Manual:Pywikibot/Development/Guidelines

This makes contains Development guidelines for helping people who want to help and improve pywikibot.

Reporting a bug
You have seen a problem in pywikibot? it's not the end of the world, just keep calm and report it in phabricator (compat core) the important notes for reporting bugs are:
 * Get output of  and amend it to your report
 * Include exact steps to reproduce the bug
 * Include the difference between expected output and real output

Bug triage
If you like to help pywikibot is not just writing code. You can help easily by categorizing, confirming, prioritizing bugs. Just go to the browse projects in phabricator (core and compat) and get the list. For more info see Bug management/How to triage

Making a patch
Read Manual:Pywikibot/Gerrit.

Commit messages should follow the Gerrit Commit message guidelines.

Follow pep8
These are some standards for writing code - pep8 is mainly about writing your code in a way that would be easy to read. Most of the rules are enforced by Jenkins. Accepted code by Jenkins is voted with +2 (not +1!). Some of the most important things are:
 * Add a space before and after an equal sign ("=") when you want to define a variable except in function/method signatures which don't use any spaces around the equal sign.
 * Lines must be shorter than 130 characters although a new limit of 100 characters is in process. Lines longer than 80 characters should be avoided. The newline character and lines consisting of only one long word (or URL for example) are not counted.
 * Indentation are really important about readability of code, use it properly, use 4 spaces instead of tab character
 * Imports should be sorted by “source” (first standard libraries, then third party and then local (pywikibot)), “type” (first normal  then  ) and then alphabetical. Between the sources (and preferably between types) should be a newline. Also each import has to be in a separated line. For example:

Follow pep257
This standard is mainly about docstrings (documentation inside code). There are two kinds of docstring, one-line docstring and multi-line docstring. A one-line docstring has to be like: and a multi-line docstring has to be like: Multi-line docstrings consist of a summary line just like a one-line docstring, followed by a blank line, followed by a more elaborate description. The summary line may be used by automatic indexing tools; it is important that it fits on one line and is separated from the rest of the docstring by a blank line.

Naming style

 * Names of classes has to be CapWord (use DataPage instead of Datapage, datapage or data_page)
 * Names of functions and methods has to be lowercase with underscores for better readability (e.g. set_label instead setLabel, or SetLabel)
 * Names of errors has to be CapWord with "Error" suffix (like NoPageError)

Documentation
Don't forget to update the documentation both in mediawiki.org and in the code.

for adding the documentation you need to add it at the top of the class or file or function you're working on it as an example:

It's really important to list all of usable methods of a class or arguments in a script.

Using decorator is highly recommended. There is a help page about them in python.org help wiki

Test via pyflakes
pyflakes is a tool to check correct usage of variables in code - for example if you define a variable and don't' use it (or don't define a variable and use it) it returns an error for you.

You can easily install and run the check, there is a manual for it

Miscellaneous

 * Use "bot" instead of "robot" in naming variables, documentation, etc.
 * Don't use tab character, use 4 spaces instead.
 * Use single quotes for strings, or double quotes if the string contains a single quote.
 * Do not use a  prefix on strings, as it is meaningless due to.
 * If you want to remove a part of code, don't comment it out. Just remove it.
 * Don't use \r (carriage return character) in code, Some code editors add it automatically, check and delete them.
 * Avoid using global variables with defining "global variable" at the beginning of the function.