status-react/doc/new-guidelines.md

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Code Style Guidelines

The goal of this document is to help all contributors (core and external) to write code in unison and help establish good practices that serve the Status Mobile contributors well.

We don't want to turn this document into an exhaustive list of rules to be followed that nobody will read. As much as possible, we'll try to document only what we consider important for Status Mobile. In other words, we don't want to maintain a general Clojure convention/style guide, nor do we want to turn this document into a long tutorial.

This is a work in progress, and not all conventions are properly implemented in the codebase yet. The project structure is also going over major changes (as of Nov/2022), and it'll take a considerable amount of time until we migrate the existing code to the new structure.

If you find out anything is outdated or missing, please, share with us or even better, create a pull-request! 🤸

Style guide

We mostly follow the Clojure Style Guide, so it's recommended to get familiar with it.

As of Nov/2022, running make lint should fix the most basic formatting issues, and we are in the process of integrating a tool to format non-trivial code according to the Clojure Style Guide. This should greatly reduce noise in pull-request reviews and it'll simplify the life of all contributors.

Pay special attention to:

Dos and don'ts

Hiccup

Never use anonymous inline function in hiccup, this will lead to reinitialization of component on each render of parent component

;; bad
(defn checkbox-view
  [{:keys [size]}]
  [rn/view
   [(fn [] [rn/view])]])

;; good
(defn comp []
  [rn/view])

(defn checkbox-view
  [{:keys [size]}]
  [rn/view
   [comp]])

This mistake mostly happens with functional components

;; bad
(fn []
  (let [atom (rf/sub [:sub])]
    (fn []
      [:f>
       (fn []
         [rn/text atom]

;; good
(defn f-comp [atom]
 [rn/text atom])
         
(fn []
 (let [atom (rf/sub [:sub])]
   (fn []
     [:f> f-comp atom]))) 

it's important to name functional components with f- prefix

Component props and API scheme to match Figma as closely as possible

Ideally, the prop names for components (particularly in quo2 Design System) should match the Figma properties as best as possible. This makes it easier for the developer using that component to configure it correctly for the screen it is being used on and avoids unnecessary overwrites and adjustments being made.

Avoid unnecessarily grouping categories to reduce the number of props

For example in Figma if there is a component and it has the following variants:

theme: "light" blur: "False" theme: "dark" blur: "False" theme: "light" blur: "True" theme: "dark" blur: "True"
type :neutral label "ABC" type :neutral label "ABC"
type :active label "ABC" type :active label "ABC"
type :danger label "ABC" type :danger label "ABC" type :danger label "ABC" type :danger label "ABC"
;; bad
"theme - :light or :dark
type - can be :neutral :active :danger :danger-blur"
(defn my-component [{:keys [theme type]} label])

;; good
"theme - :light or :dark
 type - can be :neutral :active :danger
 blur? - boolean
"
(defn my-component [{:keys [theme blur? type]} label])

Please note this is only for the external API of the component and there should be no restriction of how the component manages its internal API as that will not affect the developer using the component with the issues described above.

In some cases this is not always possible or does not make sense. However the thought process should be how easy will it be for another developer to use this component with the correct configuration given the screen designs for Figma.

Avoid unnecessarily renaming props

In general it can be helpful to avoid renaming props from their counterpart in Figma.

For example if Figma has sizes :small, :medium and :large

;; bad
":size - :little, :default or :big"
(defn my-component [{:keys [size]}])

;; good
":size - :small, :medium or :large"
(defn my-component [{:keys [size]}])

Component styles

Prefer to define styles in a separate file named style.cljs, colocated with the source file. For a real example, see src/quo2/components/record_audio/record_audio/style.cljs.

;; bad
(defn checkbox-view
  [{:keys [size]}]
  [rn/view
   {:style {:width           size
            :height          size
            :border-radius   4
            :justify-content :center
            :align-items     :center}}
   [rn/view (do-something)]])

;; good
(defn checkbox-view
  [{:keys [size]}]
  [rn/view {:style (style/checkbox size)}
   [rn/view (do-something)]])

Always add styles inside the :style key

Although when compiling ReactNative for mobile some components are able work with their styles in the top-level of the properties map, prefer to add them inside the :style key in order to separate styles from properties:

;; bad
[rn/button {:flex               1
            :padding-vertical   10
            :padding-horizontal 20
            :on-press           #(js/alert "Hi!")
            :title              "Button"}]

;; good
[rn/button {:style    {:flex               1
                       :padding-vertical   10
                       :padding-horizontal 20}
            :on-press #(js/alert "Hi!")
            :title    "Button"}]

;; better 
;; (define them in a style ns & place them inside `:style` key)
[rn/button {:style    (style/button)
            :on-press #(js/alert "Hi!")
            :title    "Button"}
 ]

Also its fine to keep one liner styles in view

;; ok
[rn/view {:style {:flex 1 :padding-top 5}}]

Don't define properties in styles ns

Properties must be set on view level

;; bad
{:style         {:position         :absolute
                 :left             0
                 :right            0
                 :bottom           0}
 :blur-amount   30
 :blur-radius   25
 :blur-type     :transparent
 :overlay-color :transparent}

;; good
{:position         :absolute
 :left             0
 :right            0
 :bottom           0}

Apply animated styles in the style file

;; bad
(defn circle
  []
  (let [opacity (reanimated/use-shared-value 1)]
    [reanimated/view {:style (reanimated/apply-animations-to-style
                              {:opacity opacity}
                              style/circle-container)}]))

;; good
(defn circle
  []
  (let [opacity (reanimated/use-shared-value 1)]
    [reanimated/view {:style (style/circle-container opacity)}]))

Don't use percents to define width/height

In ReactNative, all layouts use the flexbox model, so percentages are unnecessary the vast majority of the time, don't use them. Check out this great interactive flexbox guide by Joshua Comeau.

;; bad
[rn/view {:style {:width "80%"}}]

;; good
[rn/view {:style {:padding-horizontal 20}}]

Don't prepend booleans with is-

It is a common practice in JavaScript and other languages to prepend boolean variable names with is-*. In ClojureScript it is common practice to suffix boolean variable names with a ?. There is no need for both of these and so it is preferable to stick with the latter.

;; bad
(let [is-open? true] ...)

;; good
(let [open? true] ...)

Styles def vs defn

Always use def over defn, unless the style relies on dynamic values, such as deref'ed atoms.

;; bad
(defn title-column []
  {:height 56})

;; good
(def title-column
  {:height 56})
;; bad
(def community-card
  {:background-color (colors/theme-colors colors/white colors/neutral-90)})

;; good
(defn community-card []
  {:background-color (colors/theme-colors colors/white colors/neutral-90)})

Custom Colors

The Status designs have a lot of customization of user and group colors with components and pages. For consistency it is best to use customization-color as the prop key on pages and components. This will help easily identify what pages and components in the application are using customized colors.

;; bad
(defn community-card [{keys [custom-color]}] 
  ...)

;; good
(defn community-card [{keys [customization-color]}] 
  ...)

Using TODOs comments

TODO comments are used extensively in the codebase, but prefer to use them only when strictly necessary and when an issue is not enough to track the work left to be done.

These are all good examples:

;; TODO(@username): <message>
;; TODO(@username): <message>, <issue URL>
;; TODO(YYYY-MM-DD): <message>
;; TODO(@username,YYYY-MM-DD): <message>

Subscription names and event names

Always register events and subscriptions using a meaningful namespace, but don't namespace them with ::. We understand it's a controversial decision because there are both pros and cons to such practice.

Whenever appropriate, it's also recommended to use fake namespaces to convey more knowledge in the keyword about which bounded context (domain) it refers to. You may also use dots to convey hierarchical structures.

;; bad
;; Don't use real namespaced keywords.
(re-frame/reg-sub
 ::profile-pictures-visibility
 :<- [:multiaccount]
 (fn [multiaccount]
   (:profile-pictures-visibility multiaccount)))

;; good
;; Uses a fake namespaced keyword.
(re-frame/reg-sub
 :profile/pictures-visibility
 :<- [:multiaccount]
 (fn [multiaccount]
   (:profile-pictures-visibility multiaccount)))

;; better
;; Uses a fake namespaced keyword with a parent namespace (multiaccount).
(re-frame/reg-sub
 :multiaccount.profile/pictures-visibility
 :<- [:multiaccount]
 (fn [multiaccount]
   (:profile-pictures-visibility multiaccount)))

Declaring view components

Use the simple defn to declare components. Don't use utils.views/defview and utils.views/letsubs.

;; bad
(utils.views/defview browser []
  (utils.views/letsubs [window-width [:dimensions/window-width]]
    (do-something window-width)))

;; good
(defn browser []
  (let [window-width (rf/sub [:dimensions/window-width])]
    (do-something window-width)))

Use [] instead of () in Reagent components

;; bad
[rn/view
 (message-card message)]

;; good
[rn/view
 [message-card message]]

Using re-frame subscriptions and dispatching events

Use the utils.re-frame namespace instead of re-frame.core to subscribe and dispatch.

;; bad
(ns my-namespace
  (:require [re-frame.core :as rf]))

(let [username @(rf/subscribe [:username])]
  [pressable/pressable {:on-press #(rf/dispatch [:do-something])}
   [rn/view
    (str "Hello " username)]])

;; good
(ns my-namespace
  (:require [utils.re-frame :as rf]))

(let [username (rf/sub [:username])]
  [pressable/pressable {:on-press #(rf/dispatch [:do-something])}
   [rn/view
    (str "Hello " username)]])

Registering effects

When registering re-frame effects (reg-fx), prefer to expose a data-only interface because that will allow event handlers to stay pure.

For instance, if an effect needs a on-success callback, allow it to receive a re-frame event vector. This approach is used by us in the json-rpc/call effect, but also by third-party effects, such as https://github.com/Day8/re-frame-http-fx. For the complete rationale, see PR #15936.

Using the effect :json-rpc/call

Prefer the pure version of :json-rpc/call (no callbacks).

;; not as good
(rf/defn accept-contact-request
  {:events [:activity-center.contact-requests/accept]}
  [_ contact-id]
  {:json-rpc/call
   [{:method     "wakuext_acceptContactRequest"
     :params     [{:id contact-id}]
     :on-success #(rf/dispatch [:sanitize-messages-and-process-response %])
     :on-error   #(rf/dispatch [:activity-center.contact-requests/accept-error contact-id %])}]})

;; better
(rf/defn accept-contact-request
  {:events [:activity-center.contact-requests/accept]}
  [_ contact-id]
  {:json-rpc/call
   [{:method     "wakuext_acceptContactRequest"
     :params     [{:id contact-id}]
     :on-success [:sanitize-messages-and-process-response]
     :on-error   [:activity-center.contact-requests/accept-error contact-id]}]})

Registering event handlers

Events must always be declared with the utils.fx/defn macro. Also, don't use re-frame.core/reg-event-db.

;; bad
(re-frame/reg-event-fx
 :wakuv2.ui/save-all-confirmed
 (fn [{:keys [db] :as cofx}]
   ...))

;; good
(fx/defn save-all
  {:events [:wakuv2.ui/save-all-confirmed]}
  [{:keys [db] :as cofx}]
  ...)

Registering top-level re-frame subscriptions

Use subs.root/reg-root-key-sub to register top-level (root) subscriptions. Additionally, register root subscriptions in the subs.root namespace.

;; bad
(re-frame/reg-sub
 :view-id
 (fn [db]
   (:view-id db)))

;; good
(reg-root-key-sub :view-id :view-id)

Registering layer-3 subscriptions

The majority of the subscriptions should be defined as layer-3 subscriptions due to performance constraints.

;; bad
(re-frame/reg-sub
 :ens/preferred-name
 (fn [db]
   (get-in db [:multiaccount :preferred-name])))

;; good
(re-frame/reg-sub
 :ens/preferred-name
 :<- [:multiaccount]
 (fn [multiaccount]
   (:preferred-name multiaccount)))

Requiring quo2 components

Consume quo2 components from quo2.core, unless the namespace is also inside the quo2/ directory.

;; bad
(ns my-namespace
  (:require [quo2.components.icon :as icon]))

(icon/icon :i/verified)

;; good
(ns my-namespace
  (:require [quo2.core :as quo2]))

(quo2/icon :i/verified)

;; also good because both namespaces are inside quo2/
(ns quo2.components.tabs.account-selector
  (:require [quo2.components.markdown.text :as text]))

Require/import

Prefer :as instead of :refer. There are exceptions to this rule, e.g. the test macros deftest and is, which are ubiquitous in the Clojure community.

;; bad
(ns status-im.utils.datetime
  (:require [cljs-time.coerce :refer [from-long]]))

;; good
(ns status-im.utils.datetime
  (:require [cljs-time.coerce :as time.coerce]))

Javascript interop

Use binaryage/oops macros instead of core interop macros.

;; bad
(fn [^js event]
  (.-width (.-nativeEvent event)))

;; good
(require '[oops.core :as  oops])
(fn [event]
  (oops/oget event "nativeEvent.width"))

Accessibility labels

Accessibility labels are currently used only for end-to-end tests. Use keywords instead of strings (remember keywords are cached).

;; bad
[text/text {:accessibility-label "profile-nickname"}
 "Markov"]

;; good
[text/text {:accessibility-label :profile-nickname}
 "Markov"]

Avoid dynamic labels, for example to specify an element's index because Appium already supports element selection based on indices.

;; bad
[button {:accessibility-label (str "do-something" index)}]

;; good
[button {:accessibility-label :do-something}]

Icons

Use the appropriate keyword qualification/namespace and don't directly require namespaces inside quo2/components/.

;; bad
(require '[quo2.components.icon :as icons])
(icons/icon :main-icons2/verified)

;; good
(require '[quo2.core :as quo2])
(quo2/icon :i/verified)

Translations

Prefer to use translation placeholders instead of creating multiple translation keywords and concatenating them into a single string.

;; bad
;; Assume the translation key is:
;;   "biometric-auth-error": "Unable perform biometric authentication"
(str (i18n/label :t/biometric-auth-error) "(" error-code ")")

;; good
;; Assume the translation key is:
;;   "biometric-auth-error": "Unable perform biometric authentication ({{code}})"
(i18n/label :t/biometric-auth-error {:code error-code})

Tests

Subscription tests

Test layer-3 subscriptions by actually subscribing to them, so reframe's signal graph gets validated too.

;; bad
(defn user-recipes
  [[current-user all-recipes location]]
  ...)

(re-frame/reg-sub
 :user/recipes
 :<- [:current-user]
 :<- [:all-recipes]
 :<- [:location]
 user-recipes)

(deftest user-recipes-test
  (testing "builds list of recipes"
    (let [current-user {...}
          all-recipes  {...}
          location     [...]]
      (is (= expected (recipes [current-user all-recipes location]))))))

;; good
(require '[test-helpers.unit :as h])

(re-frame/reg-sub
 :user/recipes
 :<- [:current-user]
 :<- [:all-recipes]
 :<- [:location]
 (fn [[current-user all-recipes location]]
   ...))

(h/deftest-sub :user/recipes
  [sub-name]
  (testing "builds list of recipes"
    (swap! rf-db/app-db assoc
           :current-user {...}
           :all-recipes {...}
           :location [...])
    (is (= expected (rf/sub [sub-name])))))

Project Structure

First, the bird's-eye view with some example ClojureScript files:

src
├── js/
├── mocks/
├── quo2
│   ├── components/
│   ├── foundations/
│   └── theme.cljs
├── react_native
│   ├── gesture.cljs
│   └── platform.cljs
├── status_im/
├── status_im2
│   ├── common
│   │   └── components
│   │       └── bottom_sheet.cljs
│   ├── contexts/
│   ├── setup/
│   └── subs/
├── test_helpers/
└── utils.cljs
  • src/js: Raw Javascript files, e.g. React Native Reanimated worklets.
  • src/mocks: Plumbing configuration to be able to run tests.
  • src/quo2/: The component library for Status Mobile.
  • src/react_native/: Contains only low-level constructs to help React Native work in tandem with Clojure(Script).
  • src/status_im2/: Directory where we try to be as strict as possible about our guidelines and where we prefer to write code for the new, redesigned mobile app.
  • src/status_im/: Directory containing what we call "old code", not yet migrated to new guidelines for the new mobile app.
  • src/status_im2/common/: Directories named common can appear at any level of the directory tree. Just like directories named utils, their directory nesting level communicates their applicable limits.
  • src/status_im2/common/components/: Contains reusable components that are not part of the design system (quo2).
  • src/status_im2/contexts/: Contains bounded contexts, like browser/, messaging/, etc. As much as possible, bounded contexts should not directly require each other's namespaces.
  • src/status_im2/setup/: Contains namespaces that are mostly used to initialize the application, configure test runners, etc. In general, such namespaces should not be required from the outside.
  • src/test_helpers/: Reusable utilities for writing all kinds of tests.
  • src/status_im/subs/: All subscriptions should live inside it.

Directories named utils/ can appear at any level of the directory tree. The directory nesting level precisely indicates its boundaries. For example, a contexts/user_settings/utils/datetime.cljs file communicates that it should only be used in the user_settings context.

src/quo2

The src/quo2/ directory holds all components for the new design system. As much as possible, its sub-directories and component names should reflect the same language used by designers.

Even though the directory lives alongside the rest of the codebase, we should think of it as an external entity that abstracts away particular Status domain knowledge.

Components inside src/quo2/ should not rely on re-frame, i.e. they should not dispatch events or use subscriptions.

Example structure:

src
└── quo2
    ├── components
    │   └── dropdown
    │       ├── style.cljs
    │       ├── test.cljs
    │       └── view.cljs
    └── screens
        └── dropdown
            └── view.cljs

Re-frame events

Event handlers should be defined in files named events.cljs, and they should be close to other things, like view files, components, etc.

For example:

src
└── contexts
    └── browser
        ├── bookmarks/
        ├── options/
        ├── permissions/
        ├── events.cljs
        ├── events_test.cljs
        ├── style.cljs
        └── view.cljs

Test structure

Unit tests should be created alongside their respective source implementation. We prefer them colocated with the source and not like most Clojure (JVM) codebases which mirror the sources in a top-level test directory.

├── models
│   ├── message.cljs
│   └── message_test.cljs
├── models.cljs
└── models_test.cljs

Component tests should be created in a separate directory __tests__, colocated with the source. When the entire component implementation is isolated under a single directory, create a test file named component_spec.cljs instead.

└── filter
    ├── component_spec.cljs
    ├── style.cljs
    └── view.cljs

There's no hard rule on how integration test namespaces should be split, but we're at least striving to define them under appropriate bounded contexts that mirror the source code.

test
├── appium/
└── integration
    ├── browser/
    ├── communities/
    ├── messaging/
    ├── user_settings/
    └── wallet
        └── payment_test.cljs

Glossary

Unit test: The smallest atomic unit that's meaningful to test. For example, tests for utility functions and event handlers are considered unit tests in the mobile codebase. They should be completely deterministic, fast, and they should work flawlessly in the REPL.

Bounded context: A logical separation between different domains. It's an important concept in the Domain-Driven Design literature. See Bounded Context, by Martin Fowler for an introduction to the topic.