Jump statements, such as return
, break
and continue
let you change the default flow of program execution,
but jump statements that direct the control flow to the original direction are just a waste of keystrokes.
Noncompliant code example
def redundant_jump(x):
if x == 1:
print(True)
return # NonCompliant
Compliant solution
def redundant_jump(x):
if x == 1:
print(True)
Exceptions
- No issue is raised if the jump statement is the only statement of a statement suite:
def my_function(x):
if x > 5:
do_something()
elif x == 0:
return # ok even it could be changed to "pass"
else:
do_something_else()
- No issue is raised for
return None
because this was certainly done on purpose to be explicit that a function is really returning
None
.