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23 lines
1.3 KiB
23 lines
1.3 KiB
# Code Smell Patterns
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**Code Smells** are often signs that refactoring could be needed. That is not always the case, but these "smells" should be looked at further to dethermine if there is a need for refactoring.
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**Duplicated Code**
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Force: Refactoring may be considered if a common structure is recongized among related methods.
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Solution: It may be possible to generalize smaller methods to allow them to work as one. However, you must be careful to not over generalize a method and allow it to have more power than nessecary. A good metric to measure by is that a method should have between 6-9 meaningful lines of code.
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**Excessive Conditionals**
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Force: Refactoring may be considered if a section of code seems overloaded with conditional statements or switch cases
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Solution: It may be possible to break these conditionals up into smaller, more conscise methods that are easier to read and have a clear purpose.
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**Reocurring Parameter lists**
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Force: Refactoring may be considered if a certian list of parameters keeps reappearing in many methods.
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For example:
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function(int a, int b, string c)
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function2(int a, int b, string c)
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function3(int a, int b, string c)
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```
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Solution: It may be possible to group these parameters into an object and instead pass the object around to different functions rather than passing each parameter. |