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Code smells

Ian Edwards edited this page Oct 29, 2018 · 1 revision

As a software engineer, sometimes you see something in the code that feels like a code smell (something that doesn't quite "smell right").

A code smell is defined as:

any characteristic in the source code of a program that possibly indicates a deeper problem.

One of the most common code smells is "duplicated code" - this is code that is repeated in a very similar way in multiple places and can result in errors being introduced when you are trying to keep multiple similar copies up-to-date in different places whenever something changes or needs fixing.

The solution is through code refactoring:

restructuring existing computer code—changing the factoring—without changing its external behavior.

For example, we may be able to take a block of code that is repeated in multiple forms and write it as a single function or method that only exists is one place (and then only needs to be updated in a single place in the future).

This principal (also known as don't repeat yourself) is one of the main aims behind the use of reusable user controls.

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