flectra/addons/web/doc/guidelines.rst
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Guidelines and Recommendations
==============================
Web Module Recommendations
--------------------------
Identifiers (``id`` attribute) should be avoided
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
In generic applications and modules, ``@id`` limits the reusabily of
components and tends to make code more brittle.
Just about all the time, they can be replaced with nothing, with
classes or with keeping a reference to a DOM node or a jQuery element
around.
.. note::
If it is *absolutely necessary* to have an ``@id`` (because a
third-party library requires one and can't take a DOM element), it
should be generated with `_.uniqueId
<http://underscorejs.org/#uniqueId>`_ or some other similar
method.
Avoid predictable/common CSS class names
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
Class names such as "content" or "navigation" might match the desired
meaning/semantics, but it is likely an other developer will have the
same need, creating a naming conflict and unintended behavior. Generic
class names should be prefixed with e.g. the name of the component
they belong to (creating "informal" namespaces, much as in C or
Objective-C)
Global selectors should be avoided
''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''''
Because a component may be used several times in a single page (an
example in OpenERP is dashboards), queries should be restricted to a
given component's scope. Unfiltered selections such as ``$(selector)``
or ``document.querySelectorAll(selector)`` will generally lead to
unintended or incorrect behavior.
OpenERP Web's :js:class:`~openerp.web.Widget` has an attribute
providing its DOM root :js:attr:`Widget.$el <openerp.web.Widget.$el>`,
and a shortcut to select nodes directly :js:attr:`Widget.$
<openerp.web.Widget.$>`.
More generally, never assume your components own or controls anything
beyond its own personal DOM.
Understand deferreds
''''''''''''''''''''
Deferreds, promises, futures, …
Known under many names, these objects are essential to and (in OpenERP
Web) widely used for making :doc:`asynchronous javascript operations
<async>` palatable and understandable.
OpenERP Web guidelines
----------------------
* HTML templating/rendering should use :doc:`qweb` unless absolutely
trivial.
* All interactive components (components displaying information to the
screen or intercepting DOM events) must inherit from
:class:`~openerp.web.Widget` and correctly implement and use its API
and lifecycle.
* All css classes must be prefixed with *oe_* .
* Asynchronous functions (functions which call :ref:`session.rpc
<rpc_rpc>` directly or indirectly at the very least) *must* return
deferreds, so that callers of overriders can correctly synchronize
with them.
New Javascript guidelines
-------------------------
From v11, we introduce a new coding standard for Odoo Javascript code. Here it
is:
* add "use strict"; on top of every odoo JS module
* name all entities exported by a JS module. So, instead of
.. code-block:: javascript
return Widget.extend({
...
});
you should use:
.. code-block:: javascript
var MyWidget = Widget.extend({
...
});
return MyWidget
* there should be one space between function and the left parenthesis:
.. code-block:: javascript
function (a, b) {}
* JS files should have a (soft) limit of 80 chars width, and a hard limit of 100
* document every functions and every files, with the style JSDoc.
* for function overriding other functions, consider adding the tag @override in
the JS Doc. Also, you can mention which method is overridden:
.. code-block:: javascript
/**
* When a save operation has been confirmed from the model, this method is
* called.
*
* @override method from field manager mixin
* @param {string} id
* @returns {Deferred}
*/
_confirmSave: function (id) {
* there should be an empty line between the main function comments and the tags,
or parameter descriptions
* avoid introspection: don't build dynamically a method name and call it. It is
more fragile and more difficult to refactor
* methods should be private if possible
* never read an attribute of an attribute on somethig that you have a reference.
So, this is not good:
.. code-block:: javascript
this.myObject.propA.propB
* never use a reference to the parent widget
* avoid using the 'include' functionality: extending a class is fine and does
not cause issue, including a class is much more fragile, and may not work.
* For the widgets, here is how the various attributes/functions should be
ordered:
1. all static attributes, such as template, events, custom_events, ...
2. all methods from the lifecycle of a widget, in this order: init, willStart,
start, destroy
3. If there are public methods, a section titled "Public", with an empty line
before and after
4. all public methods, camelcased, in alphabetic order
5. If there are private methods, a section titled "Private", with an empty line
before and after
6. all private methods, camelcased and prefixed with _, in alphabetic order
7. If there are event handlers, a section titled "Handlers", with an empty line
before and after
8. all handlers, camelcased and prefixed with _on, in alphabetic order
9. If there are static methods, they should be in a section titled "Static".
All static methods are considered public, camelcased with no _.
* write unit tests
* for the event handlers defined by the key 'event' or 'custom_events', don't
inline the function. Always add a string name, and add the definition in the
handler section
* one space after if and for
* never call private methods on another object
* object definition on more than one line: each element should have a trailing
comma.
* strings: double quotes for all textual strings (such as "Hello"), and single
quotes for all other strings, such as a css selector '.o_form_view'
* always use this._super.apply(this, arguments);
* keys in an object: ordered by alphabetic order