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Help:Extension:Translate/Developer guide

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Translate extension is a large extension with hundreds of classes. This page provides guidance for developers who want to work on the code. After reading this page and linked documents you will better understand how code in Translate is organized and what special conventions are used. General MediaWiki development policies, coding conventions and how to use tools like Gerrit and Phabricator are out of scope. You are assumed to be familiar with these topics and when they apply to Translate, it will not be repeated here.

Translate extension is undergoing many large migrations simultaneously. Here we list the major migrations that are on-going, and detail which style is preferred for new code. Generally, when modifying existing code, it is better to keep to current style, and do migrations separately. Some smaller cleanups are okay to do when touching code.

Namespace migration

We are in process of migrating all Translate code under the namespace \MediaWiki\Extension\Translate. All namespaced code is placed under the src/ directory. All new PHP files should be put in an appropriate namespace. See Extension:Translate/Namespaces for guidance which namespaces are going to be available. Namespaces are organized by domain, rather than function. Abbreviations should be avoided in namespaces and class names. Legacy code is in the repository root and various subdirectories.

In Gerrit, SonarCube calculates code review coverage only for code under src/ directory.

Splitting tests into integration and unit tests

Previously there was no distinction of integration and unit tests. For new code, unit tests should be the main type of tests. Unit tests are placed under tests/phpunit/unit directory matching the namespace layout. There is a Makefile in that directory to easily run all or parts of unit tests while developing.

Type declarations and comments

All new code should declare both parameter and return types. In addition strict types should be enabled using declare( strict_types = 1 );.

Thanks to type declarations, most function and method comments are now redundant, as they would only repeat the parameter names and types. Do not add redundant documentation unless it provides additional value. One such example is to provide more accurate type hints for array types, for example:

class UserManager {
  /** @return User[] */
  public function getAllUsers(): array { ... }
}

As illustrated above, for comments having only one tag or one line description, do use the one line comment syntax as well.

There is no linter about spacing around : in return type declarations. Until such standard comes, please use the illustrated style: no space before, one space after.

Constructor dependency injection

New code should have all its dependencies injected via constructor. In some cases this is not yet possible due to the lack of ObjectFactory support for some types of classes like jobs and maintenance scripts. For such new code, place all dependencies on the class constructor (or main entry point to the class) to easy migration to constructor dependency injection in the future.

Maintenance scripts cannot use any code that requires PHP autoloader, hence all dependencies can only be declared in the execute method, not in the constructor.


File header

For new code, we have chosen the following minimalistic header:

<?php
declare( strict_types = 1 );

namespace Example;

use OtherStuff;

/**
 * Class description.
 * @author Your name
 * @license GPL-2.0-or-later
 * @since 2020.06
 */
class ExampleClass {
  /** @return User[] */
  public function getAllUsers(): array { ... }
}

If you wish to assert your copyright more explicitly, you can optionally add @copyright tag as well.

Deprecation and version numbers

When changing Translate code in backwards incompatible ways, do check https://codesearch.wmcloud.org/search/ for any users of the code. Known users are TwnMainPage, TranslateSVG, CentralNotice, MassMessage and bunch of stuff in the translatewiki repository.

You can use the deprecation facilities provided by MediaWiki core, including the @deprecated tag and wfDeprecated() hard deprecation. If there are no known users of the code, it is okay to change it in backwards incompatible way without deprecation, unless it is explicitly marked as stable (See Stable interface policy). Code marked as stable should be hard-deprecated at least for one MediaWiki Language Extension Bundle (MLEB) release.

MediaWiki core version numbers are meaningless in the context of Translate, as Translate always supports multiple MediaWiki releases. Translate itself uses YYYY.MM style versioning (as part of MLEB). New classes and methods should be annotated with @since YYYY.MM tags.