You're reading the documentation for a development version.
For the latest stable release version, please have a look at master.

Coding conventions

Introduction

The coding conventions used in SpinalHDL are the same as the ones documented in the Scala Style Guide.

Some additional practical details and cases are explained in next pages.

class vs case class

When you define a Bundle or a Component, it is preferable to declare it as a case class.

The reasons are:

  • It avoids the use of new keywords. Never having to use it is better than sometimes, under some conditions.

  • A case class provides a clone function. This is useful in SpinalHDL when there is a need to clone a Bundle, for example, when you define a new Reg or a new Stream of some kind.

  • Construction parameters are directly visible from outside.

[case] class

All classes names should start with a uppercase letter

class Fifo extends Component {

}

class Counter extends Area {

}

case class Color extends Bundle {

}

companion object

A companion object should start with an uppercase letter.

object Fifo {
  def apply(that: Stream[Bits]): Stream[Bits] = {...}
}

object MajorityVote {
  def apply(that: Bits): UInt = {...}
}

An exception to this rule is when the companion object is used as a function (only apply inside), and these apply functions don’t generate hardware:

object log2 {
  def apply(value: Int): Int = {...}
}

function

A function should always start with a lowercase letter:

def sinTable = (0 until sampleCount).map(sampleIndex => {
  val sinValue = Math.sin(2 * Math.PI * sampleIndex / sampleCount)
  S((sinValue * ((1 << resolutionWidth) / 2 - 1)).toInt, resolutionWidth bits)
})

val rom =  Mem(SInt(resolutionWidth bits), initialContent = sinTable)

instances

Instances of classes should always start with a lowercase letter:

val fifo   = new Fifo()
val buffer = Reg(Bits(8 bits))

if / when

Scala if and SpinalHDL when should normally be written in the following way:

if(cond) {
  ...
} else if(cond) {
  ...
} else {
  ...
}

when(cond) {
  ...
}.elseWhen(cond) {
  ...
}.otherwise {
  ...
}

Exceptions could be:

  • It’s fine to omit the dot before otherwise.

  • It’s fine to compress an if/when statement onto a single line if it makes the code more readable.

switch

SpinalHDL switch should normally be written in the following way:

switch(value) {
  is(key) {

  }
  is(key) {

  }
  default {

  }
}

It’s fine to compress an is/default statement onto a single line if it makes the code more readable.

Parameters

Grouping parameters of a Component/Bundle inside a case class is generally welcome because:

  • Easier to carry/manipulate to configure the design

  • Better maintainability

case class RgbConfig(rWidth: Int, gWidth: Int, bWidth: Int) {
  def getWidth = rWidth + gWidth + bWidth
}

case class Rgb(c: RgbConfig) extends Bundle {
  val r = UInt(c.rWidth bits)
  val g = UInt(c.gWidth bits)
  val b = UInt(c.bWidth bits)
}

But this should not be applied in all cases. For example: in a FIFO, it doesn’t make sense to group the dataType parameter with the depth parameter of the fifo because, in general, the dataType is something related to the design, while the depth is something related to the configuration of the design.

class Fifo[T <: Data](dataType: T, depth: Int) extends Component {

}