I like the first sentence I hear after clicking your video is "The first principle of clean code ..." just jump to the point. Love it!!!
@ConnerArdman7 ай бұрын
Turns out people can read the title and don’t need videos to introduce it for 2 minutes! What a novel concept 😂
@harmez74 ай бұрын
it means he's an honest man, not a jackal who wants to steal your time for their "watch time".
@RoamingAdhocratАй бұрын
clean video writing
@yt.Interest7 ай бұрын
W, no bullshit, no annoying stuff, straight forward, not only clean code, also clean video
@wsbchk_3 ай бұрын
he "forgot" to ask to subscribe and hit the bell icon :)
@kikocastroneto7 ай бұрын
This video is an excellent example of what uncle Bob mentioned in his book about being pragmatic with your own clean practices. All your tips are in the book, and the tips you don’t judge it to be good you just don’t have to use. People flame uncle Bob with the “functions shall be short” tip, but they forget the pragmatism mentioned by Bob in the introduction of the book.
@zeeeeeman7 ай бұрын
0:00 1. Eliminate if/else branching; early termination 2:16 2. Ambiguous definitions: ‘is’ function prefix to denote boolean return 4:05 3. Self documenting code: avoid belaboured comments 5:37 4. Consistent formatting. Use Eslint + Prettier to automate code style 7:14 5. DRY business logic. Look for opportunities to refactor. Make sure to test! 8:37 6. Fail or exit functions fast. Related to 1. 9:28 7. Avoid magic values - declare and use CONSTANTS instead. 10:41 8. Avoid violating single responsibility. Prefer to use pure functions (no side effects) 11:57 9. Overly clever code (code golf). Leads to impenetrable single liners (have to rewrite in order to debug) 14:00 10. Premature optimisations.
@brunofilgueiras35187 ай бұрын
thanks for the summary buddy
@mortsaidmort5 ай бұрын
1. Is also called Guard Clauses or reducing nesting
@konkerouf19 күн бұрын
Long time ago, i was a singler liner... but that was a long time ago So many times i had to split the code just to add a breakpoint So many times I had to decrypt my own code couple of months after writing it I came to disgust myself
@R1pTheJacka8 ай бұрын
This might be the first KZbin video I've seen in well over a decade where the content actually starts at 0:00 Subscribed
@kresuu35678 ай бұрын
For real LOL it's refreshing to see
@Frankenstein7868 күн бұрын
This video is sponsored by SquareSpace…. Skip.
@paultapping95103 күн бұрын
you just properly clarified what side-effects and pure functions are for me. I don't know why your phrasing is what finally got it to click, but I think I actually get it now.
@Ssek168 ай бұрын
You made me realise that my JavaScript code was complete doodoo and made me redo it all again. This time I actually understood what I was trying to do. Thank you.
@ConnerArdman8 ай бұрын
That’s awesome 🙌
@willowthewispy3 күн бұрын
A common mistake about dry is that people think it's about the same code. I love that you add for the same purpose. Many people even seniors, overlook this. The reason is that same code with different purpose will likely not mutate the same. And you might break one usage because you change the other.
@davidmartensson2738 ай бұрын
The isPrime example, you use Math.sqrt in the condition, this will in many languages, including js, cause the sqrt to be calculated on each pass of the loop so you should break that out to a variable and the comment can then be added to the creation of the variable, this will make it even more clear that the comment is for why we use Math.Sqrt and improve performance and reduce line complexity since the loop conditional will be a simple i
@ConnerArdman8 ай бұрын
Good call, putting the smart in Smartensson
@davidmartensson2738 ай бұрын
@@ConnerArdman the s is actually from my real middle name and I never realized it was part of the visible name :D.
@BangsarRia8 ай бұрын
Try to convert comments to names. For example, name the variable nonPrimeWillHaveFactorBelow and assign 1 + the Sqrt.
@dr.downvote4 ай бұрын
His habit of clean code shows in his way of doing a video. Clean and crisp
@AntonioSantos-ve6zv7 ай бұрын
Though of skipping the video, but it immediately got my attention due to how objective it is. Thanks for the content.
@scrapsplaysgames7 ай бұрын
Just a small addition on the example of DRY; what's covered here is to replace three functions that do the same thing with one function that can do anything. If you want to enforce the passed-in value is always one of a specific set of strings, it should still be fine to use these other three functions. They can cover an abstraction, enforcing the passed "action" to be a specific value. Such as "return logAction("logged in")" in the first example function.
@JohnDoe-sq5nv3 ай бұрын
Yep. DRY is dangerous advice because many times you don't repeat yourself but rhyme. Code should be allowed to rhyme, if it isn't then you've created an abstraction layer that will need logic. In worst case in the abstraction layer. And the more rhyming code you try to fit in the more logic you need, thus the abstraction starts growing and growing and growing. Don't repeat yourself. But don't be afraid to rhyme.
@rty19555 ай бұрын
I have been coding since 1969 and constantly learning. With ober 13 Lang under my best (1st love is assembly on a mainframe) I always agonize over "is it readable?" If not them clean it up! I write with the intention that someone else may have to maintain this. I also never take code personally, as I have seen many coders do. Instead I will show my code to others and ask them "is this easy to understand?" If the answer is no, I need to fix it. On each function, I place "function notes block" which are a block of comments, right before the function definition. It describes why the function is used, all the variables used, along with global variables, and in the case of assembly, what registers are touched or referenced. I used to run the code through a custom print program to output all these "function note blocks" to be used along any documentation I have. It shows the functions sorted alphabetically, the module they are in along with the line number where they are defined. Comes in very handy when something goes wrong
@jazzpants7 ай бұрын
Thank you Connor!!! I am forever dealing with "code smells" because people are not taking the time to do clean code. And I always end up cleaning up THEIR mess when I have to do the daily merge of everyone's code. 😭
@MeriaDuck5 ай бұрын
Try and make it their problem, that is, try to get the teammates to use the same principles as you want to. That way you are less burdened when doing merges and they get their stuff merged with more ease and probably learn from it. Where possible / feasible, use linting and code guidelines to automate the guidance.
@anthonysetiadi8 ай бұрын
This video is so good. So many gold nuggets that you don't learn in traditional coding bootcamps or tutorials.
@ConnerArdman8 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it! 😀
@alphadog0073 ай бұрын
Well Done! Solid advice. It's Saturday night, I've had a few drinks, and you STILL held my attention!
@Ольга-ж5к4й4 ай бұрын
my hero who just jump into the topic with no delay and smalltalk ❤
@sagecole80558 ай бұрын
Over commenting. I’m in university and I have to comment everything line for line and have a massive comment block on the top explaining how it works overall. Why is this taught if that many comments is actually a bad thing?
@ConnerArdman8 ай бұрын
My guess would be it’s probably for the benefit of the grader to essentially “show your work.” Hard to say for sure though 🤷♂️
@lawrencemanning7 ай бұрын
Actually learning how to comment is a skill that is difficult to teach. Your prof’s approach is likely because he is just a tad lazy, but is also not totally terrible. As long as your comments aren’t just rewording the code, you’re doing ok. Explain the thinking behind it, why a more obvious approach isn’t valid, etc. Have fun!!
@jc-aguilar4 ай бұрын
When you are writing a comment, think about the why not that what. The code already does and should be written in a manner that what is doing is clear. There are occasions that a “what” type of comment is needed. For example, the algorithm is complicated and long, or obscure, or using some hidden feature that it’s not so easy to understand by just looking at the code. Normally, a comment like is more useful when the piece of code is doing something that it’s not common for the environment/industry.
@maurolimaokАй бұрын
I'm just beginning at The Odin Project, and this is AWESOME. Thanks a lot.
@Xnight-X20 күн бұрын
perfect explanation, directly to the point, no wasted time, it was worth it 👏
@faizan34628 күн бұрын
Principle 9 is so important, no one cares if u have written something in short unless it improves performance significantly keep ur code as easy as possible to understand.
@konkerouf19 күн бұрын
Regarding principle number 5, i'd go much further and a bit against you 1. I would describe every action in const or enum (even maybe even as a map code => text to describe the action with a code but add a different value in the log) 2. I would create FIRST the "logAction" function 3. I would probably create the 3 other functions as helpers. Exactly like Logger classes usually have a base function "log(level, text)" with aliases like "debug(text) => log(LOG_LEVEL_DEBUG, text)" Helper aliases greatly improve the readability of the code, help with the learning curve, with refactoring etc. But definitely, the implementation needs to be done a single time
@jhontriboyke55348 ай бұрын
the if else principle really help me, sometime i was confused why my else block code didnot work. thank you
@206_akbarisahil72 ай бұрын
The code with guard clause saves a lot of time while debugging a code
@mansurhamidov23198 ай бұрын
Thanks for video! Principle #6: I think you have forgotten to mention about direct returning the value instead of placing it to const and then returning it Principle #7 I think better naming for the second variable would be TAXABLE_TRANSACTION_MULTIPLIER
@davidcfrogley23 күн бұрын
In principle #5, while explaining about not repeating yourself, I see a format inconsistency. Your first two functions (logLogin and logLogout) do not capitalize the embedded preposition in the noun (i.e., login vs. logIn), whereas the third function (logSignUp) does. When used as a verb phrase, "log in" and "log out" and "sign up" are separate words and therefore would include a capital in camel case or pascal case for the second word; however, when used as a noun or adjective, "login" and "logout" and "signup" are single words and therefore include no capital letter.
@Blafasel36 ай бұрын
example 1 in Principle 9 is actually rather subtle O(n^2) because the reduce is O(n) and the spreading again is O(n), so its two nested loops. Another reason why the second approach is plain better ;) The second is only O(n), becasue its two consecutive loops.
@Micosek988 ай бұрын
#1 Mostly agreed, but I think the last part when there are two ways of ending function, one with return and the other one with no return is more confusing than just one else statement #4 There was a semicolon missing in one line ;)
@ConnerArdman8 ай бұрын
Yeah that’s valid. Or if there is going to be a return, it should have been an empty return in hindsight.
@danielbreen39453 ай бұрын
Glad someone else noticed on #1. Especially important in JS since the showChildrenVersion could be modified and the compiler wouldn't warn you.
@wouterk218 ай бұрын
Great clear video 👍. But to be honest, the majority of the examples are covered by using a good ESLint configuration. Add some Prettier on top for the spacing / formatting.
@Bingo9017 ай бұрын
In Principle 3 you should also extract Math.sqrt so it wont call it again and again at each iteration
@jamesfx23 ай бұрын
There's a principle I've been talking about that might fall under "single use" but I call it "avoiding code omniscience". When we develop things in a shared project, we don't want our code to impact current code or potential future code in a way that we didn't anticipate. But we also don't want our code to increase the complexity of the project such that people working on it require knowledge of your code - i.e. requiring code omniscience. Like if we have a validation process that prevents certain items being added to a cart in an ecommerce system, unless it's hooked in directly to the add to cart system, every controller that implements add to cart will need to be updated to add this - you've increased the complexity. Or similarly, if the code we write adds a flag to the item being added, and if it's there, the validation occurs. Someone rocking up years later would have to be aware of the flag if they want to make a new system that creates gift boxes (bundles of items) or something. Documentation and tests can solve this problem but....
@brevnobia1238Ай бұрын
there is probably an équivalent in english, in french we say : "better is ennemy of good"
@I_am_Raziel28 күн бұрын
I say it similar in German. I don't know if anyone besides me says it :)
@brevnobia123827 күн бұрын
@@I_am_Raziel Yet the Germans have a reputation for overengineering.😉😉 ;)
@Bob-180212 күн бұрын
"The best is the enemy of the good" is a popular equivalent.
@DoctorLatch6 күн бұрын
"Good is better than perfect."
@RoamingAdhocratАй бұрын
the other principle of clean code is to burn your copy of Clean Code (if you have one)
@ClockworkGearhead5 ай бұрын
The side-effect with "never nesting" is you have a default behavior if a combination of checks unexpectedly work (either though a bug or unanticipated inputs). Could be good, could be bad, depending.
@filip01123 ай бұрын
Omg, thank you for starting right away. I’m tired of these 2 minute beginnings that makes no sense
@harmez74 ай бұрын
I love the blue background on you profile pic and also that soft blue lightning in your room. I love blue too
@tmbarral6646 ай бұрын
For the "return boolean" functions, I used "has'" and "can" also, depending on my needs.
@RafaeldaSilvaPeresАй бұрын
13:36 you preached man! Damn boi I've seen some crazy ass one line coders writting alien code justifying themselves as "It is faster!" but them themselves cant tell how much faster it is to be valueable enough to put the poor junior dev into despair when maintaining all that shit when it breaks! And it usually breaks! And even the senior who did that cant tell what's wrong with it!
@정하은-h6s7 ай бұрын
Hello Conner, This is absolutely great advice! Please make videos like this :)
@ConnerArdman7 ай бұрын
🫡
@BangsarRia8 ай бұрын
Regarding Optimization. In more than 20 years writing Production Java code for one of the largest international banks, I have had to optimize my code twice. The first time a change to the XSLT library implementation made processing take 50x longer. Simply adding a line of code to set an undocumented but supported flag returned to normal. The second time, Dodd Frank caused volume to increase 10x overnight. Because I had written the worker code to be reentrant all I had to do was change config parameter # of workers from 1 to 16 to increase throughput 10-fold (and add an extra CPU core and run code analysis and deadlock detection overnight). Bottom line: Just write Clean Code and - as Conner says in the video - let the compiler worry about the insignificant local optimizations that are such tempting distractions; that's its job, not yours.
@eugeneponomarov74297 ай бұрын
Great video! Beginners should take a lot of notes from here.
@tonymihut30705 ай бұрын
Just came across this and immediately subscribed 1 minute in because I need Jesse Eisenberg talking about coding in my life.
@Axlefublr6 ай бұрын
when it comes to quotes (in languages that accept both), I use single quotes generally, unless the string contains a single quote, in which case I use double quotes (I prefer that to escaping).
@anonymous491255 ай бұрын
this video slaps. I'm a huge believer that optimization should come only went a bottleneck presents itself, and in all other instances making code that is human readable is paramount. To assume how the code will be ran on the hardware, especially in javascript of all things, and attempt to pre-optimize is a fools errand. What is vastly better is easy to digest at a glance human readable code, where you can intuit how it should be used and how it can use extended and maintained. Great stuff!
@logank.702 ай бұрын
I'm not sure if it would be another principle worth considering, but over the last year I've stopped dealing with the traditional try/catch error handling construct and instead return results and if my code throws an exception it is an "unhandled" exception to terminate the app (I'll have a hook into unhandled exceptions so I can log it before crash). You can think of it like Zig's "panic" feature. I just find the traditional try/catch something that makes code execution more difficult to reason about. I also use error codes so if the caller of a function received an error it's easier to check the error code for certain kinds of errors that can be handled or possibly panic. If I'm using a library that subscribes to the try/catch paradigm then I'll wrap it around my own thing that hides that construct (and only expose the things I use from the library). Probably not perfect and, I'm sure, the methodology would conjure up some discussion and debate but it has made my experience more fun and the code I write a bit more iron clad.
@sonoftroy8572Ай бұрын
Yes string interpolation, it works great with double quoted strings. "code: {$example}"
@loudichoson3214 ай бұрын
what a gem bro, glad I stumbled upon this video.
@santra5288 ай бұрын
Now a days, I write the code and get my code reviewed by AI to see if there can be any potential improvements or refactoring we can do in terms of clean code and it helps me to write clean code. Anyways these tips are really golden! A lot of times I make these mistakes and get review comments from my Tech lead about these mistakes
@CallousCoder7 ай бұрын
AI is very very bad at clean and efficient code! I used CODY for code smells and it doesn't even see context it says: "check that pointer" and I always go: "check line xyz for your remark number x" And it sees it's covered. It comes up with idiotic ideas of naming variables really long like n "number" for readability. For fuck sake, it's the only parameter in the function, the type says its an u64 what else do you want, Cody? I am not going to type number everytime :D So my advise is, be very critical because AI is really really bad at coding!
@danielcommins12855 ай бұрын
13:14 the reason why the bitwise expression is confusing in that example is because it evaluates to a number, 1 or 0, instead of true or false. Js deals with truthy/falsy for conditional expressions so it still works, but it should really evaluate to a boolean if being used in a conditional, e.g. n & 1 !== 0 Great tips otherwise 🔥
@ibunnysaur15 ай бұрын
This was excellent in that it's a practical and straightforward explanation, thank you!
@adrianperea40262 ай бұрын
Nice list. For #1, I actually prefer writing the last conditional with an else statement and no return statement. If I have fresh eyes on the code, my first question would be "why does the child version have a return"
@arturomena349Күн бұрын
I stopped caring about etiquette and style once I realized that LLM will be writing most code in the next 5 years, and the engineer job will be automated away. Nowadays, if I do have to write some code myself, I write whatever with the basic logic, and then let Cline or other automation tool optimize it for me, write tests and integrate.
@der.einzig.wahre.jemand5 ай бұрын
i compress my code into 10 lines, nobody can read it but it looks cool.
@AnkitGarg5 ай бұрын
Nice content, good job. The first tip is a double edged sword. Too many control statements can also be confusing. You have to check the entire method to understand what all it can return. Sometimes the if-else blocks which populated a variable and return at the end is easier to understand.
@RoamingAdhocratАй бұрын
6:00 the real WTF is not having a code formatter set up - you should never need to think about consistent spacing, just hit alt-shift-F and everything lines up automatically ;)
@ronaldpaek8 ай бұрын
Thank you for this 🙏 ❤🎉
@Kutlutr3 ай бұрын
2:25 If it is just the comparison of two numeric values, then why we are sending the object to this utility function? Namely, that function does not need to know how the "length" of a "password" object is retrieved. Rather the place that is taking care of the business logic already know what password object is and how its length can be retrieved, so we can directly send the value instead of the object. With doing so we can convert this utility functions into a library which would not be depend on any object (e.g. StringUtils in Java Apache Commons). Plus, minimum password constant value can be retrieved from another constant util class's function instead of directly referencing to the variable from a function, so that the checkPasswordLength does not need to know also where actually that constant is located. My point is that, there should be minimum change in the rest when we change something in somewhere.
@ianfrye89887 ай бұрын
On #8 I would possibly rename it to calculate circular area or something as "calculateArea" could be for any shape but it only calculates a circle.
@christopheanfry24257 ай бұрын
Thank you so much this is gold!!!
@haroldpepeteАй бұрын
everyone is taking for granted guard clauses because someone said it. did you see how flutter or another framework structure core function? they use a lot of if and else. My conclusion is, don't follow trends, if good for me and my team, it doesn't matter. The people who makes the languages you use, they think really different
@telephonedude7 ай бұрын
Couldn't agree more with all of these, though Python has instilled a habit of using 'SINGLE_QUOTES' for constants and identifiers, and "double quotes" for misc./ "natural" text in me
@MeriaDuck5 ай бұрын
Going to use this in my lessons!
@iqbalibrahim47136 ай бұрын
Really love your content, straight to the point with examples 👍🏻
@2000PhucNguyen5 ай бұрын
I know all your principles, because I have read Clean Code book. But I appreciate this video, and I love this video and your content. +1 subscribe.
@darknight36137 ай бұрын
For 9:33 i would say that it would be clearer if we did: "let price = 10.0" so we know it is double
@codeSurvivor6 ай бұрын
Nice video, thanks! Straight to the point! In principle 9, I think that the example was not very good regarding the 2 loops VS 1. Reduce can be a little hard to get used to, but once you do, it's really easy to read and understand what it does. I used to chain array functions as you did here, but mainly because I never took the time to work with reduce. Now it's just easy, and if you have big arrays, loop twice VS once is really not a good idea.. I agree thaw trying to be clever while programming does not make sense, but reduce is just a basic array operator 🤷🏻♂️
@MeriaDuck5 ай бұрын
Example number nine does not have to be two loops, a compiler can reason about this and just make one reduction for it.
@TheRealCornPop4 ай бұрын
For those on a tight schedule, his 10 principles start at 0:00
@pandaer-space20 күн бұрын
What VSCode theme are you using? I really like it, can you tell me?
@pH7Programming6 ай бұрын
Always great reminders. Keep up the hard work! 💪
@zigajavornik10268 ай бұрын
I program PLCs and I had an argument with a coworker stating magic numbers are the way to go, I was so pissed, my industry is so outdared...
@michaldivismusic6 ай бұрын
I wish more people used principle #2
@SantiiYanez8 ай бұрын
Amazing video, thanks for this.
@tomz43328 ай бұрын
Try ESLint & Prettier & JSDoc
@VLADICA94KG5 ай бұрын
at 2:00 you are missing return statement.
@pedroamaralcouto6 ай бұрын
Suggestion: It's a very good useful video, but instead of “Principle #n” for the names of the timestamps, it would be more useful if they were meaningful names. I like to read the description and jump to specific topics. @sidouglas did something similar. It can be more succinct. For instance, instead of “Eliminate if/else branching; early termination”, it can be “Guard clauses” or “Return early”.
@typoilu34138 ай бұрын
For the first principle, inverting if..else only works in general with if..else throw or if..else return) but in most cases it will make everything worse. Here are some tips to keep track of what clause brackets corrsepond to -corresponding bracket have the same color on vscode you can clearly see it on the video. Maybe with another color theme they would be more visible -there is a keyboard shortcut to go from a closing/opening bracket to the corresponding opening/closing bracket -when your mouse is over a bracket the corresponding one will be highlighted .
@asdqwe44278 ай бұрын
I'm sure you can find a bunch of cases where this isn't optimal. But generally speaking, the important part of what he is demonstrating is that getting much of the validation out of the way right at the beginning of the function makes the rest of the code much more readable. The return statements on the bottom are ambiguous, but those are not the main point of the principle
@weroro6 ай бұрын
5:37 I use a combination. If I have variables at the beginning or end of the string, I don't use ${var} but var + or + var because that's two less character [4 chars VS. 2 chars]. If it's variables inside a string, it's more effective to use ${var} because it's less characters than using " + var + " [4 chars VS. 5 chars]. 8:37 I use if(variable?.trim?.()) [ I know it's not bulletproof because an object with a trim() method might come in, but in many cases it's legitimate to use my way, especially if I've tested somewhere before that it's not an object. ]
@gnack4205 ай бұрын
The number of characters makes absolutely no difference to the effectiveness of the code.
@abdulkaderjeelani4 ай бұрын
Principle 1. Don't throw. Respect your caller and Be true to the signature of the function.
@Monstermash3553 ай бұрын
Not sure I agree with 9, i'll take that reduce instead because if we apply this rule, you'll see people chaining filter map sort and such which is rather messy imho
@chrisrose708Ай бұрын
Nice video, I agree with most of your principles. But I disagree with #8. I think modifying global variables is totally fine most of the time. And I think functions can and should do lots of things if it makes sense. I find the "single responsibility principle" to be silly. Long functions are much better than a bunch of small ones. #9 example is tough to see. I think both examples look equally "readable". #10 is solid advice
@SomethingSenseful5 ай бұрын
Fallowed all 10 principles consistently from last 5 years .. still nobody appreciated 😢
@PieterJacob3 ай бұрын
Haha don’t get me started. Ive worked with senior developers who still don’t work with principles.
@andyengleАй бұрын
They would've noticed if you wrote poor code though.
@malvoliosf7 ай бұрын
You aren’t going to comment on the square-root being calculated on every iteration (5:35)?
@federicobau8651Ай бұрын
You did a mkstake with that refactoring. The function initially returns nothing.but you make it return the output of showChildrenVersion which could return anything. You should have called the functiom. And just return with nothin in next line
@pizzarand6 ай бұрын
Very nice video mate
@KeithKazamaFlick8 ай бұрын
thanks...this helped
@DaveOzoalor7 күн бұрын
More comments is always better than less. You will know when you inherit a legacy project
@proflead2 ай бұрын
Thanks for sahring!
@yaaz593 ай бұрын
Just a question, for the exemple 2, it isn’t better to declare the const password length in the function ?
@ConnerArdman3 ай бұрын
It can depend, but generally speaking no. It's a pretty common practice to add constants to the top of the file that sort of act as a configuration setup. That said, I don't think it would be the worst thing for this to be inside the function either.
@jfedererj7 ай бұрын
I always eye-roll at reduce being labelled "hard to read". Maybe don't dump it all in one line?
@Asgaia3 ай бұрын
1b) using exptions for flow control is not a good idea. Additionally showFullVersion and showChildrenVersion are alternatives. With new style it looks like showChildrenVersion is a kind of error handling. 5) you introduce a new method and increase complexity. Methods will be used. So someone will use it to log something else or even abuses it. And then other logic is coupled. You couple business logic of three methods. It they are independent than its a bad idea. It you want to make sure that they behave equally -only then - its a good idea. 8) such things can sometime be a good soliution. Especially if setting the var area later is costly. for instance if your are in a database transaction than this can be good. Or is you process an image and updating it later would mean to run through millions of pixels again. All other points are ok.
@maelstrom572 ай бұрын
Your take on 1b is weird. It's a random example with no context so how can you tell if the exception is needed or not?
@Asgaia2 ай бұрын
@@maelstrom57 using Exceptions for flow control is an anti pattern. (btw. cuddled else is never a clean code, especially with intendation of 2. And for the latter: showChildrenVersion is on the same abstraction level like showFullVersion. As I said: if there are barely any children than you construction is kind of ok. That is what i mean as kind of error handling. That a child wants to see this site is an error so to day. But if there are equally amount of children and adults than both methods are on the same level. They are alternatives. And a ternary operator (or a switch if more than two) would be a better solution than.
@victorianrichard80972 ай бұрын
Yes we need return the same follow code
@albertrain70938 ай бұрын
Hey Conner) thanks for the useful tips. But something is not clear for me in example with reduce and filter. If I'm not mistaken distructuring in reduce will cause the time complexity Am I right?
@amixengineer8 ай бұрын
excellent content thanks Conner.
@Bawar335 ай бұрын
I just watched first part of the video, u removed if else and added more ifs, the pronlem with your code style is that when it will come to priority of your ifs, because just swap two of them and your code does not work as expected, it mean if i have 10 ifs i should keep in mind not to change the order od ifs in future when i add or remove a condition, good video and thanks for sharing but who made if else knew better than us if not they just made if without else.
@seboll137 ай бұрын
First programming video I see done by Michael Cera
@vengateshm21225 ай бұрын
Well explained.
@chaoslord89186 күн бұрын
6:37 With these inconsistencies, I don't even know how this code can run. If I so much as misplace a comma, the code will crash with a lengthy error that says something like "'}' expected to close '{' near '}'." (Some help that is). I've just learned to interpret this error as "Oh, there's a missing comma." On an unrelated note, I have no idea how people who make typos are able to program.
@avinashjha5945Ай бұрын
Nice video. Kinda look like Jim Moriarty from BBC's Sherlock lol