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More specifically, what types of mistakes do you most commonly see in code from really green (inexperienced, not the Al Gore kind) programmers?

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Perhaps it would be a good idea for users to add why these mistakes are wrong, just in case some of us (me) look at this page and feel like the community here have been watching me code for years. – EnderMB Oct 26 '08 at 2:22
2  
+1 for the Al Gore differentiation – Tim Büthe Jul 13 at 12:23

109 Answers

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  • Adding using directives and declarations in header files.
  • Making class internals public instead of adding accessors.
  • Always passing by value instead of const reference.
  • Not implementing (or hiding) copy-constructor and assignment operator for objects that allocates and handles memory.
  • Having method names longer than the method. Actual example (!):

    dontResendSigIntInfoIfReasonAllreadyExistsWithinTimePeriod(...)
    
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irrational wishes (of this sort) without regard for readability, maintainability, etc.

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In web development not understanding the difference between the client and server is something that I've seen quite a few times from new developers.

I've been asked why this didn't work plenty of times (ie - why my doesn't my alert show):

Page.ClientScript.RegisterStartupScript(this.GetType(), "notification", "alert('Success!');", true);
Response.Redirect("/default.aspx");

(I think that code's right :P).

And using alerts for debugging JavaScript, man that is such a frustrating thing to see, particularly when using Firebug!

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I'd argue that terrible variable naming is one of the best giveaways (along with poor structure). The worst would be two-three letter names for class variables.

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The biggest giveaway is definitely programmers using public static methods all over the place. That is, knowingly or (hopefully) unknowingly using OO features as an excuse for writing procedural code.

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Uninitialized pointers (with a check for NULL -- because the application may have crashed at some point when trying to dereference NULL):

char *ptr;

if (ptr != NULL)
{
   ...
}
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Most of ASP.Net newbies try to frame the HTML inside the aspx.CS file instead of aspx file. If you hard code the HTML code inside the .CS file there is noway the designer can make the changes without developer support. The code is no longer stable.

Eg:

Literal lt=new Literal();

lt.Text=" test.....";

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Using a word processor to write code. More often than you'd think I've had someone ask me why their code doesn't compile, and it's because they've got some `magic quote characters' instead of just ' or ".

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Returning pointers to stack variables is one that I've seen green programmers do a number of times.

int * blah()
{
   int x ;
   return &x ;
}
char * foo()
{
   char x[3] ;
   return x ;
}

(with implied use in the caller). In all fairness, lots of non-green programmers do the same thing, but we find less obvious and harder to debug ways to do it (like saving the address to a structure somewhere, and loosing track of where we were when this was done).

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Using a method of a class inside that class and the method happens to be something that needs to be static.

public class MyClass
{
    public int GetRandomNumber()
    {
    	...
    }

    public void MyMethod()
    {
    	MyClass c = new MyClass();
    	int number = c.GetRandomNumber();

    	// Do the rest of the job without using c
    }
}
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I was always fond of

if (x = 1) { ... }

But maybe that is more inexperienced than you were thinking.

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I found this in some code a while back:

int four = Convert.ToInt32("4");
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I've actually seen some people using Bubblesort (implemented by themselves, obviously) because they didn't know about Quicksort/Mergesort or thought that their program would need to do "complex comparisons" and that "qsort only sorts ints, floats and doubles".

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Doesn't understand how to use comments. May take one of two extremes. There's your blindingly obvious waste-of-keystrokes commenter:

cakes++; // Increment the counter keeping track of the number of cakes

... and there's the "Comments are ALWAYS a complete waste of time!" religious fanatic.

If you truly think your code is opaque unless you describe every tiny detail of what it's doing, or if you've never once encountered a comment that told you something you DESPERATELY needed to know and otherwise would have learned The Hard Way ... yeah. Either way, I call green.

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Not understanding the concept a = a + 1;

When I was a lab assistant in school, I guy came for help with an intro to Fortran assignment and couldn't even program a loop to increment a simple int variable with a = a + 1;. When I refused to write the code for him (after 10-20 minutes of trying to explain the concept) he then declares that I'm an idiot and he knows what he's talking about because he's taken the intro to Fortran class three(!) times.

You might say that this wouldn't happen in the real world but I worked with a guy who 'taught himself' to code by supporting some obscure database product. He barely understood the code of the import routines. When our manager forced him to write a program in 'C' (after being to the training class) he would come by for help with the same basic loop/a=a+1 type problem. Needless to say, he didn't pass the test.

Sigh.

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It's when you come up to your new hire and find him reading "C for Dummies".

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Passing structures across compile domains. Passing structures in general.

not understanding the dangers of malloc(), strcpy(), strlen(), scanf(), etc.

Trying to use an equal with floating point numbers. (In general not understanding floating point while trying to use it).

Using ghee whiz features of a language or tool, just because it makes them feel special or superior, etc. Or just because. Not understanding the cost or risk.

Using a new (to them) language on a project just because they wanted to learn the new language.

Never learning assembly. Never disassembling and examining their code.

Never questioning things like globals, a single return per function, goto's. That doesnt mean use them that means question the teacher (after you pass the classes and get your diploma).

Not understanding the dangers of local variables. Not understanding the dangers of local globals (locals with the word static in front of them).

Doing things like this: unsigned int *something; unsigned char *cptr; ... cptr=(unsigned char)something; ... Then using *cptr or cptr[]

Doing things like this: unsigned int IamLazy; IamLazy=I.am.too.lazy.to.type; Just because you are to lazy to type. Not understanding the implications of that action.

If you cannot install the software you wrote on a computer, you are not a developer. If you cannot install the operating system on a computer then install your software you are not a developer. If you cannot repair the operating system on the computer that runs your software, you are not a developer. If you cannot build a computer from a box of parts (motherboard, memory, processor, hard disks, etc) well I will let it go, normally that is the first task on the first day of your first job, then the os, then the compilers/tools. If you make it that far then you might be allowed to write code.

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Adding lines of code.

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