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CloudCompare Coding rules

Naming

Names in CloudCompare should be as descriptive as possible, without abbreviations, apart for very clear or common ones (such as fw instead of forward, etc.). Most of variable names should begin with a lower case letter. If the name is composed of multiple words, the first letter of each word should be in upper case (apart for the first one of course).

Example: numberOfPoints, ptsCount (or even ptsNum for the laziest ;-)

Specific cases

  • static variables: should always begin with prefix s_ (in lower case – like s_defaultFilename
  • static methods: should always begin with a upper case letter (like InitGLEW)
  • classes: should always begin with prefix cc (in lower case – like ccConsole)
  • enumerators:
    • all letters in upper case
    • should always begin with prefix CC_
    • words are separated by underscore (like CC_OBJECT_FLAG)
  • macros: begin with prefix MACRO_ followed by a standard method name (like MACRO_SkipUnselected)
  • const variables:
    • all letters in upper case
    • words are separated by underscore (like NORMALS_QUANTIZE_LEVEL)
  • macro const (#define): should be avoided; same syntax as const

Files

  • File naming follows the same rule as most CloudCompare elements (first letter in lower case, etc.)
  • Each class should be saved alone in a header + source file couple. Exceptionally, very small classes that are used by a single class may be saved along with this class. The header + source filename should be the same as the main class.

Example: ccConsole saved in ccConsole.h and ccConsole.cpp

  • Filenames shouldn’t contain any space character. Use underscore instead.
  • All data-related classes (data models, database, etc) should be saved in db directory.
  • Images (icons) should all be saved in the images directory (or one of its subdirectories).
  • GUI templates (mainly .ui Qt files) should be saved in the ui_templates directory

Tabs and indentation

  • Indentation is expected to be made in Tabs only, each of size 4.

Summary

Element Example
Class ccMyClass
File ccMyClass.h and ccMyClass.cpp
Attribute/variable myAttribute
Static attribute/variable s_myAttribute
Method getMethod()
Static method GetMethod()
Structure myStruct
Enumerator CC_MY_ENUMERATOR
Macro MACRO_myMethod
Const variables MY_CONSTANT
Const (#define) MY_CONSTANT

Unix compliance

For avoiding incompatible syntax with Unix environments, the following rules must be respected: ¬ use only "/" for include paths.

Example: include "../db/ccPointCloud.h"

File headers

Any new source file (.h, .cpp, etc.) integrated to any CloudCompare module (CCLib, qCC, etc.) must present the official header.

Here is the official header for LGPL modules (CCLib, etc.):

//##########################################################################
//#                                                                        #
//#                              MODULE NAME                               #
//#                                                                        #
//#  This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify  #
//#  it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public License as       #
//#  published by the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License.  #
//#                                                                        #
//#  This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,       #
//#  but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of        #
//#  MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the         #
//#  GNU General Public License for more details.                          #
//#                                                                        #
//#                             COPYRIGHT: XXX                             #
//#                                                                        #
//##########################################################################

And for official header for GPL modules (qCC, etc.):

//##########################################################################
//#                                                                        #
//#                            MODULE NAME                                 #
//#                                                                        #
//#  This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify  #
//#  it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by  #
//#  the Free Software Foundation; version 2 of the License.               #
//#                                                                        #
//#  This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,       #
//#  but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of        #
//#  MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.  See the         #
//#  GNU General Public License for more details.                          #
//#                                                                        #
//#                             COPYRIGHT: XXX                             #
//#                                                                        #
//##########################################################################

Designing a new qCC plugin

Introduction

Designing a new plugin is an easy way to extend qCC (CloudCompare) functionalities, without the pain of having to modify its core and do all the connections.

One can easily design a new function, that may be applied on one or several entities currently loaded in CloudCompare. Moreover, the plugin can display its own dialog.

Dummy plugin structures are provided to get you started.

1. Choose your type

There are 3 types of plugins:

  1. Standard: plugins that add actions, processing tools.
  2. IO: plugins that adds to CloudCompare the ability to read or write additional file formats.
  3. GL: plugins that do things with the OpenGL rendering.

Each type of plugin has a dummy template ready that can be found in the plugins/example directory.

Once you know which type of plugin you wish to make, copy the plugin's template into the directory plugins/private. (Create the private folder if it does not exist).

CloudCompare's CMake will scan this plugins/private directory to add your plugin to the list of buildable plugins.

2. Renaming

After copying the template the next steps involve renaming the folder, class name, etc to names of your choice.

Here is a non-exhaustive list of things to be changed:

  • Rename the plugin's directory (e.g. from ExamplePlugin to SuperPlugin)
  • Rename the .qrc file to have the same name as your plugin's directory (e.g. ExamplePlugin.qrc -> SuperPlugin.qrc)
  • In the top-level CMakeLists.txt of your new plugin:
    • Change the name of the option that controls whether your plugin should be built
    • Change the name of the project
  • In the "main" .cpp and .h file (e.g. the ExamplePlugin.cpp and ExamplePlugin.h) change the class name
  • Rename the .cpp and .h files and don't forget to update the different CMakeList.txt.
  • Update the info.json file.
  • If your plugin relies on additional libraries, you can add them to the CMakeList.txt See for instance the equivalent files for the qHPR or qPCV plugins.

This list may miss some elements that you should remove, searching/greping for dummy should show you the things left.

Some guidance about what you should do is given in the form of comments inside the files of the template you started from.

Don't forget to add the correct option to your CMake configuration to make sure you plugin gets built.

Resources

You can now begin with the real work: implementing the plugin action.

All algorithms (in CCLib) and 3D entities (in CCLib, qCC_db, qCC_io and qCC_gl) are accessible inside the plugin. Check the doxygen documentation of those projects for more information.