• Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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      8 months ago

      I’m sure you are capable of rewriting that in 3 lines and a single nested scope followed by a single return. In fact in languages that use exceptions you have to use at least one subscope.

      Notice that in my example I didn’t even broach the example with error conditions, cause it’s trivial to write cleanly either way. Instead I talked about returns inside business logic. You can’t unfuck that. 🐞

      • ugo@feddit.it
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        8 months ago

        Since my previous example didn’t really have return value, I am changing it slightly. So if I’m reading your suggestion of “rewriting that in 3 lines and a single nested scope followed by a single return”, I think you mean it like this?

        int retval = 0;
        
        // precondition checks:
        if (!p1) retval = -ERROR1;
        if (p2) retval = -ERROR2;
        if (!p3 && p4) retval = -ERROR3;
        
        // business logic:
        if (p1 && !p2 && (p3 || !p4))
        {
            retval = 42;
        }
        
        // or perhaps would you prefer the business logic check be like this?
        if (retval != -ERROR1 && retval != -ERROR2 && retval != -ERROR3)
        {
            retval = 42;
        }
        
        // or perhaps you'd split the business logic predicate like this? (Assuming the predicates only have a value of 0 or 1)
        int ok = p1;
        ok &= !p2;
        ok &= p3 || !p4;
        if (ok)
        {
            retval = 42;
        }
        
        return retval;
        

        as opposed to this?

        // precondition checks:
        if(!p1) return -ERROR1;
        if(p2) return -ERROR2;
        if(!p3 && p4) return -ERROR3;
        
        // business logic:
        return 42;
        

        Using a retval has the exact problem that you want to avoid: at the point where we do return retval, we have no idea how retval was manipulated, or if it was set multiple times by different branches. It’s mutable state inside the function, so any line from when the variable is defined to when return retval is hit must now be examined to know why retval has the value that it has.

        Not to mention that the business logic then needs to be guarded with some predicate, because we can’t early return. And if you need to add another precondition check, you need to add another (but inverted) predicate to the business logic check.

        You also mentioned resource leaks, and I find that a more compelling argument for having only a single return. Readability and understandability (both of which directly correlate to maintainability) are undeniably better with early returns. But if you hit an early return after you have allocated resources, you have a resource leak.

        Still, there are better solutions to the resource leak problem than to clobber your functions into an unreadable mess. Here’s a couple options I can think of.

        1. Don’t: allow early returns only before allocating resources via a code standard. Allows many of the benfits of early returns, but could be confusing due to using both early returns and a retval in the business logic
        2. If your language supports it, use RAII
        3. If your language supports it, use defer
        4. You can always write a cleanup function

        Example of option 1

        // precondition checks
        if(!p1) return -ERROR1;
        if(p2) return -ERROR2;
        if(!p3 && p4) return -ERROR3;
        
        void* pResource = allocResource();
        int retval = 0;
        
        // ...
        // some business logic, no return allowed
        // ...
        
        freeResource(pResource);
        return retval; // no leaks
        

        Example of option 2

        // same precondition checks with early returns, won't repeat them for brevity
        
        auto Resource = allocResource();
        
        // ...
        // some business logic, return allowed, the destructor of Resource will be called when it goes out of scope, freeing the resources. No leaks
        // ...
        
        return 42;
        

        Example of option 3

        // precondition checks
        
        void* pResource = allocResource();
        defer freeResource(pResource);
        
        // ...
        // some business logic, return allowed, deferred statements will be executed before return. No leaks
        // ...
        
        return 42;
        

        Example of option 4

        int freeAndReturn(void* pResource, const int retval)
        {
            freeResource(pResource);
            return retval;
        }
        
        int doWork()
        {
            // precondition checks
        
            void* pResource = allocResource();
        
            // ...
            // some business logic, return allowed only in the same form as the following line
            // ...
        
            return freeAndReturn(pResource, 42);
        }
        
        • Avid Amoeba@lemmy.ca
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          8 months ago

          Not sure why you had to do the inverted predicate check again in your first example. You already have the information encoded in the value of retval. It can be written like this:

          int result = 0;
          if (!p1) result = -ERROR1;
          if (p2) result = -ERROR2;
          if (!p3 && p4) result = -ERROR3;
          if (result != 0) {
              result = 42;
          }
          
          return result;
          

          With a return value you have to add 4 extra lines. This overhead remains constant as you add more checks and more business logic.

          Yes all the other suggestions are better than early returns in business logic and would help with leaks. Would be nice if we had RAII outside of C++. I think Rust has it? Haven’t done Rust yet.

        • Miaou@jlai.lu
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          8 months ago

          goto is used in C for this exact kind of early return management. The person you answered to does not maintain code I think

            • Miaou@jlai.lu
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              8 months ago

              This is virtually the same thing with a different keyword, I’d like to hear where you (and the down voters) draw the line.