In most situations, readability is more important than execution speed. I therefore try
to optimize for ease of understanding, by using the following approach:
All "assertion" checks are done up front. this guarantees that all erroneous cases are dealt with at the very start. this is especially important for null-pointer-checks, e.g.
if(arg == null){
throw new IllegalArgumentException(); // harsh (correct)
}
// or
if(arg == null){
arg = ""; // forgiving (lazy)
}
Next, i try to check for 1 condition only in each if-statement. instead of
if(condition1 && condition2) {
...
} else {
...
}
i generally prefer
if(condition1) {
if(condition2) {
...
} else {
...
}
} else {
...
}
This approach is easier for setting breakpoints, and it makes the logic more obvous.
I avoid negations; instead of
if(! condition) {
...a...
} else {
...b...
}
things are better rearranged to
if(condition) {
...b...
} else {
...a...
}
Finally, all methods that return a boolean result should have a "positive" name that indicates what the results means:
boolean checkSomething(Something x){ ... } // bad -- whats the result?
boolean isSomethingInvalid(Something x){ ... } // better, but ...
boolean isSomethingValid(Something x){ ... } // best, no "mental negation"