When the same code is duplicated in two or more separate branches of a conditional, it can make the code harder to understand, maintain, and can
potentially introduce bugs if one instance of the code is changed but others are not.
Having two cases
in a switch
statement or two branches in an if
chain with the same implementation is at
best duplicate code, and at worst a coding error.
if (a >= 0 && a < 10) {
doFirstThing();
doTheThing();
}
else if (a >= 10 && a < 20) {
doTheOtherThing();
}
else if (a >= 20 && a < 50) {
doFirstThing();
doTheThing(); // Noncompliant; duplicates first condition
}
else {
doTheRest();
}
switch (i) {
case 1:
doFirstThing();
doSomething();
break;
case 2:
doSomethingDifferent();
break;
case 3: // Noncompliant; duplicates case 1's implementation
doFirstThing();
doSomething();
break;
default:
doTheRest();
}
If the same logic is truly needed for both instances, then:
- in an
if
chain they should be combined
if ((a >= 0 && a < 10) || (a >= 20 && a < 50)) { // Compliant
doFirstThing();
doTheThing();
}
else if (a >= 10 && a < 20) {
doTheOtherThing();
}
else {
doTheRest();
}
- for a
switch
, one should fall through to the other
switch (i) {
case 1:
case 3: // Compliant
doFirstThing();
doSomething();
break;
case 2:
doSomethingDifferent();
break;
default:
doTheRest();
}
Exceptions
Branches in an if
chain or switch
statement that have a simple body are ignored. A body is considered simple if
it contains a single line of code, possibly followed by a break
in the case of switch
statements.
if (a == 1) {
doSomething(); // Compliant, usually this is done on purpose to increase the readability
} else if (a == 2) {
doSomethingElse();
} else {
doSomething();
}