Julio Biason
5 years ago
8 changed files with 157 additions and 3 deletions
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title = "Things I Learnt The Hard Way - The Function Documentation Is Its Contract" |
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date = 2019-06-21 |
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[taxonomies] |
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tags = ["en-au", "books", "things i learnt", "documentation", "contracts"] |
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+++ |
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When you start the code by [writing the |
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documentation](/books/things-i-learnt/steps-as-comments), you're actually |
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making a contract (probably with your future self): I'm saying this function |
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does _this_ and _this_ is what it does. |
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Remember that the documentation must be a clear explanation of what your code |
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_is_ doing; remember that good messages will make [reading the code only by |
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the function documentation](/books/things-i-learnt/document-id) should be |
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clear. |
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A function called `mult`, documented as "Get the value and multiply by 2" but, |
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when you look at the code, it does multiply by 2, but sends the result through |
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the network or even just asks a remote service to multiply the incoming result |
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by 2, is clearly breaking its contract. It's not just multiplying by 2, it's |
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doing more than just that, or it's asking someone else to manipulate the |
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value. |
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Now, what happens when this kind of thing happens? |
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The easy solution is to change the documentation. But do you know if people |
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who called the function expecting it to be "multiply value by 2" will be happy |
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for it to call an external service? There is a clear breach of "contract" -- |
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whatever you initially said your function would do -- so the correct solution |
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would be to add a new function with a proper contract -- and probably a better |
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name. |
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{{ chapters(prev_chapter_link="/books/things-i-learnt/document-it", prev_chapter_title="Documentation Is a Love Letter To Your Future Self") }} |
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+++ |
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title = "Things I Learnt The Hard Way - Documentation Is a Love Letter To Your Future Self" |
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date = 2019-06-21 |
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[taxonomies] |
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tags = ["en-au", "books", "things i learnt", "documentation"] |
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+++ |
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We all know writing the damn docs for functions and classes and modules is a |
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pain in the backside. But realizing what you were thinking when you wrote the |
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function will save your butt in the future. |
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When I say that it will save your butt, I don't mean the documentation will |
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tell you something like "Here are the lotto numbers in 2027"[^1] or "If John |
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complains about your future code review, here is some shit he did in the |
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past". |
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I mean, it will explain how the _flow_ of your code is expected to do. Imaging |
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this: pick your code and replace every function call to its documentation. Can |
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you understand what it is expected by reading that? If you can, |
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congratulations, you won't have a problem in the future; if you can't... well, |
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I have some bad news for you... |
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[^1]: Please, don't make me revise this in 2027... :( |
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{{ chapters(prev_chapter_link="/books/things-i-learnt/future-trashing", prev_chapter_title="Future Thinking is Future Trashing", next_chapter_link="/books/things-i-learnt/document-is-contract", next_chapter_title="The Function Documentation Is Its Contract") }} |
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+++ |
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title = "Things I Learnt The Hard Way - Future Thinking is Future Trashing" |
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date = 2019-06-21 |
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[taxonomies] |
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tags = ["en-au", "books", "things i learnt", "design", "solution"] |
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+++ |
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When developers try to solve a problem, they sometimes try to find a way that |
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will solve all the problems, including the ones that may appear in the future. |
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Trying to solve the problems that will appear in the future comes with a hefty |
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tax: future problems future will never come -- and, believe me, they _never_ |
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come -- and you'll end up either having to maintain a huge behemoth of code |
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that will never be fully used or you'll end up rewriting the whole thing |
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'cause there is a shitton of unused stuff. |
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Solve the problem you have right now. Then solve the next one. And the next |
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one. At one point, you'll realize there is a pattern emerging from those |
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solutions and _then_ you'll find your "solve everything". This pattern is the |
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_abstraction_ you're looking for and _then_ you'll be able to solve it in a |
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simple way. |
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{{ chapters(prev_chapter_link="/books/things-i-learnt/languages-tests", prev_chapter_title="Good Languages Come With Tests", next_chapter_link="/books/things-i-learnt/document-id", next_chapter_title="Documentation Is a Love Letter To Your Future Self") }} |
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+++ |
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title = "Things I Learnt The Hard Way - Testing Every Function Creates Dead Code" |
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date = 2019-06-21 |
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[taxonomies] |
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tags = ["en-au", "books", "things i learnt", "unit tests", "dead code"] |
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+++ |
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If you write a test for every single function on your system, and your system |
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keeps changing, how will you know when a function is not necessary anymore? |
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Writing a test for every single function on your system may come from the |
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"100% Coverage Syndrome", which afflicts some managers, thinking that the only |
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way to be completely sure your system is "bug free" is to write tests for |
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every single piece of code, till you reach the magical "100% coverage" in all |
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the tests. |
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I do believe you can reach 100% coverage, as long as you're willing to |
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_delete_ your code. |
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Cue the universal grasps here. |
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But how do you know which pieces of code can be deleted? |
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When I mentioned [integration |
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tests](/books/things-i-learnt/integration-tests), I mentioned how much more |
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sense it made to me reading them instead of the "unit" tests, because they |
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were describing exactly how the system would operate in normal conditions. If |
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you write tests the go through the system, doing normal operations, and you |
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can get tests for all the normal cases -- and some "abnormal", like when |
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things go wrong -- then you know that, if you run those tests and they mark |
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some lines as "not tested", it's because you don't need them. |
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"But Julio, you're forgetting the error control!" I do agree, specially when |
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you're talking with project owners or some other expert, that people will |
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forget to tell you what to do in case of things going wrong -- say, someone |
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entering a name in the age field -- but _you_ can see those and _you_ know |
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that you need error control so _you_ can add the error control and describe |
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the situation where that error control would trigger. |
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If, on the other hand, you write a test for every function, when you do a |
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short/simple check, you'll find that the function is still being used in the |
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system -- by the tests, not actually, "value to the user" code. Sure, you can |
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use your IDE to go back and forth between code and test and see if it points a |
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use beyond the test, but it won't do it for yourself. |
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There is one other weird thing about trying to write integration tests for |
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error controls: Sometimes, you can't reach the control. It's true! I did wrote |
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control checks for every function once but, when running in the integration |
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tests, there was no way to produce an input at the input layer of the system |
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that would reach the error control in that function -- mostly 'cause the |
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other functions, which would run before the one I was trying to test, would |
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catch the error before it. If that's a design problem or not -- it probably |
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was -- it's a different discussion, but the fact is that that function didn't |
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need error control. |
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{{ chapters(prev_chapter_link="/books/things-i-learnt/integration-tests", prev_chapter_title="Unit Tests Are Good, Integration Tests Are Gooder", next_chapter_title="Tests Make Better APIs", next_chapter_link="/books/things-i-learnt/tests-apis") }} |
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