48

I was thinking about object oriented design today, and I was wondering if you should avoid if statements. My thought is that in any case where you require an if statement you can simply create two objects that implement the same method. The two method implementations would simply be the two possible branches of the original if statement.

I realize that this seems extreme, but it seems as though you could try and argue it to some extent. Any thoughts on this?

EDIT

Wow that didn't take long. I suppose this is way too extreme. Is it possible to say though, that under OOP you should expect way less if statements?

SECOND EDIT

What about this: An object that determines its method implementation based on its attributes. That is to say you can implement someMethod() in two ways and specify some restrictions. At any point an object will route to the correct method implementation based on its properties. So in the case of if(x > 5) just have two methods that rely on the x attribute

7
  • 16
    how would you know which of those two objects to create? use an IF?
    – KM.
    Aug 26, 2009 at 21:23
  • 5
    What's your argument? I agree, you can replace ifs with polymorphism. But why should you? Can does not imply should. Aug 26, 2009 at 21:25
  • 11
    do this at work, and the rest of the team will really LOVE you
    – KM.
    Aug 26, 2009 at 21:33
  • 9
    Ori, I honestly think you're right as a general rule. In practice you will always need if statements but don't let these guys dissuade you, you need them far less often then you think. Aug 26, 2009 at 21:43
  • 2
    @George: you're right at the point that if operator is sometimes used instead of improving the design. But I have to argue that using if is not only a matter of being practical. The if operator is itself a separate and valuable concept of programming and that's why it worths using.
    – P Shved
    Aug 26, 2009 at 22:09

25 Answers 25

56

I can tell you one thing. No matter what people say, thinking about simplifying and eliminating unnecessary branching is a sign of you maturing as a software developer. There are many reasons why branching is bad, testing, maintenance, higher rate of bugs and so on. This is one of the things I look for when interviewing people and is an excellent indicator how mature they are as a developer. I would encourage you to keep experimenting, simplifying your code and design by using less conditions. When I did this switch I found much less time debugging my code, it simply worked, then when I had to change something, changes were super easy to make since most of the code was sequential. Again I would encourage you 100% to keep doing what you are doing no matter what other people say. Keep in mind most developers are working and thinking at much lower level and just follow the rules. So good job bringing this up.

15

Explain how to implement the following without an if statement or ternary logic:

if ( x < 5 ) {
   x = 0
} else {
   print x;
}
20
  • 8
    In some languages you could do it through method overloading. BAM! Aug 26, 2009 at 21:31
  • 4
    @iftrue, the functional map-reduce-ish approach that I demonstrated is also a way to do it. Don't hate, its used by functional guys world-wide. Aug 26, 2009 at 21:58
  • 14
    It's always possible to come up with contrived examples that are easy in one language but hard in another. Explain how to implement "(~R∊R∘.×R)/R←1↓⍳R" (an actual useful algorithm) in C# -- is this evidence that APL is better than C# at real programs? When's the last time you really had such logic ("zero or print" -- really?) in a program?
    – Ken
    Aug 26, 2009 at 22:05
  • 3
    @e-satis the code that iftrue proposed did 2 unrelated things depending on a condition. Yes, unrelated concepts go in separate classes. Easier to test, easier to grasp, easier to substitute alternatives. Aug 26, 2009 at 22:07
  • 3
    ((x >= 5) && !(x=0)) || (print x, 1)
    – rmn
    Oct 3, 2009 at 21:53
13

Yes its true that often complex conditionals can be simplified with polymorphishm. But its not useful all the time. Go read Fowler's Refactoring book to get an idea of when.

http://www.refactoring.com/catalog/replaceConditionalWithPolymorphism.html

1
8

Completely eliminating if statements is not realistic and I don't think that is what Ori is suggesting. But they can often be replaced using polymorphism. (And so can many switch statements).

Francesco Cirillo started the Anti-If Campaign to raise awareness of this issue. He says:

Knowing how to use objects lets developers eliminate IFs based on type, those that most often compromise software's flexibility and ability to evolve.

You or your team can also join the campaign.

7

One of my teacher used to say that. I tend to think that people being so dogmatic about that kind of thing usually don't program for a living.

6
  • 1
    Just curious. What is your usual strategy for something like this? Do you look for (dogmatic) conventions and make an informed judgement or do you prefer just writing code that works?
    – reggaemahn
    May 26, 2016 at 1:25
  • 1
    I read about it. Think about it. Test it on a project. Share the experience with other coworkers. Think about it again. Then take a stand.
    – Bite code
    May 26, 2016 at 20:27
  • Interesting. So, once you've done your research, if your conclusion is that it's wrong/bad practice, would you always follow that from that point on. If you do, would that mean you're being dogmatic about it?
    – reggaemahn
    May 27, 2016 at 0:58
  • :) Being dogmatic would imply I don't think again about it if the situation changes. E.G: I'm a web dev, my perfs are dominated by db calls. If I start programming on a SIM card, which is a specific situation, it's smart to reconsider it. "if are bad" as teached as a general statement in classes is a problem. A proper way the teacher could formulate it is: 20 years ago, flow control had performances impact in all softwares, now, it's unlikely, but think about it if after all optimizations, it stands in the way on very constraint hardware.
    – Bite code
    May 27, 2016 at 15:51
  • I can get behind that. Thanks for answering. :)
    – reggaemahn
    May 27, 2016 at 21:15
7

Have a look at the Anti-If Campaign The idea is not to replace every single if in your application with the Strategy or State Pattern. The idea is that when you have complex branching logic especially based on something like an enumeration, you should look to refactoring to the Strategy Pattern.

And that case you can remove the if all together by using a Factory. Here is a relatively straightforward example. Of course as I said in a real case, the logic in your strategies would be a bit more complex than just printing out "I'm Active".

public enum WorkflowState
{
  Ready,
  Active,
  Complete
}

public interface IWorkflowStrategy
{
  void Execute();
}

public class ActiveWorkflowStrategy:IWorkflowStrategy
{
  public void Execute()
  {
    Console.WriteLine("The Workflow is Active");
  }
}

public class ReadyWorkflowStrategy:IWorkflowStrategy
{
  public void Execute()
  {
    Console.WriteLine("The Workflow is Ready");
  }
}

public class CompleteWorkflowStrategy:IWorkflowStrategy
{
  public void Execute()
  {
    Console.WriteLine("The Workflow is Complete");
  }
}

public class WorkflowStrategyFactory
{
  private static Dictionary<WorkflowState, IWorkflowStrategy> _Strategies= 
    new Dictionary<WorkflowState, IWorkflowStrategy>();
  public WorkflowStrategyFactory()
  {
    _Strategies[WorkflowState.Ready]=new ReadyWorkflowStrategy();
    _Strategies[WorkflowState.Active]= new ActiveWorkflowStrategy();
    _Strategies[WorkflowState.Complete] = new CompleteWorkflowStrategy();
  }
  public IWorkflowStrategy GetStrategy(WorkflowState state)
  {
    return _Strategies[state];
  }
}

public class Workflow
{
    public Workflow(WorkflowState state)
    {
        CurrentState = state;
    }
    public WorkflowState CurrentState { get; set; }
}

public class WorkflowEngine
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        var factory = new WorkflowStrategyFactory();
        var workflows =
            new List<Workflow>
                {
                    new Workflow(WorkflowState.Active),
                    new Workflow(WorkflowState.Complete),
                    new Workflow(WorkflowState.Ready)
                };
        foreach (var workflow in workflows)
        {
            factory.GetStrategy(workflow.CurrentState).
                Execute();
        }
    }
}   
6

Avoiding If Statement: There are many ways to do, one of them is below:

int i=0;
if(i==1)
{
//Statement1
}

if(i==2)
{
//Statement2
}

if(i==3)
{
//Statement3
}

if(i==4)
{
//Statement4
}

Using Dictionary and delegate:

delegate void GetStatement ();

Dictionary<int,GetStatement > valuesDic=new Dictionary<int,GetStatement >();

void GetStatement1()
{
//Statement1
}
void GetStatement2()
{
//Statement2
}
void GetStatement3()
{
//Statement3
}


void GetStatement4()
{
//Statement4
}

void LoadValues()
{
valuesDic.Add(1,GetStatement1);
valuesDic.Add(2,GetStatement2);
valuesDic.Add(3,GetStatement3);
valuesDic.Add(4,GetStatement4);

}

Replacing If Statement:

int i=0;
valuesDic[i].Invoke();
4

In some ways this can be a good idea. Swiching on a type field inside an object is usually a bad idea when you can use virtual functtions instead. But the virtual function mechanism is in no way intended to replace the if() test in general.

3

How do you decide which object's method to use without an if statement?

4
  • Viurtual functions, you know. They act like a switch operator of sorts, and each if is a special case of the switch operator.
    – P Shved
    Aug 26, 2009 at 21:32
  • 1
    @Pavel: How do you decide which object to instantiate? Right, an if statement.
    – Thorarin
    Aug 26, 2009 at 21:43
  • I suspect that what Ori Cohen is suggesting is: Polymorphism and factories are two potential ways that would get rid of the if-statement. No, they wouldn't replace all if and case statements, but they could take the place of some.
    – ewall
    Aug 26, 2009 at 21:49
  • 1
    @Thorarin: I can use map<bool, CallableOOPSomething*>, instantiate both objects and after evaluation of the condition, I can call clone() method of the proper object and get the brand new instance of the thingy we need. This instance will have a call() method what lets virtual functions do the rest of the job.
    – P Shved
    Aug 26, 2009 at 22:01
3

It depends on what the original statement is comparing. My rule of thumb is that if it's a switch or if testing equality against an enumeration, then that's a good candidate for a separate method. However, switch and if statements are used for many, many other kinds of tests -- there's no good way to replace the relational operators (<, >, <=, >=) with specialized methods, and some kinds of enumerated tests work much better with standard statements.

So you should only replace ifs if they look like this:

if (obj.Name == "foo" || obj.Name == "bar") { obj.DoSomething(); }
else if (obj.Name == "baz") { obj.DoSomethingElse(); }
else { obj.DoDefault(); }
3

In answer to ifTrue's question:

Well, if you have open classes and a sufficiently strong dependent type system, it's easy, if a bit silly. Informally and in no particular language:

class Nat {
    def cond = {
        print this;
        return this;
    }
}

class NatLessThan<5:Nat> { // subclass of Nat
    override cond = {
        return 0;
    }
}

x = x.cond();

(continued...)

Or, with no open classes but assuming multiple dispatch and anonymous classes:

class MyCondFunctor {
    function branch(Nat n) {
        print n;
        return n;
    }

    function branch(n:NatLessThan<5:Nat>) {
        return 0;
    }
}

x = new MyCondFunctor.branch(x);

Or, as before but with anonymous classes:

x = new {
    function branch(Nat n) {
        print n;
        return n;
    }

    function branch(n:NatLessThan<5:Nat>) {
        return 0;
    }
}.branch(x);

You'd have a much easier time if you refactored that logic, of course. Remember that there exist fully Turing-complete type systems.

3
Assume we have conditional values.

public void testMe(int i){

if(i=1){
somevalue=value1;
}


if(i=2){
 somevalue=value2;
}

if(i=3){
somevalue=value3;
}

}

//**$$$$$you can replace the boring IF blocks with Map.$$$$$**

// ============================================================

Same method would look like this:
--------------------------------
public void testMe(int i){

Map<Integer,String> map = new HashMap<Integer,String>();

map.put(1,value1);
map.put(2,value2);
map.put(3,value3);

}
This will avoid the complicated if conditions.

You can use simliar solution when using factory patterns for loading classes.

public void loadAnimalsKingdom(String animalKingdomType)
    if(animalKingdomType="bird"){
    Bird b = new Bird();
    }
    if(animalKingdomType="animal"){
    Animal a= new Animal();
    }
    if(animalKingdomType="reptile"){
    Reptile r= new Reptile();
    }
  }

Now using map :

   public void loadAnimalsKingdom(String animalKingdomType)
    {
       Map <String,String> map = new HashMap<String,String>();

       map.put("bird","com.animalworld.Bird.Class");
       map.put("animal","com.animalworld.Animal.Class");
       map.put("reptile","com.animalworld.Reptile.Class");

       map.get(animalKingdomType);

***Use class loader to load the classes on demand once you extract the required class from the map.***
}

Like the solution? Give thumbs-up. - Vv

2

Creating a whole new class for an else, while technically doable, would likely result in code that is hard to read, maintain, or even prove correct.

1
  • 1
    This is not necessarily true. if(condtion) {do something} else {do something completely different} -you're telling me that those concerns shouldn't be...you know...separated? Aug 26, 2009 at 22:03
1

That's an interesting idea. I think that you could theoretically do this, but it would be an enormous pain in a language not specifically designed to support it. I certainly don't see any reason to.

1

I think what he is saying or what he means to say is that he thinks it is best to avoid over-abuse of "tagging" and adding custom functionality to a class by several if statements when it better makes sense to subclass or rethink the object hierarchy.

0

It is quite extreme. Doing what you are suggesting would cause a lot of needless code duplication, unless the entire function was completely different, based on a single surrounding if; and if so, that if should probably have been on the other side of the method invocation.

If-statements certainly have their place in object-orient design.

0

Surely some form of comparison needs to be made regardless of what you do? In the end ... sure you can avoid if statements but you'd be producing code that is IDENTICAL to the code using an if statement.

Someone correct me if im wrong but I can't think of a time where you could get any win form doing this.

0

I think applying that argument to the idea of every if statement is pretty extreme, but some languages give you the ability to apply that idea in certain scenarios.

Here's a sample Python implementation I wrote in the past for a fixed-sized deque (double-ended queue). Instead of creating a "remove" method and having if statements inside it to see if the list is full or not, you just create two methods and reassign them to the "remove" function as needed.

The following example only lists the "remove" method, but obviously there are "append" methods and the like also.

class StaticDeque(collections.deque):

    def __init__(self, maxSize):

        collections.deque.__init__(self)
        self._maxSize = int(maxSize)
        self._setNotFull()

    def _setFull(self):

        self._full = True
        self.remove = self._full_remove

    def _setNotFull(self):

        self._full = False
        self.remove = self._not_full_remove

    def _not_full_remove(self,value):

        collections.deque.remove(self,value)

    def _full_remove(self,value):

        collections.deque.remove(self,value)
        if len(self) != self._maxSize and self._full:
            self._setNotFull()

In most cases it's not that useful of an idea, but sometimes it can be helpful.

0

I will say the answer is vaguely yes-ish. Especially when the language allows some heavy duty functional programming (ie C#, F#, OCaml).

A component that contains 2 if statements strongly couples two business rules so break it up.

Take that as a very general rule of thumb but I would agree. If you have a bunch of if statements, maybe you should think about another approach.

0

If-statements are pretty core to programming so, in short, you cannot sensibly avoid them.

However, a key goal in OOP--in fact, one of the "pillars"--is encapsulation. The old "encapsulate what varies" rule helps you remove those troublesome if and case statements where you are trying to account for every option in your object. A better solution to dealing with branches, special cases, etc. is to use something like the "Factory" design pattern (Abstract Factory or Factory Method--depending on needs, of course).

For example, rather than having your main code loop check which OS your using with if statements then branch to create GUI windows with different options for each OS, your main code would create an object from the factory, which use the OS to determine which OS-specific concrete object to make. In doing this you are taking the variations (and the long if-then-else clauses) out of your main code loop and letting the child objects handle it--so the next time you need to make a change such as supporting a new OS, you merely add a new class from the factory interface.

0

I've been following the anti-if talk lately and it does sound like extreme / hyperbolic rhetoric to me. However I think there is truth in this statement: often the logic of an if statement can be more appropriately implemented via polymorphism. I think it is good to keep that in mind every time you right an if statement. That being said, I think the if statement is still a core logic structure, and it should not be feared or avoided as a tenet.

0

My two bits here of what I understand of the Object Oriented approach -

First, what objects in a program should be intuitive. That is, I should not try to create a 'Arithmatic' class to provide mathematical functions. This is an abuse of OOD.

Second and this is a very strong opinion of mine. It should not be called Object Oriented design but Object and Method Oriented design! If the method names of the objects are themselves not intuitive then inherited objects might end up reimplementing the methods already available.

Object Oriented approach, according to me, is not a replacement for the Procedural approach. Rather it is mainly for two main reasons for the creators of the language -

  1. Better capability of scoping of variables.

  2. Better capability of garbage collection rather than having too many global variables.

0

I agree with Vance that the IF is not good, because it increases the conditional complexity and should be avoided as possible.

Polymorphism is a totally viable solution at condition it's used to make sense and not to "Avoid If".

A side note that does not fit to your OOP requirements but the Data Oriented approach also tends to avoid the branching.

0

You must understand what (x > 5) really mean. Assuming that x represents a number, then it basically "classifies" all numbers greater than five. So the code would look like this in a language with python syntax:

class Number(Object):

    # ... Number implementation code ... #

    def doSomething():
        self = 0
        return self

    def doSomethingElse():
        pass

class GreaterThan5(Number):
    def doSomething():
        print "I am " + self

    def doSomethingElse():
        print "I like turtles!"

Then we could run code like the following:

>>> type(3)
<class Number>
>>> type(3+3)
<class GreaterThan5>
>>> 3.doSomething()
0
>>> (3 + 3).doSomething()
I am 6
>>> (7 - 3).doSomethingElse()
>>>

The automatic type conversion here is important. As far as I am aware, none of the languages today allow you to mess with integers this much.

In the end, you can do in your code whatever. As long as the people reading it can understand immediately. So the polymorphic dispatch on integers or anything unordinary must have really good reasoning behind it.

0

I too thought of the same thing and took a challenge of not using if statements in code, till now I found out some methods that could eliminate the use of if statement in the code. I replaced the comparator operator the following code.

if(x>5):
    z=1
else:
    z=0 
#without if statement
z=1*(x>5)
#without if statement and comparator
z=1+((x+x//5-5)//abs(x+x//5-5))//2

all of the code will give the same result, this is my first step towards eliminating the use of IF statement. I think this might help.

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