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A rant

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  • C Cotter

    I agree - refactoring has become a bucket for all excuses. I believe it has its place but at a higher level than the method level. All code should be intended as production at all times. As needs change and grow then refactoring original design is warranted. Recognizing this allows us to not over-design for perceived future needs - especially when they always change and thus our design becomes wrong anyways. A systemic lack of comments and indicators like multiple return points (amongst many other subtleties) by a "senior" developer indicates a lack of personal drive to improve one's self (read a friggin' book!) - a lack of professionalism. These are the shots over the bow of not caring and likely bad, buggy code.

    K Offline
    K Offline
    Kevin McFarlane
    wrote on last edited by
    #14

    Cotter wrote:

    indicates a lack of personal drive to improve one's self (read a friggin' book!) - a lack of professionalism

    Most programmers don't read books about the art of programming - according to a C++ guru I once read.

    Kevin

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • C Cotter

      I agree - refactoring has become a bucket for all excuses. I believe it has its place but at a higher level than the method level. All code should be intended as production at all times. As needs change and grow then refactoring original design is warranted. Recognizing this allows us to not over-design for perceived future needs - especially when they always change and thus our design becomes wrong anyways. A systemic lack of comments and indicators like multiple return points (amongst many other subtleties) by a "senior" developer indicates a lack of personal drive to improve one's self (read a friggin' book!) - a lack of professionalism. These are the shots over the bow of not caring and likely bad, buggy code.

      J Offline
      J Offline
      Josh Smith
      wrote on last edited by
      #15

      Cotter wrote:

      A systemic lack of comments and indicators like multiple return points

      What do you have against multiple return points? What's wrong with this?

      public int Foo
      {
      get
      {
      if( muck )
      return 0;
      return 42;
      }
      }

      :josh: My WPF Blog[^]

      D A M 3 Replies Last reply
      0
      • J Josh Smith

        Cotter wrote:

        A systemic lack of comments and indicators like multiple return points

        What do you have against multiple return points? What's wrong with this?

        public int Foo
        {
        get
        {
        if( muck )
        return 0;
        return 42;
        }
        }

        :josh: My WPF Blog[^]

        D Offline
        D Offline
        David Crow
        wrote on last edited by
        #16

        Josh Smith wrote:

        What do you have against multiple return points?

        It used to be that the stack would not get cleaned up if a function returned from more than one spot. That was several generations ago, however.

        Josh Smith wrote:

        What's wrong with this?

        How would you set a breakpoint to know which return point was going to be used? I'd prefer:

        public int Foo
        {
        int x = 42;
        get
        {
        if( muck )
        x = 0;
        }
        return x; // set one breakpoint here
        }


        "Money talks. When my money starts to talk, I get a bill to shut it up." - Frank

        "Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb

        C 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • K Kevin McFarlane

          Ennis Ray Lynch, Jr. wrote:

          When I write a method I initiall my write it messy but I don't call it down. After I write code, I reread it to eliminate obvious logic errors and rewrite bits and pieces to be more maintainable and more efficient (if possible, maintainable is number 1). Then I test and then I may rewrite once again. I tidy up comments put a comment header and then call it done.

          This is my working style too. :) Sometimes when I'm fixing bugs in code I've not written I have to refactor the existing code first just so that I can see how to fix the bug.

          Kevin

          E Offline
          E Offline
          Ennis Ray Lynch Jr
          wrote on last edited by
          #17

          In large teams I feel guilty but rewriting crap code is required for understanding. Plus I delete some comments:

          //assign 5 to x
          int x = 5;
          //loop through 5 times
          for(int i=0;i

          snip

          A man said to the universe:
          "Sir I exist!"
          "However," replied the Universe, "The fact has not created in me A sense of obligation."

           -- Stephen Crane
          
          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • D David Crow

            Josh Smith wrote:

            What do you have against multiple return points?

            It used to be that the stack would not get cleaned up if a function returned from more than one spot. That was several generations ago, however.

            Josh Smith wrote:

            What's wrong with this?

            How would you set a breakpoint to know which return point was going to be used? I'd prefer:

            public int Foo
            {
            int x = 42;
            get
            {
            if( muck )
            x = 0;
            }
            return x; // set one breakpoint here
            }


            "Money talks. When my money starts to talk, I get a bill to shut it up." - Frank

            "Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb

            C Offline
            C Offline
            Chris Losinger
            wrote on last edited by
            #18

            that's fine for a 7 line function. in practice, however, functions can be substantially more complex, and slavishly following the 'one return point' rule forces you to use logic tailored more towards following that rule than to solving the actual problem at hand.

            image processing | blogging

            1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • M Marc Clifton

              Looking at bad code makes me cringe. When I look at something like a simple function that returns a string and the compiler warns about unreachable code detected and the code itself has multiple return points, I can't help but wonder, if simple code like this is so poorly implemented, warnings aren't fixed, and there's not comment to explain what the if statements and switch statements are even doing, what can I expect in complicated code? I have this visceral emotional reaction to bad code, it makes me not even want to touch the whole project, even if I'm working on an isolated part of it. I'm still associated with the bad code. Do you ever feel that way? Or am I letting my emotions get in the way here? And then I hear the "we need to get something out, and we'll refactor it later". Refactoring is abused, IMO. How much refactoring could be eliminated if you just wrote the code right to begin with? And come now, does refactoring really happen? It's more like a meditation than a practice. What's the sound of one programmer refactoring? Yeah, exactly. Shouldn't code get reviewed frequently, even in the midst of a the continuous fire drill? I mean, after all, if you acknowledge that the fire alarm is always sounding, then you might as well figure out how to do the programming better and smarter, rather than take the McGyver approach and hope the ducttape lasts to end of the episode. Does your team ducttape (I always thought it was duck tape) the code and promise each other to refactor later? About that lying questionnaire below, good intents are almost like lies, but you're never actually caught at the lie because you can always say "it'll happen soon." So, is there some truth my conception that bad, uncommented simple code is a portent of bad, uncommented complicated code? And is there some merit to the conclusion that the bad, uncommented, complicated code will also be really buggy? Is there some merit to the attitude that refactoring should be minimized? What are your thoughts? Marc

              Thyme In The Country

              Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
              People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
              There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer

              J Offline
              J Offline
              J Dunlap
              wrote on last edited by
              #19

              Marc Clifton wrote:

              I have this visceral emotional reaction to bad code, it makes me not even want to touch the whole project, even if I'm working on an isolated part of it. I'm still associated with the bad code. Do you ever feel that way?

              Yes. Worse, though, is when I'm forced to write code that's not up to my quality standards, because the project manager doesn't want me to take the time to write it the right way. It makes me feel... well... dirty. :~

              Marc Clifton wrote:

              How much refactoring could be eliminated if you just wrote the code right to begin with?

              And how much time could be saved even before the release that you're skimping so that you can meet? Chances are pretty high in many cases that that code you rushed and did a bad job on will come back to haunt you sooner, not just later.

              Marc Clifton wrote:

              And come now, does refactoring really happen? It's more like a meditation than a practice.

              Refactoring happens in my code quite a bit - but it's less likely to happen in convoluted code that is hard to make sense of later when you come back to refactor. And the type of people who use "we can refactor later" as an excuse to write poor code are the ones who are the least likely to actually take the bother to refactor later.

              Marc Clifton wrote:

              Shouldn't code get reviewed frequently, even in the midst of a the continuous fire drill? I mean, after all, if you acknowledge that the fire alarm is always sounding, then you might as well figure out how to do the programming better and smarter, rather than take the McGyver approach and hope the ducttape lasts to end of the episode.

              Exactly.

              A 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • M Marc Clifton

                Looking at bad code makes me cringe. When I look at something like a simple function that returns a string and the compiler warns about unreachable code detected and the code itself has multiple return points, I can't help but wonder, if simple code like this is so poorly implemented, warnings aren't fixed, and there's not comment to explain what the if statements and switch statements are even doing, what can I expect in complicated code? I have this visceral emotional reaction to bad code, it makes me not even want to touch the whole project, even if I'm working on an isolated part of it. I'm still associated with the bad code. Do you ever feel that way? Or am I letting my emotions get in the way here? And then I hear the "we need to get something out, and we'll refactor it later". Refactoring is abused, IMO. How much refactoring could be eliminated if you just wrote the code right to begin with? And come now, does refactoring really happen? It's more like a meditation than a practice. What's the sound of one programmer refactoring? Yeah, exactly. Shouldn't code get reviewed frequently, even in the midst of a the continuous fire drill? I mean, after all, if you acknowledge that the fire alarm is always sounding, then you might as well figure out how to do the programming better and smarter, rather than take the McGyver approach and hope the ducttape lasts to end of the episode. Does your team ducttape (I always thought it was duck tape) the code and promise each other to refactor later? About that lying questionnaire below, good intents are almost like lies, but you're never actually caught at the lie because you can always say "it'll happen soon." So, is there some truth my conception that bad, uncommented simple code is a portent of bad, uncommented complicated code? And is there some merit to the conclusion that the bad, uncommented, complicated code will also be really buggy? Is there some merit to the attitude that refactoring should be minimized? What are your thoughts? Marc

                Thyme In The Country

                Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
                People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer

                L Offline
                L Offline
                led mike
                wrote on last edited by
                #20

                Yes crap code happens every day. Why... lots of reasons, like crap developers (spend some time in the forums) and crap managers and crap companies.

                Marc Clifton wrote:

                And then I hear the "we need to get something out, and we'll refactor it later". Refactoring is abused, IMO.

                Refactoring "should" occur when the design must change due to an analysis error or requirement change, not as an excuse to do crap work originally. And all of this is under the guise of "it's faster", which in my experience has never proven to be true, it's all bullshit. Anyway you don't need to believe me, see the web for Technical Debt[^]

                led mike

                A M 2 Replies Last reply
                0
                • J Josh Smith

                  Cotter wrote:

                  A systemic lack of comments and indicators like multiple return points

                  What do you have against multiple return points? What's wrong with this?

                  public int Foo
                  {
                  get
                  {
                  if( muck )
                  return 0;
                  return 42;
                  }
                  }

                  :josh: My WPF Blog[^]

                  A Offline
                  A Offline
                  Alvaro Mendez
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #21

                  Josh Smith wrote:

                  What's wrong with this?

                  or this: return (muck ? 0 : 42); :-> Alvaro


                  Josh: So you have been married twice? You must have been young the first time around. Christian: Yeah, we were young and stupid. I was young, and she was...

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • J J Dunlap

                    Marc Clifton wrote:

                    I have this visceral emotional reaction to bad code, it makes me not even want to touch the whole project, even if I'm working on an isolated part of it. I'm still associated with the bad code. Do you ever feel that way?

                    Yes. Worse, though, is when I'm forced to write code that's not up to my quality standards, because the project manager doesn't want me to take the time to write it the right way. It makes me feel... well... dirty. :~

                    Marc Clifton wrote:

                    How much refactoring could be eliminated if you just wrote the code right to begin with?

                    And how much time could be saved even before the release that you're skimping so that you can meet? Chances are pretty high in many cases that that code you rushed and did a bad job on will come back to haunt you sooner, not just later.

                    Marc Clifton wrote:

                    And come now, does refactoring really happen? It's more like a meditation than a practice.

                    Refactoring happens in my code quite a bit - but it's less likely to happen in convoluted code that is hard to make sense of later when you come back to refactor. And the type of people who use "we can refactor later" as an excuse to write poor code are the ones who are the least likely to actually take the bother to refactor later.

                    Marc Clifton wrote:

                    Shouldn't code get reviewed frequently, even in the midst of a the continuous fire drill? I mean, after all, if you acknowledge that the fire alarm is always sounding, then you might as well figure out how to do the programming better and smarter, rather than take the McGyver approach and hope the ducttape lasts to end of the episode.

                    Exactly.

                    A Offline
                    A Offline
                    Alvaro Mendez
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #22

                    1. Your response 2. Ctrl+C Ctrl+V 3. My response One of the things I like doing after I've refactored my code is sprinkle it with useful comments. Regards, Alvaro


                    Josh: So you have been married twice? You must have been young the first time around. Christian: Yeah, we were young and stupid. I was young, and she was...

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • L led mike

                      Yes crap code happens every day. Why... lots of reasons, like crap developers (spend some time in the forums) and crap managers and crap companies.

                      Marc Clifton wrote:

                      And then I hear the "we need to get something out, and we'll refactor it later". Refactoring is abused, IMO.

                      Refactoring "should" occur when the design must change due to an analysis error or requirement change, not as an excuse to do crap work originally. And all of this is under the guise of "it's faster", which in my experience has never proven to be true, it's all bullshit. Anyway you don't need to believe me, see the web for Technical Debt[^]

                      led mike

                      A Offline
                      A Offline
                      Alvaro Mendez
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #23

                      led mike wrote:

                      crap code

                      led mike wrote:

                      crap developers

                      led mike wrote:

                      crap managers

                      led mike wrote:

                      crap companies

                      And more recently, "crap president". :-D Alvaro


                      Josh: So you have been married twice? You must have been young the first time around. Christian: Yeah, we were young and stupid. I was young, and she was...

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • M Marc Clifton

                        Looking at bad code makes me cringe. When I look at something like a simple function that returns a string and the compiler warns about unreachable code detected and the code itself has multiple return points, I can't help but wonder, if simple code like this is so poorly implemented, warnings aren't fixed, and there's not comment to explain what the if statements and switch statements are even doing, what can I expect in complicated code? I have this visceral emotional reaction to bad code, it makes me not even want to touch the whole project, even if I'm working on an isolated part of it. I'm still associated with the bad code. Do you ever feel that way? Or am I letting my emotions get in the way here? And then I hear the "we need to get something out, and we'll refactor it later". Refactoring is abused, IMO. How much refactoring could be eliminated if you just wrote the code right to begin with? And come now, does refactoring really happen? It's more like a meditation than a practice. What's the sound of one programmer refactoring? Yeah, exactly. Shouldn't code get reviewed frequently, even in the midst of a the continuous fire drill? I mean, after all, if you acknowledge that the fire alarm is always sounding, then you might as well figure out how to do the programming better and smarter, rather than take the McGyver approach and hope the ducttape lasts to end of the episode. Does your team ducttape (I always thought it was duck tape) the code and promise each other to refactor later? About that lying questionnaire below, good intents are almost like lies, but you're never actually caught at the lie because you can always say "it'll happen soon." So, is there some truth my conception that bad, uncommented simple code is a portent of bad, uncommented complicated code? And is there some merit to the conclusion that the bad, uncommented, complicated code will also be really buggy? Is there some merit to the attitude that refactoring should be minimized? What are your thoughts? Marc

                        Thyme In The Country

                        Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
                        People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                        There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer

                        G Offline
                        G Offline
                        Graham Shanks
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #24

                        The similar circumstances that I see all too often is "we'll skip unit testing because of time pressure and catch all the errors in integration". Firstly the project will never catch up and second the integration will take longer without unit tests. I once did a phase review on a project where the manager had just decreed that no more unit testing or code reviews would happen in order to keep on schedule. My report stated that I considered that too risky. However, the project manager asked if it were certain that integration would take longer than scheduled and I had to say no, but it was high risk. He went ahead anyway. Guess what - integration took much, much longer than scheduled because of all the bugs they had to fix. :sigh: I didn't get much satisfaction from being proved right. I did the analysis and the extra time spent in integration was more than the time saved in unit testing and code reviews. So yes, code should be reviewed frequently even in the midst of the continuous fire drill. Bad code will bite you (or someone else) in the end. As for refactoring, my initial reaction was yes I do it all the time. But reading other replies I realised that I do it as part of the natural development process when writing the code in the first place or because I'm changing a piece of old code because it now needs to meet new requirements and it's architecture is no longer sufficient. I cannot think of any time when the code has been refactored just because it is messy.

                        Graham My signature is not black, just a very, very dark blue

                        M 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • B BrockVnm

                          I go through this everyday. The project I am working on was put together by a few developers that just had the attitude of get it working and worry about the rest later. The management throws around the word refactor for everything. They always say oh we will just refactor it later. Well the crap code piled up so high that it started causing hugh problems. They built it with out a solid design, commented nothing and they copied and pasted the same code in multiple classes all of the places, tons of hard coding and no oo design (they had no idea how to use inheritance or polymorphism). My initial roll on the team as the junior developer was to just help the senor guys out. Well 6 months later they fired both senor guys because everything they wrote started to break and I am stuck writing in this mess all day long. Its so bad I really don't like having my name associated with the mess. I go home sick to my stomach some days. Not to mention that sometimes I feel like I am not learning anything and I am starting to become a worse developer because of this mess. So after my rant I would say yes bad uncommented simple code leads to bad uncommented compiled code.

                          C Offline
                          C Offline
                          cje
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #25

                          in my opinion you are actually learning a whole lot by being in this situation - you are learning about the importance of design and what it takes to make code maintainable, huge lessons for sure that will serve you well for many years to come - hang in there!

                          cje

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • M Marc Clifton

                            Looking at bad code makes me cringe. When I look at something like a simple function that returns a string and the compiler warns about unreachable code detected and the code itself has multiple return points, I can't help but wonder, if simple code like this is so poorly implemented, warnings aren't fixed, and there's not comment to explain what the if statements and switch statements are even doing, what can I expect in complicated code? I have this visceral emotional reaction to bad code, it makes me not even want to touch the whole project, even if I'm working on an isolated part of it. I'm still associated with the bad code. Do you ever feel that way? Or am I letting my emotions get in the way here? And then I hear the "we need to get something out, and we'll refactor it later". Refactoring is abused, IMO. How much refactoring could be eliminated if you just wrote the code right to begin with? And come now, does refactoring really happen? It's more like a meditation than a practice. What's the sound of one programmer refactoring? Yeah, exactly. Shouldn't code get reviewed frequently, even in the midst of a the continuous fire drill? I mean, after all, if you acknowledge that the fire alarm is always sounding, then you might as well figure out how to do the programming better and smarter, rather than take the McGyver approach and hope the ducttape lasts to end of the episode. Does your team ducttape (I always thought it was duck tape) the code and promise each other to refactor later? About that lying questionnaire below, good intents are almost like lies, but you're never actually caught at the lie because you can always say "it'll happen soon." So, is there some truth my conception that bad, uncommented simple code is a portent of bad, uncommented complicated code? And is there some merit to the conclusion that the bad, uncommented, complicated code will also be really buggy? Is there some merit to the attitude that refactoring should be minimized? What are your thoughts? Marc

                            Thyme In The Country

                            Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
                            People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                            There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer

                            C Offline
                            C Offline
                            Chris S Kaiser
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #26

                            Well, you just dumped my thoughts into formatted html. ;P Refactoring works when your time isn't governed by a manager that says "you'll have time to do it later" or "this has to get out the door now". That's when it doesn't work. But its necessary as your in the eleventh hour and requirements are still coming in that break the design, yet there's no time to fix the design so in go the hacks. Then its a must to return and refactor, else the law of diminishing returns will bite later.

                            This statement is false.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • L Le centriste

                              Marc Clifton wrote:

                              "we need to get something out, and we'll refactor it later".

                              This should make the alarm go off. I have over 10 years of experience in software development (most of them multi-million dollar projects) and there are 2 things that are always true: 1- If you are asked to "get something out", it is certainly how the whole project has been developped and managed. 2- Refactoring never happens, because companies don't see the point of redoing something that already works. From their standing point of vue, it is easy to understand, for they don't know the first thing on software development. Speaking of point number 2, the best approach to refactor the thing is to do it on a on-demand basis. Let me explain. If you are asked to work on code, it is probably to add new features or fix bugs. Take this occasion to refactor your "little piece". Like I said in point 2, refactoring code without improving what it is doing won't fly at management level. If possible, educate your co-workers, especially the junior ones. You know, Marc, the perfect world does not exist, nor do the perfect code. You are out there to make it better, though.

                              -------- "I say no to drugs, but they don't listen." - Marilyn Manson

                              C Offline
                              C Offline
                              Chris S Kaiser
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #27

                              MP (2) wrote:

                              2- Refactoring never happens, because companies don't see the point of redoing something that already works. From their standing point of vue, it is easy to understand, for they don't know the first thing on software development.

                              Right, because they'll quote a business need for it. For some reason developer productivity is never weighed in as a valid business need. If the design breaks from creeping requirements, and last minute hacks, it will eventually get out of hand, and turn into a mess of hacks and spaghetti. So maintenance is definately a business reason to refactor, but you can't always convince the powers that this is true.

                              This statement is false.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • C Cotter

                                I agree - refactoring has become a bucket for all excuses. I believe it has its place but at a higher level than the method level. All code should be intended as production at all times. As needs change and grow then refactoring original design is warranted. Recognizing this allows us to not over-design for perceived future needs - especially when they always change and thus our design becomes wrong anyways. A systemic lack of comments and indicators like multiple return points (amongst many other subtleties) by a "senior" developer indicates a lack of personal drive to improve one's self (read a friggin' book!) - a lack of professionalism. These are the shots over the bow of not caring and likely bad, buggy code.

                                C Offline
                                C Offline
                                Chris S Kaiser
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #28

                                if(!connect()) return false; //continue with processing return true; That's a lot cleaner than bool ret = connect(); if(ret) { //continue with processing } return ret; And it saves a level of indenting. Maybe with 1280 x 1028 resolution this isn't such a big deal, but I still say there's nothing wrong with this style. Its just that, style.

                                This statement is false.

                                M K 2 Replies Last reply
                                0
                                • M Marc Clifton

                                  Looking at bad code makes me cringe. When I look at something like a simple function that returns a string and the compiler warns about unreachable code detected and the code itself has multiple return points, I can't help but wonder, if simple code like this is so poorly implemented, warnings aren't fixed, and there's not comment to explain what the if statements and switch statements are even doing, what can I expect in complicated code? I have this visceral emotional reaction to bad code, it makes me not even want to touch the whole project, even if I'm working on an isolated part of it. I'm still associated with the bad code. Do you ever feel that way? Or am I letting my emotions get in the way here? And then I hear the "we need to get something out, and we'll refactor it later". Refactoring is abused, IMO. How much refactoring could be eliminated if you just wrote the code right to begin with? And come now, does refactoring really happen? It's more like a meditation than a practice. What's the sound of one programmer refactoring? Yeah, exactly. Shouldn't code get reviewed frequently, even in the midst of a the continuous fire drill? I mean, after all, if you acknowledge that the fire alarm is always sounding, then you might as well figure out how to do the programming better and smarter, rather than take the McGyver approach and hope the ducttape lasts to end of the episode. Does your team ducttape (I always thought it was duck tape) the code and promise each other to refactor later? About that lying questionnaire below, good intents are almost like lies, but you're never actually caught at the lie because you can always say "it'll happen soon." So, is there some truth my conception that bad, uncommented simple code is a portent of bad, uncommented complicated code? And is there some merit to the conclusion that the bad, uncommented, complicated code will also be really buggy? Is there some merit to the attitude that refactoring should be minimized? What are your thoughts? Marc

                                  Thyme In The Country

                                  Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
                                  People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                  There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer

                                  L Offline
                                  L Offline
                                  lintybits
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #29

                                  Ugh. I'm doing some refactoring on bad code right now (not by choice). I was asked to add a feature to a windows service (a "quick fix"); it's now day 2 & I've rewritten about 50% of it. Very few comments, best one is at the WTF point- 'Remove table with parameters. 'It is done to addapt dataset for later routines which really means, make sure I've only got 1 datatable so I can hardcode it everywhere else. example- 'Count number of tables in dataset Dim countTables As Integer = 1 good times.

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                                  • M Marc Clifton

                                    Looking at bad code makes me cringe. When I look at something like a simple function that returns a string and the compiler warns about unreachable code detected and the code itself has multiple return points, I can't help but wonder, if simple code like this is so poorly implemented, warnings aren't fixed, and there's not comment to explain what the if statements and switch statements are even doing, what can I expect in complicated code? I have this visceral emotional reaction to bad code, it makes me not even want to touch the whole project, even if I'm working on an isolated part of it. I'm still associated with the bad code. Do you ever feel that way? Or am I letting my emotions get in the way here? And then I hear the "we need to get something out, and we'll refactor it later". Refactoring is abused, IMO. How much refactoring could be eliminated if you just wrote the code right to begin with? And come now, does refactoring really happen? It's more like a meditation than a practice. What's the sound of one programmer refactoring? Yeah, exactly. Shouldn't code get reviewed frequently, even in the midst of a the continuous fire drill? I mean, after all, if you acknowledge that the fire alarm is always sounding, then you might as well figure out how to do the programming better and smarter, rather than take the McGyver approach and hope the ducttape lasts to end of the episode. Does your team ducttape (I always thought it was duck tape) the code and promise each other to refactor later? About that lying questionnaire below, good intents are almost like lies, but you're never actually caught at the lie because you can always say "it'll happen soon." So, is there some truth my conception that bad, uncommented simple code is a portent of bad, uncommented complicated code? And is there some merit to the conclusion that the bad, uncommented, complicated code will also be really buggy? Is there some merit to the attitude that refactoring should be minimized? What are your thoughts? Marc

                                    Thyme In The Country

                                    Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
                                    People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                    There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer

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                                    Jorgen Sigvardsson
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #30

                                    Marc Clifton wrote:

                                    I have this visceral emotional reaction to bad code, it makes me not even want to touch the whole project, even if I'm working on an isolated part of it. I'm still associated with the bad code. Do you ever feel that way?

                                    Yes. It's like having to sniff someone else's farts... X|

                                    -- Not Y3K Compliant

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                                    • B BrockVnm

                                      I go through this everyday. The project I am working on was put together by a few developers that just had the attitude of get it working and worry about the rest later. The management throws around the word refactor for everything. They always say oh we will just refactor it later. Well the crap code piled up so high that it started causing hugh problems. They built it with out a solid design, commented nothing and they copied and pasted the same code in multiple classes all of the places, tons of hard coding and no oo design (they had no idea how to use inheritance or polymorphism). My initial roll on the team as the junior developer was to just help the senor guys out. Well 6 months later they fired both senor guys because everything they wrote started to break and I am stuck writing in this mess all day long. Its so bad I really don't like having my name associated with the mess. I go home sick to my stomach some days. Not to mention that sometimes I feel like I am not learning anything and I am starting to become a worse developer because of this mess. So after my rant I would say yes bad uncommented simple code leads to bad uncommented compiled code.

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                                      Marc Clifton
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #31

                                      BrockVnm wrote:

                                      The project I am working on was put together by a few developers that just had the attitude of get it working and worry about the rest later. The management throws around the word refactor for everything. They always say oh we will just refactor it later. Well the crap code piled up so high that it started causing hugh problems. They built it with out a solid design, commented nothing and they copied and pasted the same code in multiple classes all of the places, tons of hard coding and no oo design (they had no idea how to use inheritance or polymorphism). My initial roll on the team as the junior developer was to just help the senor guys out. Well 6 months later they fired both senor guys because everything they wrote started to break and I am stuck writing in this mess all day long. Its so bad I really don't like having my name associated with the mess.

                                      Geez, that sounds exactly like what I'm dealing with. Marc

                                      Thyme In The Country

                                      Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
                                      People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                      There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer

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                                      • K Kevin McFarlane

                                        Marc Clifton wrote:

                                        Looking at bad code makes me cringe.

                                        Standard practice in my case. I'm a contractor and typically do a lot of maintenance programming. Maintaining bad code is the norm.

                                        Marc Clifton wrote:

                                        if simple code like this is so poorly implemented, warnings aren't fixed, and there's not comment to explain what the if statements and switch statements are even doing, what can I expect in complicated code?

                                        Recently had to do post hoc unit testing on a complex piece of software that had virtually no comments, and the few it did have were pretty useless.

                                        Marc Clifton wrote:

                                        Refactoring is abused, IMO. How much refactoring could be eliminated if you just wrote the code right to begin with?

                                        There are different types of refactoring. 1. Refactoring code because it's bad. 2. Refactoring while writing it. 3. Refactoring for extension. Maybe others... Only the first is an undesirable situation. However, I think that's what you mean?

                                        Kevin

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                                        Marc Clifton
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #32

                                        Kevin McFarlane wrote:

                                        Only the first is an undesirable situation. However, I think that's what you mean?

                                        Yes, that's what I mean. Because #2 doesn't happen, even when the compiler screams warnings. Marc

                                        Thyme In The Country

                                        Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
                                        People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                        There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer

                                        K 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • M Marc Clifton

                                          Looking at bad code makes me cringe. When I look at something like a simple function that returns a string and the compiler warns about unreachable code detected and the code itself has multiple return points, I can't help but wonder, if simple code like this is so poorly implemented, warnings aren't fixed, and there's not comment to explain what the if statements and switch statements are even doing, what can I expect in complicated code? I have this visceral emotional reaction to bad code, it makes me not even want to touch the whole project, even if I'm working on an isolated part of it. I'm still associated with the bad code. Do you ever feel that way? Or am I letting my emotions get in the way here? And then I hear the "we need to get something out, and we'll refactor it later". Refactoring is abused, IMO. How much refactoring could be eliminated if you just wrote the code right to begin with? And come now, does refactoring really happen? It's more like a meditation than a practice. What's the sound of one programmer refactoring? Yeah, exactly. Shouldn't code get reviewed frequently, even in the midst of a the continuous fire drill? I mean, after all, if you acknowledge that the fire alarm is always sounding, then you might as well figure out how to do the programming better and smarter, rather than take the McGyver approach and hope the ducttape lasts to end of the episode. Does your team ducttape (I always thought it was duck tape) the code and promise each other to refactor later? About that lying questionnaire below, good intents are almost like lies, but you're never actually caught at the lie because you can always say "it'll happen soon." So, is there some truth my conception that bad, uncommented simple code is a portent of bad, uncommented complicated code? And is there some merit to the conclusion that the bad, uncommented, complicated code will also be really buggy? Is there some merit to the attitude that refactoring should be minimized? What are your thoughts? Marc

                                          Thyme In The Country

                                          Some people believe what the bible says. Literally. At least [with Wikipedia] you have the chance to correct the wiki -- Jörgen Sigvardsson
                                          People are just notoriously impossible. --DavidCrow
                                          There's NO excuse for not commenting your code. -- John Simmons / outlaw programmer

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                                          C Offline
                                          charlieg
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #33

                                          I call it code slamming - generally. Then there is the code clearly written by someone who has no passion for the quality of their product.

                                          Charlie Gilley Will program for food... Whoever said children were cheaper by the dozen... lied. My son's PDA is an M249 SAW. My other son commutes in an M1A2 Abrams

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