Prelude

Recently I’ve noticed that the Community Clojure Style Guide has turned 6! According to git log the project started its life on the 3rd of January, 2013!

commit 3abbcfb8b536999d0b1d64b531a9c57b49b4562a Author: Bozhidar Batsov <bozhidar@batsov.com> Date: Thu Jan 3 10:09:53 2013 -0800 Initial commit

Time sure flies fast!

After the initial announcement of the guide, I never really revisited the topic, so it seems to me that this “birthday”, is as good of an opportunity as any, to do so.

Impact

The main purpose of a style guide is always to educate (beginners) and align (experts). It showcases in a concise form the convention of a language and how to effectively use it. Its existence also spares you from the burden of having to make a lot of trivial decisions yourselves and makes it easier for people to work on many different projects (provided those projects applied the same style principles).

Did the Clojure style guide achieve its primary objectives? From my perspective it seems that the guide had a good impact on the community - I’ve often seen it cited here and there, which means that people are using it. I can only guess how many people are actually abiding by it, but I’m feeling optimistic in this regard.

The impact was not as big, however, as I had originally envisioned, because I never got to the second step I had planned - namely writing a lint-like tool that enforces the guide automatically. I pretty much wanted to replicate what I had done for Ruby with the Community Ruby Style Guide and RuboCop. I recall I spent a lot of time thinking about the name of the lint tool, but I never actually found time to start it.

Despite my failure, others managed to fill some of the gap - I know that zprint has a community formatting mode and I think that cljfmt has defaults that are similar to what’s outlined in the style guide.

Current Status

The work on the guide has stagnated a bit in the recent years, as I’ve been very busy with work and other projects, and there haven’t been many contributors to the project. When the guide was announced a lot of people helped with growing and polishing it, but after a while the work grinded almost to a halt.

I’d really love for us to find a few more editors to help with the guide (and more occasional contributors, of course), so that the guide can be completed and always kept up-to-date with the best practices in the Clojure community. Having more editors should also dispel any notion that despite its name (community guide), the guide reflects my personal stylistic preferences, as opposed to those of the broader Clojure community.

Future Goals

So, I guess now you’re wondering how exactly can you help, right? Let me give you a few ideas - some goals I set out to achieve and never got to accomplishing.

Cohesion

One of the problems of the guide today is that certain sections are just stubs, compared to others. All sections should have equally good rationales, examples and so on. Currently that’s certainly no the case for sections like State Management , Macros , Documentation , etc.

A good style guide is a cohesive style guide. It’s a style guide with good style.

Coverage of Newer Clojure Features

Clojure introduced many new features after the guide was created that never made their way to it. Some things that come to mind are transducers, specs, reader conditionals.

We should totally fix this!

Better Rationales

I’m a big fan of Stuart Sierra’s series on Clojure Do’s and Don’t. They are similar to a style guide, but the articles there go into great detail when it comes to the rationale for the suggestions in them.

While a style guide has to be concise by definition, it also has to be clear. The Clojure style guide can certainly take a page from Stu’s book and improve the rationales of many of its suggestions.

I also think that he has covered many of topics that are not covered in the style guide presently, so it’d be nice if we borrowed those as well.

So, what’s “better rationale” to begin with. Well, unfortunately that’s really subjective, but let me try to illustrate this with a few examples. Here’s a rule with a weak rationale (or poor examples):

Leverage comp when doing so yields simpler code.

;; Assuming `(:require [clojure.string :as str])`... ;; good (map #(str/capitalize (str/trim %)) ["top " " test "]) ;; better (map (comp str/capitalize str/trim) ["top " " test "])

Is this really simpler? Why not use threading?

And here are a few examples a consider better - either because they are self-explanatory, or they have better rationale attached to them:

Prefer condp instead of cond when the predicate & expression don’t change.

;; good (cond (= x 10) :ten (= x 20) :twenty (= x 30) :thirty :else :dunno) ;; much better (condp = x 10 :ten 20 :twenty 30 :thirty :dunno)

Prefer case instead of cond or condp when test expressions are compile-time constants.

;; good (cond (= x 10) :ten (= x 20) :twenty (= x 30) :forty :else :dunno) ;; better (condp = x 10 :ten 20 :twenty 30 :forty :dunno) ;; best (case x 10 :ten 20 :twenty 30 :forty :dunno)

Don’t use the interop syntax to construct type and record instances. deftype and defrecord automatically create constructor functions. Use those instead of the interop syntax, as they make it clear that you’re dealing with a deftype or a defrecord . See this article for more details.

(defrecord Foo [a b]) (deftype Bar [a b]) ;; good (->Foo 1 2) (map->Foo {:b 4 :a 3}) (->Bar 1 2) ;; bad (Foo. 1 2) (Bar. 1 2)

Note that deftype doesn’t define the map->Type constructor. It’s available only for records.

I hope you get the point.

Looking Forward

Once the goals I’ve mentioned above have been dealt with, I’m considering to submit the style guide to https://clojure.org. Hopefully Alex, Rich and Stu would consider it a valuable addition to the official documentation.

I’d also love to find the time to write that lint tool I mentioned earlier, but I doubts that’s going to happen in the foreseeable future.

Epilogue

If you’ve got any generic feedback about the style guide (structure, content, examples, whatever) - I’d love to hear it! I’m looking forward to working with all of you on making the guide better and more useful to all the members of the Clojure community!

Keep hacking and keep editing!