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A recent post about the 'with' statement in Delphi - which in practice I never use because it trades clarity and ease of debugging for superficially 'cleaner' looking code got me thinking; what other language features, in any language, do you think should never be touched? - or at least avoided where at all possible?

The classic example of this would be the COBOL ALTER statement, which dynamically rewrites the executing code to change the destination of a GOTO. Use of ALTER was just about a sackable offense in every COBOL shop I ever worked in.

My supposition would be that as language design is better understood nowadays there may be fewer of these 'features' coming through - but is that true of the newer more exotic paradigms such as the functional programming languages?

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48 Answers

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vote up -6 vote down

C++: protected inheritance

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vote up 3 vote down

I find Python's backtick repr quite nasty (and especially since there are better ways to do it.)

`some_var` == repr(some_var)     # yikes Batman (gone in 3.0 - thanks Greg)

And then there is this implicit string concatenation thing:

>>> 'a''b''c'     # holy moly Robin
'abc'
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vote up 31 vote down

In C:

  • Taking advantage of the commutative property of array indexing to swap the array name and the index:

    int array[5];
    3[array] = 0;
    
  • Using the preprocessor to try to turn C into another language:

    #define IF if (
    #define BEGIN {
    
  • The register keyword, which at best is likely to be ignored, at worst it will make performance worse, and in either case you lose the ability to take the address of your variable.

  • The auto keyword, simply no need to use this.

  • More of a library issue than a language feature but the gets() function should never be used.

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vote up -1 vote down

C interprets nonzero values to signify true and zero values to signify false. You shouldn't have to rely on this feature any more.

Edit: Number of people are not buying my disliking nonzero-as-true. What about this?

if (status = UNDER_ATTACK) {
    launch_nuclear_missiles();
}

or this?

if(x & 2 == 1)
{
    launch_nuclear_missiles();
}
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vote up 12 vote down

Never use the C / C++ language feature of chaining code in a switch statement by appending code to a previous switch case:

OK -

switch (x) {
  case 1:
  case 2:
  case 3:
    ...
    break;
  case 4:
    ...
    break;

  }

Evil -

switch (x) {
  case 1:
  case 2:
  case 3:
    ...
  case 4:
    ...  // Add to the 1,2,3 case here
    break;

  }
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I might have uses for this construct, actually, but I always document the fallthrough. – PhiLho Nov 23 '08 at 17:44
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vote up 4 vote down

In C# there are a number of caveats, e.g.

Never lock on a value type - the lock keyword prevents you from doing this, but if you call Monitor.Enter() directly, you'll be locking on a boxed instance of the value. Fortunately when you try to call Monitor.Exit() on a boxed value, you'll get an exception.

Never lock on a literal string. In C# literal strings are interned for the entire application. Thus local strings, strings in different AppDomains etc. are all shared. This could lead to weird deadlock issues.

Be very careful with finalizers and try to avoid them if possible. One problem: an unhandled exception in a finalizer will take down the entire process.

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vote up 1 vote down

I cannot find a good use for the Shadows keyword in VB .NET.

Shadows is the same as declaring a method with no modifiers, which VB's compiler doesn't otherwise allow. It creates a new name, effectively blocking all all of the overloads with that name in the inheritance hierarchy. I don't think there is a C# equivalent - for example, C#'s new is not equivalent, as it targets the hidebysig IL construct, like VB's Overloads.

If you only have one overload when you use Shadows, the behaviour matches Overloads. But maintenance developers will find out that new overloads are also hidden!

What makes this worse is that Shadows is the default. I think this may be because of VB's way of resolving an overloaded method. Unlike C#, the VB compiler does a depth-first analysis of the entire inheritance chain. Having Shadows as the default prevents base type changes modifying the behaviour of your existing code. I suppose this is a necessary evil in a world where you may not be able to control base type behaviour.

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vote up 3 vote down

It's not a language feature, but a compiler option that you should never use.

javac -nowarn myApp.java
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vote up 15 vote down

Global Variables.

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A static class is just a global in disguise. It has all the same problems and advantages. – Jules Dec 24 '08 at 16:26
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vote up 10 vote down

You should never write Perl code without:

use warnings;
use strict;

Also, you should never use a JAPH in production code. Those are strictly for use in .signature files and golf. Their misuse elsewhere is, IMHO, one of the main reasons for Perl's reputation as a "write-only" language.

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vote up 1 vote down

In C#, you should (almost) never use [assembly: ComVisible(true)] in your AssemblyInfo.cs. It is far too easy to generate wads of COM coclasses and interfaces you're not even aware of. After all, FxCop itself considers it bad practice and recommends specyfing the [ComVisible] attribute on specific classes and interfaces explicitly.

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vote up -3 vote down

Multiple Inheritance in C++, of course. There's a good reason it's been dropped in C#/java.

(Though "every rule does has exceptions, including this one").

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vote up 18 vote down

You should never do using namespace std; in a header file in global scope in C++.

And you should be shocked if you see using namespace std; in global scope. Never do it, it throws away the names scope separation gained using namespaces.

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vote up 3 vote down

I agree with Vinko Vrsalovic. And my exception is the Delphi With statement. The only time I used it was to create a test set for the delphi frontend of my metrics tool.

The with statement has a very big "I want to shoot myself in the foot" factor. Which is fine if you are the only developer, but in a team it can be very nasty.

Maybe there should be a compiler option that gives warnings if with statements are encountered ;-).

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vote up 2 vote down

In C#, extern aliases. These allow you to cope with the situation where you have two different assemblies both containing a type with the same name, including namespace, and you want to refer to a particular one of them. Avoid wherever possible.

EDIT: Just to be clear, this isn't a fault in the language. The feature allows you to get out of otherwise intractable situations. It's just a feature you don't want to have to use.

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vote up 18 vote down

I think no language feature should never be used. It's just a matter of knowing when and how to apply each feature. Of course there are features you almost never would want to use, but can still have their place in certain contexts.

Well, as every rule has to have at least one exception, here's one, PHP related:

  • Having register_globals set to on should never happen :-)
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I think magic_quotes_gpc is a million times more evil than register_globals. At least you can code around register_globals, but magic quotes are right there staring you in the face, laughing at you as they corrupt all your input. – Ant P Dec 6 '08 at 2:57
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vote up 27 vote down

You should always use Option Explicit in Visual Basic (i.e.: you should never use implicit variables).

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I think you should also be using Option Strict also. It takes a little more typing to cast when needed, but can prevent a lot of bugs. – Kibbee Nov 24 '08 at 0:33
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vote up 18 vote down

The only thing that comes to mind are GOTO statements :)

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While I agree with the spirit of this, the problem I've run across when programmers follow this rule without really understanding why they should avoid gotos is that they wind up creating bizarre constructs like: do { ... break; ... } while (false); which technically follow the rule, but [continued] – Ferruccio Nov 23 '08 at 11:53
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I like to use goto in order to have a single point of return from C functions that need to do some clean-up before returning, rather than repeating the clean-up before each return statement. – divideandconquer.se Nov 23 '08 at 12:13
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