# Copyright (c) 2006 Marcos Pinto ('markybob') This is pretty much taken straight out of PEP 8, the "Style Guide for Python Code" (http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0008/) More or less, if you try to submit a patch that doesn't follow this guide, odds are your patch will be denied...unless it does some incredibly magnificient things, in which case I *might* edit it. Don't bet on it, though. Here are the highlights: Indents are FOUR (4) spaces. Not 8, not 5 or 2 and definitely NOT tab. Limit all lines to a maximum of 79 characters. Use UTF-8 encoding Every single import should be on its own line Avoid extraneous whitespace in the following situations: Yes: spam(ham[1], {eggs: 2}) No: spam( ham[ 1 ], { eggs: 2 } ) Yes: spam(1) No: spam (1) Yes: if x == 4: print x, y; x, y = y, x No: if x == 4 : print x , y ; x , y = y , x Yes: dict['key'] = list[index] No: dict ['key'] = list [index] Yes: x = 1 y = 2 long_variable = 3 No: x = 1 y = 2 long_variable = 3 Some more recommendations: * "Don't repeat yourself (DRY). Every distinct concept and/or piece of data should live in one, and only one, place. Redundancy is bad. Normalization is good." (taken straight from django's Design philosophies) * Try to use iterators/generators where applicable. The simplest change from range to xrange is also good. * In UI and deluge code for consistency we use notion of speed not rate. Libtorrent mixes this usage and so do we on deluge-libtorrent boundary, but all deluge only code should use speed.