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Code Style

This style guide comes from dav1d

Tabs vs Spaces
No tabs, only spaces; 4-space indentation

Be aware that some tools might add tabs when auto aligning the code, please check your commits with a diff tool for tabs.

For multi-line statements, the indentation of the next line depends on the context of the statement and braces around it.
For example, if you have a long assignment, you can choose to either align it to the = of the first line, or (if that leads to less lines of code) just indent 1 level further from the first line's indentation level:

const int my_var = something1 &&
                   something2;

or

const int my_var = something1 +
    something2 - something3 * something4;

However, if there are braces, the first non-whitespace character of the line should be aligned with the brace level that it is part of:

const int my_var = (something1 +
                    something2) * something3;

Use CamelCase for types and under_score for variable names (TypeName my_instance;)
Use const where possible, except in forward function declarations in header files, where we only use it for const-arrays:

int my_func(const array *values, int arg);

[..]

int my_func(const array *const values, const int num) {
    [..]
}

Braces go on the same line for single-line statements, but on a new line for multi-line statements:

static void function(const int argument) {
    do_something();
}

versus

static void function(const int argument1,
                     const int argument2)
{
    do_something();
}

Braces are only necessary for multi-line code blocks or multi-line condition statements;

if (condition1 && condition2)
    do_something();

and

if (condition) {
    do_something_1();
    do_something_2();
}

and

if (condition1 &&
    condition2)
{
    do_something();
}

Switch/case are indented at the same level, and the code block is indented one level deeper:

switch (a) {
case 1:
    bla();
    break;
}

but for very trivial blocks, you can also put everything on one single line:

switch (a) {
case 1: bla(); break;
}

Lines should idealy not be longer than 80 characters. We allow exceptions if wrapping the line would lead to exceptional ugliness, and this is done on a case-by-case basis.
Don't use goto except for standard error handling.
Use native types (int, unsigned, etc.) for scalar variables where the upper bound of a size doesn't matter.
Use sized types (uint8_t, int16_t, etc.) for vector/array variables where the upper bound of the size matters.
Use dynamic types (pixel, coef, etc.) so multi-bitdepth templating works as it should.

Doxygen Documentation

/* File level Description */

/*********************************************************************************
* @file
*  file.c
*
* @brief
*  Brief description about file
*
* @author
*  Author
*
* @par List of Functions:
* - fun1()
* - fun2()
*
* @remarks
*  Any remarks
*
********************************************************************************/

/* Macro Description */
/** Brief description of MACRO */
#define MACRO   val

/* enum Description : description for all entries */
/** Brief description of ENUMs */
enum {
    ENUM1         = 1, /**< Brief description of ENUM1 */
    ENUM2         = 2, /**< Brief description of ENUM2 */
    ENUM3         = 3  /**< Brief description of ENUM3 */
}

/* enum Description : top level description */
/** Brief description of ENUMs */
enum {
    ENUM1         = 1,
    ENUM2         = 2,
    ENUM3         = 3
}

/* structure level Description */

struct {
    member1, /**< Brief description of member1 */
    member2, /**< Brief description of member2 */
    member3, /**< Brief description of member3 */
}

/* Function level Description */

/*********************************************************************************
*
* @brief
*  Brief description of function
*
* @par Description:
*  Detailed description of function
*
* @param[in] prm1
*  Brief description of prm1
*
* @param[in] prm2
*  Brief description of prm2
*
* @param[out] prm3
*  Brief description of prm3
*
* @returns  Brief description of return value
*
* @remarks
*  Any remarks
*
********************************************************************************/

Post-coding

After coding, make sure to trim any trailing white space and convert any tabs to 4 spaces

For bash

find . -name <Filename> -type f -exec sed -i 's/\t/    /;s/[[:space:]]*$//' {} +

Where <Filename> is "*.c" or "*.(your file extention here)"
Search the find man page or tips and tricks for more options.
Do not use find on root without a filter or with the .git folder still present. Doing so will corrupt your repo folder and you will need to copy a new .git folder and re-setup your folder.

Alternatively, for single file(s):

sed -i 's/\t/    /;s/[[:space:]]*$//' <Filename/Filepath>

Note: For macOS and BSD related distros, you may need to use sed -i '' inplace due to differences with GNU sed.

For Powershell/pwsh

ls -Recurse -File -Filter *.c | ForEach-Object{$(Get-Content $_.FullName | Foreach {Write-Output "$($_.TrimEnd().Replace("`t","    "))`n"}) | Set-Content -NoNewline -Encoding utf8 $_.FullName}

Where -Filter *.c has your extention/filename(s).
This does not work with pwsh on non-windows OS.
Search the docs for pwsh related commands and powershell related commands for more information on what they do.
Do not use ls without a -Filter on the root directory or with the .git folder still present. Doing so will corrupt your repo folder and you will need to copy a new .git folder and re-setup your folder.

Alternatively, for a single file:

$filename="<filename>"; Get-content $filename | Foreach {Write-Output "$($_.TrimEnd().Replace("`t","    "))`n"}) | Set-Content -NoNewline $filename

Where <filename> is the specific file you want to trim.