Naming conventions directory - lowercase (directory) filename - corresponding class name without prefix (Filename) class - capitalized (ClassName) member function - lowercase/capitalized (memberFunction) member variable - lowercase/underscore/trailing underscore (member_variable_) Trailing underscore prevents conflict with accessor member function name. function - lowercase/capitalized (functionName) comments - use capitalized sentences that end with periods C++ code files should use a .cc file extension C++ header files should use a .hh file extension Use ifdef/define's to protect headers from being read more than once. Name the define variable the same as the header in uppercase. For example, for Clock.hh #ifndef STA_CLOCK_H #define STA_CLOCK_H ... #endif In general it is better to for class variables to use pointers to objects of other classes rather than embedding the instance directly. This only requires that the class be declared rather than defined, many times breaking a dependency on another header file. Header files that define the classes of a sub-directory allow other headers to have pointers to the objects without pulling in the details of the class definitions. These headers are named "DirectoryClass.hh" where Directory is the capitalized name of the sub-directory. Place comments describing public functions and classes in header files rather than code files because a consumer is more likely to have access to the header and that is the first place they will look. Comments for private functions can be in the source file. The return type of a function should be on the line before the function name. Spaces should be added after commas in the argument list. Split the function arguments to fit on one line. For example: return_type function(type1 arg1, type2, arg2) { } Functions should be less than one screen long. Break long functions up into smaller ones. Lines should be less than 80 characters long. Try to avoid assignments inside `if'-conditions. For example, don't write this: if ((foo = (char *) malloc (sizeof *foo)) == 0) fatal ("virtual memory exhausted"); instead, write this: foo = (char *) malloc (sizeof *foo); if (foo == 0) fatal ("virtual memory exhausted"); Use braces around if/for bodies that are more than one line. IE, if (pred) for (int i = 0; i < len; i++) { // this body should be in {}'s ... } Add a default clause to all switches calling switchCaseNotHandled: switch (type) { case edge_interconnect: ... default: switchCaseNotHandled(); } Put return types for functions on the line before the function name: Cell * Library::findCell(char *name) { ... } Class member functions should be grouped in public, protected and then private order. class Frob { public: protected: private: friend class Frobulator; } Don't declare class variables as const. It means any downstream code that accesses the member cannot modify it, which is overly restrictive. Never use [] to lookup a map value because it creates a key/null value pair if the lookup fails. Use sta::Map::findKey instead. Avoid nested classes/enums because SWIG has trouble with them. ................................................................ Warning get_ not found sdf timing arc not found disabling timing arcs to break loops virtual clock with no sources (no pins) invalid endpoint for constrained paths sdf DESIGN does not match top level cell name set_input_delay on clk port (deprecation warning) link cannot resolve reference (module/cell not found) Errors cannot open file file syntax error cmd illegal command option combinations cmd extra positional args cmd unknown keyword option cmd unknown sdf pin not found ................................................................ if configure.ac changes autoconf if Makefile.am changes automake Adding a new source file Add header and source to source_dir/Makefile.am cd source_dir; make clean Adding a new source directory Add to configure.ac STA_SUBDIRS, AC_CONFIG_FILES bootstrap configure make ................................................................ Swig notes C null pointers (zero) turn into "NULL" values in TCL. TCL "NULL" strings turn into NULL (zero) pointers in C. # TCL lexpr-funcall eval exec $prog $args