From: Akira Yokosawa <akiyks@gmail.com>
To: Martin Fernandez <martin.fernandez@eclypsium.com>
Cc: bagasdotme@gmail.com, dwaipayanray1@gmail.com, joe@perches.com,
linux-doc@vger.kernel.org, lukas.bulwahn@gmail.com,
Akira Yokosawa <akiyks@gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [PATCH v3] doc/checkpatch: Add description to MACRO_ARG_REUSE
Date: Wed, 6 Jul 2022 23:03:41 +0900 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <16d9f9ea-0727-91cf-5443-eb4d3640ec60@gmail.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <CAKgze5Yv+mzbsS+L50GHwLLJm4SfDVRP4QKwUPBdihqsq6OjJQ@mail.gmail.com>
Hi,
Let me chime in.
On Wed, 6 Jul 2022 10:19:46 -0300, Martin Fernandez wrote:
> On 7/6/22, Bagas Sanjaya <bagasdotme@gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Mon, Jul 04, 2022 at 07:57:57PM -0300, Martin Fernandez wrote:
>>> + **ARG_REUSE**
>>> + Using the same argument multiple times in the macro definition
>>> + would lead to unwanted side-effects.
>>> +
>>> + For example, given a `min` macro defined like::
>>> +
>>> + #define min(x, y) ((x) < (y) ? (x) : (y))
>>> +
>>> + If you call it with `min(foo(x), 0)`, it would expand to::
>>> +
>>> + foo(x) < 0 ? foo(x) : 0
>>> +
>>
>> Nit: literal blocks are indented three spaces relative to surrounding
>> paragraph.
>
> I just been told that I should be using 2 (I was using 1) and the rest
> of the file have 2 spaces...
I think what Bagas said above is convention of Python documentation [1].
As far I see, there is no such convention in kernel documentation.
Indents of 2 spaces are fine as far as they are consistent in
related .rst files, I suppose.
[1]: https://devguide.python.org/documenting/#use-of-whitespace
>
>>> + If `foo` has side-effects or it's an expensive calculation the
>>> + results might not be what the user intended.
>>> +
>>> + For a workaround the idea is to define local variables to hold the
>>> + macro's arguments. Checkout the actual implementation of `min` in
>>> + include/linux/minmax.h for the full implementation of the
>>> + workaround.
>>> +
>>
>> For inline code, the correct syntax is ``some text``.
>
> You are right, I just misleadingly reused the syntax for some other
> example in the file.
>
>> However, by
>> convention here, the backquotes aren't used where these would be
>> appropriate, like variable and function names.
>
> So you are saying that for single variables and functions you don't
> use double backquotes?
If you want crossref from the functions to their kernel-doc definitions,
you can just say function() --- no double backquotes.
If you say ``function()``, crossref won't work. See [2] for such
crossrefs.
[2]: https://www.kernel.org/doc/html/latest/doc-guide/kernel-doc.html#cross-referencing-from-restructuredtext
For simple variables, the style is up to you. Too much double
backquotes might make the text hard to read as plain text, though.
Thanks, Akira
>
>> For the last paragraph, better say "The workaround is to define local
>> variables to hold macro arguments. See the min macro in
>> include/linux/minmax.h for example.".
>
> I like it. Thanks.
>
>> --
>> An old man doll... just what I always wanted! - Clara
>>
>
next prev parent reply other threads:[~2022-07-06 14:04 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2022-07-04 22:57 [PATCH v3] doc/checkpatch: Add description to MACRO_ARG_REUSE Martin Fernandez
2022-07-06 7:30 ` Bagas Sanjaya
2022-07-06 13:19 ` Martin Fernandez
2022-07-06 14:03 ` Akira Yokosawa [this message]
2022-07-06 14:07 ` Martin Fernandez
2022-07-06 11:29 ` Lukas Bulwahn
2022-07-06 13:26 ` Martin Fernandez
2022-07-06 14:21 ` Lukas Bulwahn
2022-07-06 17:19 ` Martin Fernandez
2022-07-06 15:09 ` Akira Yokosawa
2022-07-06 17:24 ` Martin Fernandez
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