neoneo-go/docs/conventions.md
Roman Khimov 0e2784cd2c always wrap errors when creating new ones with fmt.Errorf()
It doesn't really change anything in most of the cases, but it's a useful
habit anyway.

Fix #350.
2020-08-07 12:21:52 +03:00

1.2 KiB

Conventions

This document will list conventions that this repo should follow. These are guidelines and if you believe that one should not be followed, then please state why in your PR. If you believe that a piece of code does not follow one of the conventions listed, then please open an issue before making any changes.

When submitting a new convention, please open an issue for discussion, if possible please highlight parts in the code where this convention could help the code readiblity or simplicity.

Avoid Named return paramters

func example(test int) (num int) { a = test + 1 num = a * test return }

In the above function we have used a named return paramter, which allows you to include a simple return statement without the variables you are returning. This practice can cause confusion when functions become large or the logic becomes complex, so these should be avoided.

Use error wrapping

Bad:

err = SomeAPI()
if err != nil {
    return fmt.Errorf("something bad happened: %v", err)
}

Good:

err = SomeAPI()
if err != nil {
    return fmt.Errorf("something bad happened: %w", err)
}

Error wrapping allows errors.Is and errors.As usage in upper layer functions which might be useful.