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  • If you had to think about the design of your code, explain your design in prose in a comment no later than when you submit the code for review.

  • Write as if the audience was yourself prior to you writing the code.

  • When exploring / analyzing existing code, if you notice that you need to think hard to understand it, then make a PR to add comments with your new understanding. Also fix typos and grammar mistakes that impair the reading, as you find them.
    Do so even if it's not your own code.

  • When there are questions during a code review, add comments to explain the outcome of the review:
    if the reviewer had questions, the next reader will too.

Engineering standards (checked during reviews)

Do’s:

  • Use full sentences. Capital letter at begin, period at the end, with at least a subject and a verb.

  • In a struct, API or protobuf definition, there should be more comments than code.

    • The comments explain the purpose of the fields, as well as their lifecycle: what code initializes them, what code accesses them and why, when fields become obsolete, etc.

    • This rule becomes a “must” if the struct/API/protobuf is part of a public/exported API.

  • Throughout a function body, use comments to separate and summarize different “phases” of the processing in the control flow.

    • Write these comments such that they would be good explanatory comments if the corresponding part of the function body was extracted into a separate function.

  • Make an honest attempt at keeping your comments grammatical.
    Conversely, assume any reviewer suggestions about grammar is done on a neutral and non-accusatory tone. As a reviewer, prefix grammar-related comments as “nit:”.

  • During reviews, point out when adding a (missing) comment would have helped your understanding.

  • Give praise for well-written comments.

Don’t:

  • Write comments that read the code underneath “out loud”, for example:

    • “this line increments the variable x” for x++.

    • “now we iterate over all the strings” for for i := range strs

  • When reviewing a PR, put too much emphasis on comment grammar.
    Grammar remains prefixed by “nits:” in reviews.

Updating comments over time

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When you discover something valuable that should be explained in a comment, but is not yet explained, consider adding/extending a comment with your new knowledge. The next reader will thank you.

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If you find a mistake in a comment, it can be a good use of your time to fix it.

  • If a comment is factually incorrect, then you should consider it as an outright bug and either attempt to fix it immediately or file an issue.

  • If it contains a grammatical or spelling error that makes the reading particularly difficult, it would be valuable to the team and your future self to fix it too.

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Beware of “cosmetic” improvements, e.g. changing one word for another, or fixing “simple” typos that don’t hurt reading. The time spent on creating a commit and a PR and getting it reviewed might not be worth the marginal value of the improvement, unless you can combine the improvement with a larger project.

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Updating comments over time

  • When you discover something valuable that should be explained in a comment, but is not yet explained, consider adding/extending a comment with your new knowledge. The next reader will thank you.

  • If you find a mistake in a comment, it can be a good use of your time to fix it.

    • If a comment is factually incorrect, then you should consider it as an outright bug and either attempt to fix it immediately or file an issue.

    • If it contains a grammatical or spelling error that makes the reading particularly difficult, it would be valuable to the team and your future self to fix it too.

  • Beware of “cosmetic” improvements, e.g. changing one word for another, or fixing “simple” typos that don’t hurt reading. The time spent on creating a commit and a PR and getting it reviewed might not be worth the marginal value of the improvement, unless you can combine the improvement with a larger project.

  • Also consider the marginal impact of aesthetic changes on automation and the output of git blame, as discussed here.

Engineering standards (checked during reviews)

Do’s:

  • Use full sentences. Capital letter at begin, period at the end, with at least a subject and a verb.

  • In a struct, API or protobuf definition, there should be more comments than code.

    • The comments explain the purpose of the fields, as well as their lifecycle: what code initializes them, what code accesses them and why, when fields become obsolete, etc.

    • This rule becomes a “must” if the struct/API/protobuf is part of a public/exported API.

  • Throughout a function body, use comments to separate and summarize different “phases” of the processing in the control flow.

    • Write these comments such that they would be good explanatory comments if the corresponding part of the function body was extracted into a separate function.

  • Make an honest attempt at keeping your comments grammatical.
    Conversely, assume any reviewer suggestions about grammar is done on a neutral and non-accusatory tone. As a reviewer, prefix grammar-related comments as “nit:”.

  • During reviews, point out when adding a (missing) comment would have helped your understanding.

  • Give praise for well-written comments.

Don’t:

  • Write comments that read the code underneath “out loud”, for example:

    • “this line increments the variable x” for x++.

    • “now we iterate over all the strings” for for i := range strs

  • When reviewing a PR, put too much emphasis on comment grammar.
    Grammar remains prefixed by “nits:” in reviews.

Examples

Top-level design comments

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