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Go

Go static code analysis

Unique rules to find Bugs, Vulnerabilities, Security Hotspots, and Code Smells in your GO code

  • All rules 94
  • Vulnerability21
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  • Code Smell46
Filtered: 1 rule found
naming
    Impact
      Clean code attribute
        1. Function and method names should not use "Get" prefix

           Code Smell

        Function and method names should not use "Get" prefix

        consistency - conventional
        maintainability
        Code Smell
        • convention
        • naming

        This is an issue when function or method names start with 'Get' or 'get' prefix, unless the underlying concept specifically uses the word 'get' (like HTTP GET operations).

        Why is this an issue?

        How can I fix it?

        More Info

        In Go, using 'Get' prefixes in function and method names is considered redundant and goes against established naming conventions. The Go community follows the principle that functions returning something should be given noun-like names, starting directly with the noun rather than prefixing it with 'Get'.

        This convention exists because the function signature already makes it clear that something is being returned. Adding 'Get' creates unnecessary verbosity without adding meaningful information. For example, func (c *Config) GetJobName() is less idiomatic than func (c *Config) JobName().

        The 'Get' prefix pattern comes from other programming languages like Java, where getters and setters are common. However, Go’s philosophy emphasizes simplicity and conciseness, making such prefixes unnecessary.

        Following this convention makes code more readable and consistent with the broader Go ecosystem, including the standard library and most open-source Go projects.

        What is the potential impact?

        Using 'Get' prefixes in function names reduces code readability and makes the codebase inconsistent with Go naming conventions. While this doesn’t cause functional issues, it can:

        • Make the code appear less idiomatic to Go developers
        • Reduce maintainability as the naming doesn’t follow community standards
        • Create inconsistency when working with standard library and third-party packages that follow Go conventions
        • Make function names unnecessarily verbose
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