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97 Things Every Programmer Should Know
book

97 Things Every Programmer Should Know

by Kevlin Henney
February 2010
Beginner
255 pages
6h 10m
English
O'Reilly Media, Inc.
Content preview from 97 Things Every Programmer Should Know

Chapter 4. Automate Your Coding Standard

Filip van Laenen

image with no caption

YOU’VE PROBABLY BEEN THERE, TOO. At the beginning of a project, everybody has lots of good intentions—call them “new project’s resolutions.” Quite often, many of these resolutions are written down in documents. The ones about code end up in the project’s coding standard. During the kick-off meeting, the lead developer goes through the document and, in the best case, everybody agrees that they will try to follow them. Once the project gets underway, though, these good intentions are abandoned, one at a time. When the project is finally delivered, the code looks like a mess, and nobody seems to know how it came to be that way.

When did things go wrong? Probably already at the kick-off meeting. Some of the project members didn’t pay attention. Others didn’t understand the point. Worse, some disagreed and were already planning their coding standard rebellion. Finally, some got the point and agreed, but when the pressure in the project got too high, they had to let something go. Well-formatted code doesn’t earn you points with a customer that wants more functionality. Furthermore, following a coding standard can be quite a boring task if it isn’t automated. Just try to indent a messy class by hand to find out for yourself.

But if it’s such a problem, why is it that we want a coding standard in the first place? One reason to format ...

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Publisher Resources

ISBN: 9780596809515Errata Page