this post was submitted on 22 Oct 2023
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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/6863402

Fed up w/ my ad-hoc scripts to display the targets and variables in a makefile(s), I've decided to write a reusable piece of code to do that: https://github.com/bahmanm/bmakelib/issues/81


The first step toward that would be to understand the common commenting styles. So far I have identified 4 patterns in the wild which you can find below.

Are there any style guides/conventions around this topic? Any references to well-written makefiles I can get inspiration from?


A

VAR1 = foo   ## short one-liner comment
my-target:   ## short one-liner comment 
	…

B

# longer comment which 
# may span
# several lines
VAR1 = foo

## comments can be prefixed w/ more than # 
## lorem ipsum dolor
my-target: 
	…

C

#####
# a comment block which is marked w/ several #s on
# an otherwise blank line
#####
VAR1 = foo

D

#####
#>    # heading 1
#     This is a variation to have markdown comments
#     inside makefile comments.
#
#     ## It's a made-up style!  
#     I came up w/ this style and used it to document `bmakelib`.
#     For example: https://is.gd/QtiqyA (opens github)
#<
#####
VAR1 = foo
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[–] [email protected] 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The GNU Coding Standards has a section on Make, which I would think is the most prominent Make style guide.

The doc itself doesn't have a section on comments, but in the few examples given in that doc, they use style B.

https://www.gnu.org/prep/standards/html_node/Makefile-Conventions.html

[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

That's a great starting point - and a good read anyways!

Thanks 🙏