Seeing that Uncle Bob is making a new version of Clean Code I decided to try and find this article about the original.

  • @realharo@lemm.ee
    link
    fedilink
    13
    edit-2
    7 months ago

    It’s not nitpicking, stuff like this is far more impactful than choosing between 5 lines vs 10 lines long methods, or whether the hasExtraCommissionsif” belongs inside or outside of calculateExtraCommissions. This kind of thing should immediately jump out at you as a red flag when you’re reading code, it’s not something to handwave away as a detail.

    • dandi8
      link
      fedilink
      -57 months ago

      I never claimed it’s not important, I’m just saying it’s not relevant here, as there is no context to where this method was put in the code.

      As I said, it might be top-level. You have to mutate state somewhere, because that’s what applications ultimately do. You just don’t want state mutations everywhere, because that makes bad code.

      • @BatmanAoD@programming.dev
        link
        fedilink
        97 months ago

        The whole book is like this, though, and these are specifically supposed to be examples of “good” code. The rewritten time class toward the end, a fully rewritten Java module, is a nightmare by the time Martin finishes with it. And I’m pretty sure it has a bug, though I couldn’t be bothered to type the whole thing into an editor to test it myself.