These are mostly "suggestions", if you feel like your code is readable, comprehensible to others; and most importantly doesn't result in unreadable spaghetti you're fine to go.
But for new developers you may find that following these guidelines will make everything x10 easier.
## Naming conventions
Simply put, types/classes are named as `PascalCase`, same for methods and functions like `AddElement`. Variables are named `like_this_snake_case` and constants are `IN_SCREAMING_CASE`.
Template typenames prefer short names like `T`, `I`, `U`, if a longer name is required either `Iterator` or `perform_action` are fine as well. Do not use names like `SS` as systems like solaris define it for registers, in general do not use any of the following for short names:
-`SS`, `DS`, `GS`, `FS`: Segment registers, defined by Solaris `<ucontext.h>`
-`EAX`, `EBX`, `ECX`, `EDX`, `ESI`, `EDI`, `ESP`, `EBP`, `EIP`: Registers, defined by Solaris.
-`X`: Defined by some utility headers, avoid.
-`_`: Defined by gettext, avoid.
-`N`, `M`, `S`: Preferably don't use this for types, use it for numeric constants.
-`TR`: Used by some weird `<ucontext.h>` whom define the Task Register as a logical register to provide to the user... (Need to remember which OS in specific).
Macros must always be in `SCREAMING_CASE`. Do not use short letter macros as systems like Solaris will conflict with them; a good rule of thumb is >5 characters per macro - i.e `THIS_MACRO_IS_GOOD`, `AND_ALSO_THIS_ONE`.
Formatting is extremelly lax, the general rule of thumb is: Don't add new lines just to increase line count. The less lines we have to look at, the better. This means also packing densely your code while not making it a clusterfuck. Strike a balance of "this is a short and comprehensible piece of code" and "my eyes are actually happy to see this!". Don't just drop the entire thing in a single line and call it "dense code", that's just spaghetti posing as code. In general, be mindful of what other devs need to look at.
And about templates, use them sparingly, don't just do meta-templating for the sake of it, do it when you actually need it. This isn't a competition to see who can make the most complicated and robust meta-templating system. Just use what works, and preferably stick to the standard libary instead of reinventing the wheel. Additionally:
```c++
// NOT OK This will create (T * N * C * P) versions of the same function. DO. NOT. DO. THIS.