Exceptions are a great way of separating happy path versus trouble path. But we tend to over-complicate our solutions.
TL;DR: Don't nest Exceptions. Nobody cares of what you do in the inner blocks.
Problems
- Readability
Solutions
- Refactor
Sample Code
Wrong
try {
transaction.commit();
} catch (e) {
logerror(e);
if (e instanceOf DBError){
try {
transaction.rollback();
} catch (e) {
doMoreLoggingRollbackFailed(e);
}
}
}
//Nested Try catchs
//Exception cases are more important than happy path
//We use exceptions as control flow
Right
try {
transaction.commit();
} catch (transactionError) {
this.withTransactionErrorDo(transationError, transaction);
}
//transaction error policy is not defined in this function
//so we don't have repeated code
//code is more readable
//It is up to the transaction and the error to decide what to do
Detection
We can detect this smell using parsing trees.
Tags
- Exceptions
Conclusion
Don't abuse exceptions, don't create Exception classes no one will ever catch, and don't be prepared for every case (unless you have a good real scenario with a covering test).
Happy path should always be more important than exception cases.
Relations
Code Smell 73 - Exceptions for Expected Cases
Maxi Contieri ・ May 31 '21
Code Smell 26 - Exceptions Polluting
Maxi Contieri ・ Nov 16 '20
More Info
Credits
Photo by David Clode on Unsplash
Thanks to @Rodrigo for his inspiration
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Maxi Contieri ・ Dec 28 '20
This article is part of the CodeSmell Series.
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