Wednesday, April 20, 2016

Code Review and Single Responsibility Principle

According to the Single Responsibility Principle each unit in our code should have only one reason to change.
Code Review, on the other hand, is a technique that helps us improve the quality of our code and increase its readability.
I believe that you know both the principle and the technique.
The question is: why do I juxtapose them in one article?

Well, if SRP is about one reason to change code, then I think that code in the review should be organized around one change. The author should organize the commit of the code which is sent to the review in a way that will reflect only one change.

Code Review and the effort

Code review is really useful and important. However, it requires some amount of effort from the reviewer. A developer that will read the code will have to understand what needs to be implemented. They need to know whether expectations are met. They need to have enough understanding to verify the quality of the code and its readability. All of it requires both time and full attention. During the review, if you want to do it right, you have to stay focused.

That’s why we should make code review as small as possible. To decrease the effort that must be put into this activity.

Code Review and only one change

Many changes mean that you are jumping from one place to another and you are trying to figure out which change is the reason of which modification of the code. It makes reading the code harder, because you need to keep in mind many contexts and reasons. It makes it harder to find bugs in such situation.
More things that are merged can go unnoticed..

When the code that is put to the review, it has various reasons for modifications than, except for everything I mentioned in the previous paragraph, we need to carry out two additional activities: switch contexts and group changes into subsets organized around each change. And we also have to remember that each change can have an impact on another.

So the amount of the effort and time that reviewer needs to invest into a code review is:
Number of changes * effort needed for one change + switching the context + understanding implication


I heard more than once that “it is better/easier/faster to do one code review instead of many, because you will do a review only once”. As you can see, though, putting many things into a code review is not simple multiplication of effort needed for one review.
Unfortunately there is additional complexity in this equation.

Many changes in one review

The additional complexity of the review is not the only thing that stands against putting many changes into one commit. What is also important, many changes in one commit mean less readable history so when you want to find something, it would be harder because some changes will be merged with other changes. What would be the name of your commit in that case? It will need to either focus on the most important change or it will be something meaningless, because you will try to use one sentence to explain many things that were modified.

Such thing doesn’t help when you have to find a root cause of some issue or you want to understand some part of the functionality. It is hard because of the same reasons that make the review of such code hard - complexity and presence of many contexts.

One change at a time

What do you think about this idea?
Let’s organize our commits around a single change.
Let’s make things simple and easier for us and all of those who will read the code.


Tuesday, April 5, 2016

First for test, second for implementation!

Test-Driven Development is a great technique, isn’t it? Today I want to propose you an experiment that may help you convince all of those struggling developers that writing code in such manner really improves your code and development.
What is the experiment about? It’s about only one, tiny commit which will force you to practice this technique for some time. Talk with your team/teams and propose a new way of doing pull requests. The first commit for test, the second for implementation. Easy, isn’t it?