vote up 53 vote down star
38

When it comes to coding style I'm a pretty relaxed programmer. I'm not firmly dug into a particular coding style. I'd prefer a consistent overall style in a large code base but I'm not going to sweat every little detail of how the code is formatted.

Still there are some coding styles that drive me crazy. No matter what I can't look at examples of these styles without reaching for a VIM buffer to "fix" the "problem". I can't help it. It's not even wrong, I just can't look at it for some reason.

For instance the following comment style almost completely prevents me from actually being able to read the code.

if (someConditional) 
// Comment goes here
{
  other code
}

What's the most frustrating style you've encountered?

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7  
This should be a community wiki before it's reopened. Getting rep for having an opinion on best/worst type questions is inconsistent with the intent of the reputation system. – tvanfosson Oct 26 '08 at 21:45
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81 Answers

1 2 3 next
vote up 147 vote down check

Interestingly enough, that's

if (0 == foo()) {}

i.e. putting the constant on the left to avoid an == / = mixup. I know it would be better to do it, and I feel bad for it, but reading it is for me a mental speedbump.

Doesn't say much except that being annoying doesn't mean it's necessarily bad.

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16  
This used to be strongly encouraged if you were working in C or C++. It saves you from a nasty bug that the compiler will joyfully allow. Nowadays any static analysis tool will alert you if you use = instead of ==. – Bill the Lizard Oct 26 '08 at 12:22
2  
Any sane compiler can warning you as well. – JesperE Oct 26 '08 at 15:33
12  
"Mental speedbump". I like that analogy. – JesperE Oct 26 '08 at 15:33
5  
Hillarious. I personally love that style but it's great to see other people have rational styles they can't handle either. – JaredPar Oct 27 '08 at 1:31
3  
Alternatively it's like thinking, I can just remember not to crash or I can ruin my hair and wear a crash helmet. – Martin Beckett May 30 at 22:43
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vote up 10 vote down

I hate it when people declare/use undescriptive variable...

e.g.

string zp = string.Empty;
int n1 = -1;
List<object> xList = new List<object>();
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2  
zp as in zip, n1 as in negative one, what is nondescriptive about that ok i kid i kid ;P – mike nvck Apr 16 at 15:16
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vote up 5 vote down

The use of different languages for identifier names gives me the creeps.

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vote up 59 vote down

Overkill abstraction of object oriented design.

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5  
Like, for instance, this: stackoverflow.com/questions/582603/… – Aaron Maenpaa Feb 24 at 17:31
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vote up 92 vote down

Inconsistent indentation.

I can put up with tabs or spaces, all sorts of brace matching, and various depths of indentation - as long as it is used consistently across a project.

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1  
In Visual Studio, CTRL-K, CTRL-D will automatically fix up formatting... – Mitch Wheat Dec 31 '08 at 0:21
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vote up 56 vote down

GNU style, of course.

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1  
return type is on top of the function declaration. It looks out of place. – artificialidiot Oct 26 '08 at 16:49
1  
Indentation and brace-style is rather awkward. – staticsan Feb 9 at 21:50
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vote up 35 vote down

When the variable and method/function names are as unintuitive as they can be:

void function1(int i, int j) {
    for(index, index++, index < 5) 
       for(index1, index1++, index1 < 10)

Code is meant to be as self-explanatory as possible and the most control we as programmers have is on things we can name/define ourselves (comments is really the next level and should be done only if required).

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3  
You demonstrate another pet peeve of mine: using the canonical loop variables i and j as function arguments, preventing their use in the loops! ;-p – Shog9 Oct 26 '08 at 15:42
4  
Which language has for-loops organized like that? It seems to be 'for (initializer, reinitializer, condition)', which is not the canonical C and C-derived order. – Jonathan Leffler Oct 26 '08 at 16:52
vote up 1 vote down

While Style is number 1, and functionality is number 2.

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vote up 89 vote down

The use of type prefix in variables name in modern languages like c#

int iIndex;
string strMessage;
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2  
That's not Hungarian, it's very weak variable name typing. Hungarian is vastly more complex. – Cruachan Oct 26 '08 at 20:47
10  
That's not Hungarian. Please, please stop bashing Hungarian if you do not understand what it is!! – Yarik Oct 27 '08 at 20:12
2  
@Yarik: Many reasons 1) you can know the type of the var just from the tooltip, intellisence, etc 2)it doesn't prevent bugs of bad type assignments since the compilation in this case fails 3) if the type of the var changes you have to change the name? 4) less elegant(readable) but this is my opinion – pablito Nov 1 '08 at 5:12
2  
I prefer this style. I don't have to do any hunting whatsoever in order to know what type the variable is. – SnOrfus Feb 24 at 17:24
7  
I'm against Hungarian 100% -- buth apps and system. In the Wikipedia example, what is wrong with rowPosition? why use rPosition? Why be ambiguous? Certainly, if the project I was given had a document outlining what each notiation meant I would be less against it. Good luck with finding that doc. – Nazadus Mar 22 at 20:30
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vote up 49 vote down

Since programmers have to write correct code without syntax errors, i am overly picky when it comes to obvious typographical errors in variable and function names. Especially not since rename-refactoring is just a click away.

A few examples:

m_bHasLoosed
SetDesturctionMode
GetAdminitsrationRights
HasPlayerWinningGame

The last one being the worst of all.

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2  
Finding obvious spelling mistakes that have been in the code for ages, erks me. OK, it won't affect the code running, but it smacks of laxiness. Often, a dev will notice it and not change it because they have no way of being 100% certain it won't break somewhere. (stored procs are a good example). – Mitch Wheat Dec 31 '08 at 0:30
6  
for the last 2 years I've been trying to figure out what the original programmer who named this method was thinking... LoadSchmulaka() – Christopher Klein Mar 3 at 21:13
17  
I propose that the winner is "Referer", of HTTP fame. Every time a user clicks a link in a web browser, this 7-character brainfart is transmitted across the world. – j_random_hacker Mar 7 at 18:16
1  
Every time something like this comes up, I remember the $date_dude variable in the Perl scripts I inherited at my job. – Artem Russakovskii May 10 at 16:45
5  
Re: "Referer". Just think of the gigabytes of data saved EVERY DAY by omitting that one 'r'! – Barry Brown May 30 at 23:35
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vote up 8 vote down

For me it's code that's deliberately hard to read, whilst ironically the developer thought they were making it easier to read. I posted this code snippet as an answer to another question, but it's just as relevant here. Here's an exact copy of code from something I work on, all the comments (or lack thereof) as identical to how it appears in the source code:

function getAttributes(&$a_oNode)
{
    $l_aAttributes = $a_oNode->attributes();
    if ($l_aAttributes === NULL)
        return array();

    $l_iCount = count($l_aAttributes);
    $l_i = 0;

    for ($l_i = 0; $l_i < $l_iCount; $l_i++)
    {
        $l_aReturn[$l_aAttributes[$l_i]->name()] = $l_aAttributes[$l_i]->value();
    }

    return $l_aReturn;
}

function getText(&$a_oNode)
{
    $l_aChildren = $a_oNode->child_nodes();
    if ($l_aChildren === NULL)
        return NULL;

    $l_szReturn = "";

    $l_iCount = count($l_aChildren);
    for ($l_i = 0; $l_i < $l_iCount; $l_i++)
    {
        if ($l_aChildren[$l_i]->node_type() == XML_TEXT_NODE)
            $l_szReturn .= $l_aChildren[$l_i]->node_value();
    }

    if (strlen($l_szReturn) > 0)
        return $l_szReturn;

    return NULL;
}

Someone obviously didn't read Joel's article on Hungarian Notation. This code just makes my head hurt.

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1  
Say goodbye to that code, youy just released it under creative commons! – RCIX Sep 13 at 10:00
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vote up 56 vote down

Spaceless concatenation like this:

string s = "Bob"+" "+objWhatever.ToString()+obj2.ToString()+"isadork";
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1  
@staticsan: spaceless concatenation is permitted in C#; I just find it annoying and more difficult to read. – MusiGenesis Feb 10 at 1:35
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vote up 25 vote down

Undocumented (uncommented) hacks.

After almost two decades in the field, I can tolerate the lack of comments in general, and I can tolerate justifiable hacks. But uncommented hacks?!...

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6  
I agree. "// HACK ALERT" should be second nature to any programmer. – MusiGenesis Oct 26 '08 at 12:43
1  
I feel it neccesary to qualify this. Just saying that a bit of code is /* a bit hackish */ is worse than no comment at all. On the other hand, explaining that a bit of code is not expected to correctly handle all corner cases, explaining which corner cases, and what happens now when it encounters those cases (raises an exception? divides by zero?) is correct. – TokenMacGuy May 30 at 22:56
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vote up 87 vote down

Placement of commas like this:

enum Whatever 
{
      SomeValue
    , AnotherValue
    , YetAnotherValue
}

I understand the rationale, but my eyes bleed when I have to read something like that. Very inhumane.

What I don't understand is why language syntax designers do not allow to have redundant delimiter characters at the ends of character-delimited lists. Of course, something like this

enum Whatever 
{
    SomeValue,
    AnotherValue,
    YetAnotherValue,
}

would be a little inhumane too but, in my humble opinion, not nearly as ugly as the first sample...

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8  
C99 enums allow the trailing comma; C89 does not (so don't use them unless you're sure you're using C99, always). – Jonathan Leffler Oct 26 '08 at 16:54
4  
PHP, Ruby, Python all allow trailing commas. Several other languages as well. I commonly leave it in to make adding another entry or removing one easier. – jcoby Oct 26 '08 at 17:20
4  
Many constructs in C# allow for this, such as enums and object initializers. – Wyatt Oct 26 '08 at 20:16
4  
I disagree. I MUCH prefer the comma-before-values. Maybe it's just me... but once I got used to it, it just looks and feels better to me. – Atomiton Nov 2 '08 at 9:36
6  
@Christopher, but then you can't just comment out the first entry. What's the difference? – jmucchiello May 30 at 23:12
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vote up 1 vote down

This one is specific to VB... I really hate multi-line statements - one of those legitimate features that should not be used. For example:

ErrorMessage = "Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, " _
             & "consectetuer adipiscing elit. " _
             & "Donec pharetra arcu et urna. " _
             & "Vivamus vehicula leo in dui."

Of course, the main problem is not those underscores and not ampersands at the beginnings of the lines. They are eyesores, but the main problem is inability to comment one of those lines...

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2  
For error messages- yeah that's a pain. But just wait until you have to keep a large sql statement string in code. – Joel Coehoorn May 14 at 14:24
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vote up 3 vote down

Putting statements on multiple lines, especially when it's really not necessary, as in this case:

if (bOne &&
    bTwo &&
    bThree &&
    bFour &&
    (!bFive ||
    !bSix))
{
   // do something
}

And it's even more ugly counterpart:

if (bOne
    && bTwo
    && bThree
    && bFour
    && (!bFive
    || !bSix))
{
   // do something
}
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3  
This is subjective, so I'm not downvoting it, but I often do split if conditions like this, especially when there are six conditions like this example. – Zan Lynx Oct 26 '08 at 20:18
1  
I think what you ought to do is create a submethod and then call that method. The name of the method should be descriptive to tell a new developer what it is doing. – andHapp Dec 30 '08 at 23:51
1  
It's much better to wrap that whole condition in a meaningfully named variable, then get the value for it from a meaningfully named, unit testable method. – Trampas Kirk Mar 3 at 21:50
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vote up 16 vote down

I just don't like prefixes in front of class field names: string m_name;

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7  
They are absolutely not useless. Quite on the contrary, they're very much required, considering that you'd else risk name conflicts with public properties. Differentiation on capitalization alone is quite error-prone and doesn't work in languages like VB: – Konrad Rudolph Nov 2 '08 at 17:59
6  
I also think this is essential. I hate looking at variables and trying to figure out where they came from. I always think I missed the declaration of a variable when reading the code and stumbling upon a member variable without an m_ preceding it. It wastes time trying to find where it was declared. – Dunk Feb 9 at 21:54
1  
In PHP where you have to say $this->member, they should never be used. – jmucchiello Mar 3 at 22:05
1  
When you're deep in a function and suddenly see "name", it'd be nice to know whether you're dealing with a local, global, member, or class variable... with g_, m_, and c_ you'd know. ;-) – DevSolar Apr 15 at 14:30
1  
@devsolar just don't use deep functions. – Vadim Ferderer Jul 14 at 22:44
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vote up 100 vote down

Omission of brackets just because they are not required for single-statement blocks. Like this:

if (SomeCondition)
    DoSomething();

If you spent enough time staring at code like this

while (SomeCondition)
   DoSomething();
   DoSomeOtherThing();
DoYetAnotherThing();

and wondering "is this a bug or just somebody's sloppy indentation?", then I bet you know what I mean. If you didn't... well, I guess you were just lucky so far. :-)

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11  
That’s interesting, I’m glad I am allowed to do that (even in for or while loops), the extra braces look ugly to me. – zoul Oct 26 '08 at 15:45
9  
It's less offensive if it's all on the same line, rather than split on two lines. – neonski Oct 26 '08 at 16:15
5  
braces helps when you change your mind and add a few more lines. – artificialidiot Oct 26 '08 at 16:46
19  
Completely disagree. One liners are much nicer looking without the braces. – James Atkinson Oct 27 '08 at 5:46
13  
Atomiton: why complicate things? if there are braces around every block, you don't need to think of the rules at all. – Ed Swangren Dec 31 '08 at 0:12
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vote up 12 vote down

The worst I saw was on some well known open source network code in C (I can't recall the software name): the author defines a bunch of pre-processor shortcuts (like W for while, and worse) and use it through the whole code...

I also saw an ex-Pascal programmer defining BEGIN and END to { and }...

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3  
Fortunately, for preprocessor hacks like this, there's an easy tool to fix them - gcc -E. – Chris Lutz Aug 19 at 1:53
1  
+1 for the BEGIN END thing, but taken a step further and actually enforcing it company wide in a "style guide"... – hapalibashi Nov 3 at 20:15
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vote up 20 vote down

Useless variable names

int temp1 = 10;
int temp2 = 5;
string a = "test";
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5  
I think only the local variables which have a very short life time should be declared with these names. – andHapp Dec 30 '08 at 23:52
3  
@Meeh - if the variables were named properly, the method wouldn't need to be "well documented" as it would be self-documenting – Alconja May 8 at 4:18
1  
Perhaps with the intended usage after the 'temp'? Such as 'tempRowPosition' or 'tempFooArray'. – Sid Farkus Nov 3 at 20:45
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vote up 17 vote down

I hate it when there is no style--every engineer just does whatever he wants and the reader can tell which parts of a file were written by which engineers.

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1  
I find its worthwile, especially gives a good idea who really wrote the code when it was copied and pasted or written over the shoulder. – Joshua Dec 31 '08 at 0:19
3  
That's what source control is for. Programmer personality is not something that should be reflected in the code, changing from one line to the next; the code should be a cohesive body of work. The style, the handling of errors, etc should be standard for the project. (Scope of "project" may vary.) – Mitch Haile Feb 2 at 5:05
1  
We had a developer who had his own style, but would only remember to run the code beautifier on 50% of his stuff. This would result in half of his code following company standards and the other half following his own standards. I agree, it was very annoying! – Outlaw Programmer Mar 4 at 14:51
1  
In theory, it's kind of odd that the beautifier wouldn't be part of a pre-commit hook to SCM or part of a build step, etc. But not everyone has time to implement all the stuff required in a perfect world. I sure don't. :-) – Mitch Haile Mar 5 at 4:18
2  
+1. Having to handle four different ways of logging and five different styles of error reporting ain't fun. – DevSolar Apr 15 at 14:32
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vote up 99 vote down

Useless comments.

Example:

i++; // Increment of i
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7  
at least it didn't say "by 1" – benPearce Dec 31 '08 at 0:21
1  
I used to - simply to aid the reader of my code if they were new to the particular language I was writing in. If you're reading along and you don't know what "i++" does, it can help to have a comment. – Dalin Seivewright Feb 24 at 19:35
4  
@Dalin If you're writing a very basic tutorial/book, sure. If you're doing absolutely ANYTHING else, it's completely redundant. People reading your code are likely going to be at least slightly familiar with the language. If a keyword or operator is unfamiliar, letmegooglethatforyou.com – Stuart B Mar 3 at 20:46
19  
/* Yea, and God said to Abraham, you shall increment the value by one. One being greater than zero yet less than two. After incrementing, thou shalt then emit the original value. The original value being one -- not zero nor two -- less than the new value. */ – Tyson May 19 at 16:09
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vote up 77 vote down

Inconsistent brace usage within the same construct:

if (something)
   this->noteSomething();
else
{
   several();
   statements();
   within();
   braces();
}
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6  
Yes, I find the opposite ugly, braces around a single statement ALWAYS uglifies my code. Braces are meant only to group. This code is perfectly readable. – Atomiton Nov 2 '08 at 9:43
2  
+1. I seen people make mistakes in C/C++ by adding a new method call, indenting and forggetting to add the braces. (with brace/no-brace other way round) – Mitch Wheat Dec 31 '08 at 0:33
2  
I do this... braces around a single statement don't look write either – Click Upvote Mar 3 at 20:31
1  
There is no rule that you don't use braces for single statements, but virtually every "good style" guide will tell you that consistency wins. It's the same with comments - basically redundant, but in their redundancy allow other people to figure out if your code works as you intended... – DevSolar Apr 15 at 14:22
2  
+1 As a fan of no-braces-around-one-liners, I use braces around all blocks if any blocks need them. – Chris Lutz Aug 19 at 1:45
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vote up 1 vote down

I've been dealing with a large chunk of legacy code that's been written in bad Perl by somebody with a Unix shell background.

Because of the Unix background they've adopted the convention of using a zero return value as success. Everbody else in the Perl world this evaluates to false. Because of this you have variants of:

if (not $success ) {
  # happy path
} else {
  # failure
}

everywhere - mixed in with "normal" Perl libraries with the saner convention of false == failure, true == success.

Evil.

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vote up 26 vote down

mixing the bracket styles between K & R and that other style...

if (condition){
}
else
{
}

Inconsistent mixing of initialization with declaration

int x,y,z=0;

  x = 1;
  y = 1;
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vote up 145 vote down

For a basic university course in programming, we were supposed to write a simple client program connecting to a server. Here is a part of the server code we were given, written by someone who obviously really, REALLY prefers python's syntax to Java's.

It was only about 50 lines in total, so it's really no big deal, and we didn't have to do anything with it except run it. But the style still bothers me.

import java.net.*                                         ;
import java.io.*                                          ;
import java.util.*                                        ;
public class Server                                       { 
    public static void main( String[] args)               {
        try                                               {
            ServerSocket sock = new ServerSocket(4712,100);
            while(true) new Handler(sock.accept()).start();}
        catch(IOException e) {System.err.println(e);}     ;}} 

class Handler extends Thread                              {
    public void run()                                     {
    Random random=new Random()                            ;
    try                                                   {
            //yada yada yada
    catch(Exception e) {System.err.println(e);}           ;}}
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14  
It hurts my eyes. – Mike Powell Feb 9 at 21:14
5  
amazingly, it was a pleasure to read! although I would guess a pain to write while maintaining the vertical line to the right! – hasen j Feb 10 at 3:32
17  
Wow. I've never seen such beatiful java code. – Rob Mar 3 at 22:04
11  
Reminds me of winter when the plow trucks come through and push all the snow to the side of the road :) That's a very interesting coding style. One could really mess with coworkers' heads, especially if one moved the column of scope operators far off to the right. "What? C#? How does this compile?" – Triynko Apr 16 at 22:29
25  
This is plain awesome, that's what it is (I love python). Whoever whote this code should be given a medal. Posthumously, of course. – shylent May 10 at 16:38
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vote up 4 vote down

Worst ever?

# TODO: Document This!

...exceptionally good when its found at the top of every method declaration and at the top of the file.

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1  
Well, at least it's an official TODO, so i don't think this is too bad. Of course, it ought to actually be done sometime later... – echorhyn Feb 25 at 9:06
vote up 0 vote down

Can't stand this:

if (condition) {
    # ...
}

Not sure why, either. I've always had a new line for braces. I also always keep a new line for return, so this also bothers me:

function a($x)
{
    $y = $x * $x;
    return $y;
}
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vote up 4 vote down

Macro-filled code where 99.9% of lines of code use at least one if not more macros making the code a language unto itself mostly.

I did have this with my first out of school job where this is what the server developer did that he thought was a good idea. It eventually got to be OK, but by then I had spent a couple of years in it and was the most senior employee that ran it.

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vote up 110 vote down

Explicitly testing against boolean literals:

if(foo == true)
{
   ...
}

and (Joel Spolsky mentioned this on the podcast) refusing to return boolean expressions:

if(x < 24)
{
    return true;
}
else
{
    return false;
}

that makes me crazy.

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3  
I don't see why this is bad. If they do it this way and commented it well, I would just assume the programmar wanted clarity and not desperately saving a few lines of code. – Hao Wooi Lim Feb 10 at 3:32
1  
@Hao: because ignoring (or feigning to ignore) that an expression can return a boolean type and not using this capability is laziness (or worse). I am not fan of super conciseness, on the contrary, but extra parentheses and above examples makes me cringe. – PhiLho Feb 14 at 17:47
8  
It's outright retarded. It says "I do not understand expression evaluation". To think this is in any way a matter of clarity is an insult to the reader. – annakata Feb 24 at 17:07
3  
I find this usually is caused by code cruft. There may at one time have been stuff before the returns and then it got removed and the big if-else remains. – jmucchiello Mar 3 at 21:10
5  
@David Conversely, sometimes you do want to explicitly check against a boolean. For example in Javascript it's typical for callbacks to return explicit false to suppress the default behaviour, whereas not returning a value (the return value is undefined) should not suppress it. – Kieron Mar 7 at 1:18
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