• Simulation6@sopuli.xyz
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    20 hours ago

    Figuring out what the code is doing is not the hard part. Documenting the reason you want it to do that (domain knowledge) is the hard part.

    • steventhedev@lemmy.world
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      17 hours ago

      One upvote is not enough.

      I once wrote a commit message the length of a full blog post comparing 10 different alternatives for micro optimization, with benchmarks and more. The diff itself was ten lines. Shaved around 4% off the hot path (based on a sampling profiler that ran over the weekend).

    • tatterdemalion@programming.dev
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      19 hours ago

      Agreed.

      And sometimes code is not the right medium for communicating domain knowledge. For example, if you are writing code the does some geometric calculations, with lot of trigonometry, etc. Even with clear variable names, it can be hard to decipher without a generous comment or splitting it up into functions with verbose names. Sometimes you really just want a picture of what’s happening, in SVG format, embedded into the function documentation HTML.

      • hex@programming.dev
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        8 hours ago

        Yeah. I advocate for self explanatory code, but I definitely don’t frown upon comments. Comments are super useful but soooo overused. I have coworkers that aren’t that great that would definitely comment on the most basic if statements. That’s why we have to push self explanatory code, because some beginners think they need to say:

        //prints to the console
        console.log("hello world");
        

        I think by my logic, comments are kind of an advanced level concept, lol. Like you shouldn’t really start using comments often until you’re writing some pretty complex code, or using a giant codebase.

        • TehPers@beehaw.org
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          3 hours ago

          Sometimes when I don’t leave comments like that, I get review comments asking what the line does. Code like ThisMethodInitsTheService() with comments like “what does this do?” in the review.

          So now I comment a lot. Apparently reading code is hard for some people, even code that tells you exactly what it does in very simple terms.

          • hex@programming.dev
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            3 hours ago

            Fair. I guess in this case, it’s a manner of gauging who you’re working with. I’d much rather answer a question once in a while than over-comment (since refactors often make comments worthless and they’re so easy to miss…), but if it’s a regular occurrence, yeah it would get on my nerves. Read the fuckin name of the function! Or better yet go check out what the function does!

    • lobut@lemmy.ca
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      17 hours ago

      I can’t recall the exact change but a coworker did something five years very intentionally. The comments, the commit and everything described what they did but not why.

      I think it was with side effects: true and I fixed a certain way we bundled things and I believe that could have solved the issue but I don’t know for sure :/