Most editors support automatically reflowing
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blocks of text with a configurable line length; consider learning the
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relevant hotkey in your editor of choice.
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### Naming
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Use camel case (e.g. `functionName`) when naming functions and upper camel case
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(e.g. `DataType`) when naming data types.
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Prefer full words over abbreviations. For example, prefer the name `ColumnType`
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to `ColTy` and `computeAggregateFunction` to `compAggFn`. Exceptions: extremely
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common, idiomatic abbreviations, like using “err” to mean “error” or “ref” to
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mean “reference.” When in doubt about whether or not an abbreviation is
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well-known, prefer the full name.
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#### Functions and variables
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Avoid “Hungarian notation,” aka using short variable prefixes or suffixes based
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on the variable type. For example, do not prefix or suffix variables or
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functions with the letter “m” to indicate that they are or return `Maybe`
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values:
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```haskell
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-- Bad
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parseArgumentM :: Maybe UserRole -> Value -> Maybe Argument
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parseArgumentM userRoleM value = case userRoleM of
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Just userRole -> ...
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Nothing -> ...
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```
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Instead, where possible, prefer names that convey _why_ the value is wrapped in
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a `Maybe`, or, if `Nothing` is just an ordinary member of the value’s domain,
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don’t include any special indication in the name at all:
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```haskell
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-- Good
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parseOptionalArgument :: Maybe UserRole -> Value -> Maybe Argument
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parseOptionalArgument userRole value = case userRole of
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Just knownUserRole -> ...
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Nothing -> ...
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```
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When possible, avoid the need to name intermediate results at all so that
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coming up with several different variants of the same name is unnecessary. For
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example, instead of writing
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```haskell
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-- Bad
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argumentM <- parseOptionalArgument userRole value
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case argumentM of
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Just argument -> ...
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Nothing -> ...
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```
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prefer writing
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```haskell
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-- Good
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parseOptionalArgument userRole value >>= \case
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Just argument -> ...
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Nothing -> ...
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```
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which avoids the need for the extra name entirely. If such an approach isn’t
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practical or is hard to read, and a type-related prefix or suffix is absolutely
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necessary, prefer a prefix with the full name of the type over abbreviations:
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```haskell
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-- Okay
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maybeArgument <- parseOptionalArgument userRole value
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doSomethingElse
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case maybeArgument of
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Just argument -> ...
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Nothing -> ...
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```
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#### Modules
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Use singular, not plural, module names, e.g. use `Data.Map` and
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`Data.ByteString.Internal` instead of `Data.Maps` and
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`Data.ByteString.Internals`.
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### Data types
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#### Wrap primitives in newtype (or sum types)
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It is usually a good idea to introduce a custom data type (sum types or
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`newtype`) instead of using a primitive type (like `Int`, `String`, `Set`
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`Text`, etc.). This prevents confusion and mistakes of using the wrong types in
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wrong places.
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#### Prefer sum types to `Bool`
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Avoid using `Bool` to represent two different states, especially if the set of possible states could potentially grow in the future. For example, instead of writing
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```haskell
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-- bad
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data LiveQuery = LiveQuery
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{ ...
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, lqIsPaused :: !Bool
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, ...
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}
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```
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prefer a sum type that has meaning even without context:
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```haskell
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-- good
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data LiveQuery = LiveQuery
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{ ...
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, lqState :: !LiveQueryState
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, ...
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}
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data LiveQueryState
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= LQActive
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| LQPaused
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```
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Also, avoid defining boolean predicates that simply select distinguish between different constructors of a sum type. For example, avoid this:
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```haskell
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-- bad
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isPaused :: LiveQueryState -> Bool
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isPaused LQPaused = True
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isPaused _ = False
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...
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unless (isPaused queryState) do
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handleActiveQuery query
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```
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This pattern can easily bite you if you later decide to extend the sum type with a new constructor. For example, suppose `LiveQueryState` was extended with an `LQStopped` constructor. Our guard using `isPaused` would still compile, but it would return `False` for stopped queries, and we’d call `handleActiveQuery` even though the query is stopped!
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Pattern-matching is much more robust to this kind of code evolution, and it isn’t very much more code:
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```haskell
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-- good
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case queryState of
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LQActive -> handleActiveQuery query
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LQPaused -> pure ()
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```
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### Dealing with laziness
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By default, use strict data types and lazy functions.
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#### Data types
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Constructor fields should be strict, unless there's an explicit reason to make
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them lazy. This avoids many common pitfalls caused by too much laziness and
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reduces the number of brain cycles the programmer has to spend thinking about
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evaluation order.
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```haskell
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-- Good
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data Point = Point
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{ pointX :: !Double
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, pointY :: !Double
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}
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```
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```haskell
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-- Bad
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data Point = Point
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{ pointX :: Double
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, pointY :: Double
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}
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```
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### Functions
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Have function arguments be lazy unless you explicitly need them to be strict.
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The most common case when you need strict function arguments is in recursion
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with an accumulator:
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```haskell
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mysum :: [Int] -> Int
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mysum = go 0
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where
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go !acc [] = acc
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go acc (x:xs) = go (acc + x) xs
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```
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(Though the above function could be written using `foldl'` instead, which would
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be preferable.)
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### Comments and documentation
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#### Formatting
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Use line comments (comments that start with `--`) for short comments (1–3
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lines). For longer comments, use multiline comments (comments that begin with
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`{-` and end with `-}`).
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Use [Haddock syntax](https://haskell-haddock.readthedocs.io/en/latest/markup.html)
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for documentation comments. Running Haddock should always complete successfully.
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#### Module headers
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Include a short purpose statement at the top of each module, usually about
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1–3 sentences long. Try to describe how the contents of the module relate to
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each other (i.e. what criteria determine which bindings should go in this
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module?) and to other modules in the project (i.e. what high-level problem do
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the exports of this module solve?).
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Examples:
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```haskell
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-- | Types and functions for generating a GraphQL schema from information
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-- about Postgres tables.
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module Hasura.GraphQL.Context where
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```
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```haskell
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-- | Top-level HTTP routes and handlers for the server, provided as a WAI
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-- application.
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module Hasura.Server.App where
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```
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Certain modules may benefit from longer comments, which can serve as
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internal documentation for high-level architectural design choices that don’t
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make sense to document anywhere else. For example, the module comment for
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`Hasura.RQL.DDL.Schema` describes in a couple paragraphs the high-level
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concepts behind the schema cache and metadata catalog. As appropriate, link to
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that module documentation in other comments using the Haddock syntax of
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enclosing a module name in double quotes; for example:
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```haskell
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-- | Types that represent the raw data stored in the catalog. See also the
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-- module documentation for "Hasura.RQL.DDL.Schema".
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module Hasura.RQL.Types.Catalog
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```
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Not every module needs documentation comment—it doesn’t make sense for small
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helper/utility modules, for example—but most modules should have one. A module
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that cannot be given a short, precise purpose statement may benefit from being
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broken up into multiple modules.
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#### Functions and datatypes
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Include documentation comments on function and datatype declarations to
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communicate additional context about their purpose or usage information, but
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avoid using comments as a replacement for precise names. For example, instead
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of writing
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```haskell
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-- Bad
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-- | Configuration options given on the command-line.
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data Options = ...
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```
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prefer a more self-documenting name:
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```haskell
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-- Good
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data CommandLineOptions = ...
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```
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Likewise, avoid using comments to describe invariants of a function argument
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or datatype field instead of a more precise type:
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```haskell
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-- Bad
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newtype AuthenticationToken
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= AuthenticationToken
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{ unAuthenticationToken :: Text
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-- ^ Invariant: contains Base64-encoded binary data.
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}
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```
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```haskell
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-- Good
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import Data.Text.Conversions (Base64)
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newtype AuthenticationToken
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= AuthenticationToken
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{ unAuthenticationToken :: Base64 ByteString
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}
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```
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However, _do_ use comments on functions and datatypes to clarify information
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that cannot easily be communicated via names or types:
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```haskell
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-- Good
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resolveTableReference
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:: OMap SchemaName TableName
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-- ^ All tables visible to the current user. Schemas with priority in the
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-- search path should come earlier.
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-> Maybe SchemaName -> TableName -> Maybe QualifiedTable
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resolveTableReference = ...
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```
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#### Inline comments
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Use inline comments within function bodies to provide additional context about
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why a function does something a particular way or to call special attention to
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an easily-overlooked subtlety. For example:
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```haskell
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-- Good
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allComparableTypes
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-- due to casting, we need to generate both geometry and geography operations
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-- even if just one of the two appears directly in the table schema
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| anyGeoTypes = geoTypes <> columnTypes
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| otherwise = columnTypes
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```
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Include links to external resources such as specifications or GitHub issues
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that provide context for decisions:
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```haskell
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-- Good
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isValidEnumName name =
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-- see https://graphql.github.io/graphql-spec/June2018/#EnumValue
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isValidName name && name `notElem` ["true", "false", "null"]
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```
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Avoid comments that state the obvious (i.e. just restate types or variable
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names), and prefer using informative variable or function names over comments
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where possible. For example:
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```haskell
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-- Bad
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runSelectQuery tables constraints cache shouldPrepare = do
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-- part 1: construct the query
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select <- buildSelect tables
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conditions <- traverse buildCondition constraints
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query <- buildQuery select conditions
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-- part 2: execute the query
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plan <- cacheLookup query (generateQueryPlan query) cache
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-- prepare if necessary
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prepared <- if shouldPrepare then prepareQueryPlan plan else pure plan
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runQueryPlan prepared
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```
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```haskell
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runSelectQuery tables constraints cache shouldPrepare =
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constructQuery >>= executeQuery
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where
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constructQuery = do
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select <- buildSelect tables
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conditions <- traverse buildCondition constraints
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query <- buildQuery select conditions
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executeQuery = do
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plan <- cacheLookup query (generateQueryPlan query) cache
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prepared <- if shouldPrepare then prepareQueryPlan plan else pure plan
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runQueryPlan prepared
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```
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#### Out-of-line `Note`s
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For especially tricky details that deserve thorough explanation and may need
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to be referenced from multiple places, we emulate [GHC’s
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Notes](https://www.stackbuilders.com/news/the-notes-of-ghc). A `Note` is an
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out-of-line comment written at the top-level of a module, written with a
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short title header:
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```haskell
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{- Note [Checking metadata consistency in run_sql]
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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SQL queries executed by run_sql may change the Postgres schema in arbitrary
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ways. We attempt to automatically update the metadata to reflect those changes
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as much as possible---for example, if a table is renamed, we want to update the
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metadata to track the table under its new name instead of its old one.
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... -}
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```
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At any point where the comment is relevant, we add a short comment referring
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to the note:
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```haskell
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-- see Note [Checking metadata consistency in run_sql]
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containsDDLKeyword :: Text -> Bool
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containsDDLKeyword = TDFA.match $$(quoteRegex ...)
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```
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A key advantage of notes is that they can be referenced from multiple places,
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so information does not necessarily need to be connected to any particular
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binding the way it must be for Haddock comments.
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When updating a piece of code that includes a reference to a `Note`, take
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care to ensure the `Note` is updated as well if necessary! Inevitably, some
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will get stale and go out of sync with the code, but that’s okay—just fix
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them up when you find some information is outdated.
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### Misc
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#### Point-free style
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Avoid over-using point-free style. For example, this is hard to read:
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```haskell
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-- Bad:
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f = (g .) . h
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```
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### Acknowledgement/Credits
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Parts of this coding style guide have been adapted from:
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- https://github.com/tibbe/haskell-style-guide/blob/master/haskell-style.md
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- https://kowainik.github.io/posts/2019-02-06-style-guide
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- https://chrisdone.com/posts/german-naming-convention/
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