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Clean Code
A Handbook of Agile Software Craftsmanship
Taschenbuch von Robert C. Martin
Sprache: Englisch

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Beschreibung

Anyone with a modicum of industry experience knows that there is an awful lot

of bad code out there. It's not that it's just unsightly. Code that is not clean can

quite easily move beyond being a functional problem to becoming an expensive

organizational issue that has to be dealt with immediately.

There are no shortage of suggestions and methods for cleaning up your code

after it has been written, but in this new book, Robert C. Martin espouses

nipping these potential problems in the bud by cleaning on the fly, rather than

doing it in segments or waiting until the end of a project. The book is a tutorial

and reference that will teach the reader to conceive and write cleaner code

through a multitude of proven examples.

This book shows the PROCESS of cleaning code. Rather than just illustrating

the end result, or just the starting and ending state, Martin shows how several

dozen seemingly small code changes can positively impact the performance and

maintainability of an application's code base. It will also explain why each of

those changes was made. In the end the book will boil all these changes down

into a suite of heuristics and principles that will guide the reader in his own

code cleanups.

Anyone with a modicum of industry experience knows that there is an awful lot

of bad code out there. It's not that it's just unsightly. Code that is not clean can

quite easily move beyond being a functional problem to becoming an expensive

organizational issue that has to be dealt with immediately.

There are no shortage of suggestions and methods for cleaning up your code

after it has been written, but in this new book, Robert C. Martin espouses

nipping these potential problems in the bud by cleaning on the fly, rather than

doing it in segments or waiting until the end of a project. The book is a tutorial

and reference that will teach the reader to conceive and write cleaner code

through a multitude of proven examples.

This book shows the PROCESS of cleaning code. Rather than just illustrating

the end result, or just the starting and ending state, Martin shows how several

dozen seemingly small code changes can positively impact the performance and

maintainability of an application's code base. It will also explain why each of

those changes was made. In the end the book will boil all these changes down

into a suite of heuristics and principles that will guide the reader in his own

code cleanups.

Über den Autor
Robert C. “Uncle Bob” Martin has been a software professional since 1970 and an international software consultant since 1990. He is founder and president of Object Mentor, Inc., a team of experienced consultants who mentor their clients worldwide in the fields of C++, Java, C#, Ruby, OO, Design Patterns, UML, Agile Methodologies, and eXtreme programming.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Foreword xix
Introduction xxv
On the Cover xxix


Chapter 1: Clean Code 1
There Will Be Code 2
Bad Code 3
The Total Cost of Owning a Mess 4
Schools of Thought 12
We Are Authors 13
The Boy Scout Rule 14
Prequel and Principles 15
Conclusion 15
Bibliography 15

Chapter 2: Meaningful Names 17
Introduction 17
Use Intention-Revealing Names 18
Avoid Disinformation 19
Make Meaningful Distinctions 20
Use Pronounceable Names 21
Use Searchable Names 22
Avoid Encodings 23
Avoid Mental Mapping 25
Class Names 25
Method Names 25
Don’t Be Cute 26
Pick One Word per Concept 26
Don’t Pun 26
Use Solution Domain Names 27
Use Problem Domain Names 27
Add Meaningful Context 27
Don’t Add Gratuitous Context 29
Final Words 30

Chapter 3: Functions 31
Small! 34
Do One Thing 35
One Level of Abstraction per Function 36
Switch Statements 37
Use Descriptive Names 39
Function Arguments 40
Have No Side Effects 44
Command Query Separation 45
Prefer Exceptions to Returning Error Codes 46
Don’t Repeat Yourself 48
Structured Programming 48
How Do You Write Functions Like This? 49
Conclusion 49
SetupTeardownIncluder 50
Bibliography 52

Chapter 4: Comments 53
Comments Do Not Make Up for Bad Code 55
Explain Yourself in Code 55
Good Comments 55
Bad Comments 59
Bibliography 74

Chapter 5: Formatting 75
The Purpose of Formatting 76
Vertical Formatting 76
Horizontal Formatting 85
Team Rules 90
Uncle Bob’s Formatting Rules 90
Chapter 6: Objects and Data Structures 93
Data Abstraction 93
Data/Object Anti-Symmetry 95
The Law of Demeter 97
Data Transfer Objects 100
Conclusion 101
Bibliography 101

Chapter 7: Error Handling 103
Use Exceptions Rather Than Return Codes 104
Write Your Try-Catch-Finally Statement First 105
Use Unchecked Exceptions 106
Provide Context with Exceptions 107
Define Exception Classes in Terms of a Caller’s Needs 107
Define the Normal Flow 109
Don’t Return Null 110
Don’t Pass Null 111
Conclusion 112
Bibliography 112

Chapter 8: Boundaries 113
Using Third-Party Code 114
Exploring and Learning Boundaries 116
Learning log4j 116
Learning Tests Are Better Than Free 118
Using Code That Does Not Yet Exist 118
Clean Boundaries 120
Bibliography 120

Chapter 9: Unit Tests 121
The Three Laws of TDD 122
Keeping Tests Clean 123
Clean Tests 124
One Assert per Test 130
F.I.R.S.T. 132
Conclusion 133
Bibliography 133

Chapter 10: Classes 135
Class Organization 136
Classes Should Be Small! 136
Organizing for Change 147
Bibliography 151

Chapter 11: Systems 153
How Would You Build a City? 154
Separate Constructing a System from Using It 154
Scaling Up 157
Java Proxies 161
Pure Java AOP Frameworks 163
AspectJ Aspects 166
Test Drive the System Architecture 166
Optimize Decision Making 167
Use Standards Wisely, When They Add Demonstrable Value 168
Systems Need Domain-Specific Languages 168
Conclusion 169
Bibliography 169

Chapter 12: Emergence 171
Getting Clean via Emergent Design 171
Simple Design Rule 1: Runs All the Tests 172
Simple Design Rules 2–4: Refactoring 172
No Duplication 173
Expressive 175
Minimal Classes and Methods 176
Conclusion 176
Bibliography 176

Chapter 13: Concurrency 177
Why Concurrency? 178
Challenges 180
Concurrency Defense Principles 180
Know Your Library 182
Know Your Execution Models 183
Beware Dependencies Between Synchronized Methods 185
Keep Synchronized Sections Small 185
Writing Correct Shut-Down Code Is Hard 186
Testing Threaded Code 186
Conclusion 190
Bibliography 191

Chapter 14: Successive Refinement 193
Args Implementation 194
Args: The Rough Draft 201
String Arguments 214
Conclusion 250

Chapter 15: JUnit Internals 251
The JUnit Framework 252
Conclusion 265

Chapter 16: Refactoring SerialDate 267
First, Make It Work 268
Then Make It Right 270
Conclusion 284
Bibliography 284

Chapter 17: Smells and Heuristics 285
Comments 286
Environment 287
Functions 288
General 288
Java 307
Names 309
Tests 313
Conclusion 314
Bibliography 315

Appendix A: Concurrency II 317
Client/Server Example 317
Possible Paths of Execution 321
Knowing Your Library 326
Dependencies Between Methods Can Break Concurrent Code 329
Increasing Throughput 333
Deadlock 335
Testing Multithreaded Code 339
Tool Support for Testing Thread-Based Code 342
Conclusion 342
Tutorial: Full Code Examples 343

Appendix B: [...].date.SerialDate 349

Appendix C: Cross References of Heuristics 409

Epilogue &nbs
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2009
Genre: Importe, Informatik
Rubrik: Naturwissenschaften & Technik
Medium: Taschenbuch
ISBN-13: 9780132350884
ISBN-10: 0132350882
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Martin, Robert C.
Hersteller: Prentice Hall
Pearson Education Limited
Pearson Professional
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Prentice Hall, St.-Martin-Straße 82, D-81541 München, salesde@pearson.com
Abbildungen: illustrations
Maße: 179 x 233 x 21 mm
Von/Mit: Robert C. Martin
Erscheinungsdatum: 30.01.2009
Gewicht: 0,806 kg
Artikel-ID: 101811318
Über den Autor
Robert C. “Uncle Bob” Martin has been a software professional since 1970 and an international software consultant since 1990. He is founder and president of Object Mentor, Inc., a team of experienced consultants who mentor their clients worldwide in the fields of C++, Java, C#, Ruby, OO, Design Patterns, UML, Agile Methodologies, and eXtreme programming.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Foreword xix
Introduction xxv
On the Cover xxix


Chapter 1: Clean Code 1
There Will Be Code 2
Bad Code 3
The Total Cost of Owning a Mess 4
Schools of Thought 12
We Are Authors 13
The Boy Scout Rule 14
Prequel and Principles 15
Conclusion 15
Bibliography 15

Chapter 2: Meaningful Names 17
Introduction 17
Use Intention-Revealing Names 18
Avoid Disinformation 19
Make Meaningful Distinctions 20
Use Pronounceable Names 21
Use Searchable Names 22
Avoid Encodings 23
Avoid Mental Mapping 25
Class Names 25
Method Names 25
Don’t Be Cute 26
Pick One Word per Concept 26
Don’t Pun 26
Use Solution Domain Names 27
Use Problem Domain Names 27
Add Meaningful Context 27
Don’t Add Gratuitous Context 29
Final Words 30

Chapter 3: Functions 31
Small! 34
Do One Thing 35
One Level of Abstraction per Function 36
Switch Statements 37
Use Descriptive Names 39
Function Arguments 40
Have No Side Effects 44
Command Query Separation 45
Prefer Exceptions to Returning Error Codes 46
Don’t Repeat Yourself 48
Structured Programming 48
How Do You Write Functions Like This? 49
Conclusion 49
SetupTeardownIncluder 50
Bibliography 52

Chapter 4: Comments 53
Comments Do Not Make Up for Bad Code 55
Explain Yourself in Code 55
Good Comments 55
Bad Comments 59
Bibliography 74

Chapter 5: Formatting 75
The Purpose of Formatting 76
Vertical Formatting 76
Horizontal Formatting 85
Team Rules 90
Uncle Bob’s Formatting Rules 90
Chapter 6: Objects and Data Structures 93
Data Abstraction 93
Data/Object Anti-Symmetry 95
The Law of Demeter 97
Data Transfer Objects 100
Conclusion 101
Bibliography 101

Chapter 7: Error Handling 103
Use Exceptions Rather Than Return Codes 104
Write Your Try-Catch-Finally Statement First 105
Use Unchecked Exceptions 106
Provide Context with Exceptions 107
Define Exception Classes in Terms of a Caller’s Needs 107
Define the Normal Flow 109
Don’t Return Null 110
Don’t Pass Null 111
Conclusion 112
Bibliography 112

Chapter 8: Boundaries 113
Using Third-Party Code 114
Exploring and Learning Boundaries 116
Learning log4j 116
Learning Tests Are Better Than Free 118
Using Code That Does Not Yet Exist 118
Clean Boundaries 120
Bibliography 120

Chapter 9: Unit Tests 121
The Three Laws of TDD 122
Keeping Tests Clean 123
Clean Tests 124
One Assert per Test 130
F.I.R.S.T. 132
Conclusion 133
Bibliography 133

Chapter 10: Classes 135
Class Organization 136
Classes Should Be Small! 136
Organizing for Change 147
Bibliography 151

Chapter 11: Systems 153
How Would You Build a City? 154
Separate Constructing a System from Using It 154
Scaling Up 157
Java Proxies 161
Pure Java AOP Frameworks 163
AspectJ Aspects 166
Test Drive the System Architecture 166
Optimize Decision Making 167
Use Standards Wisely, When They Add Demonstrable Value 168
Systems Need Domain-Specific Languages 168
Conclusion 169
Bibliography 169

Chapter 12: Emergence 171
Getting Clean via Emergent Design 171
Simple Design Rule 1: Runs All the Tests 172
Simple Design Rules 2–4: Refactoring 172
No Duplication 173
Expressive 175
Minimal Classes and Methods 176
Conclusion 176
Bibliography 176

Chapter 13: Concurrency 177
Why Concurrency? 178
Challenges 180
Concurrency Defense Principles 180
Know Your Library 182
Know Your Execution Models 183
Beware Dependencies Between Synchronized Methods 185
Keep Synchronized Sections Small 185
Writing Correct Shut-Down Code Is Hard 186
Testing Threaded Code 186
Conclusion 190
Bibliography 191

Chapter 14: Successive Refinement 193
Args Implementation 194
Args: The Rough Draft 201
String Arguments 214
Conclusion 250

Chapter 15: JUnit Internals 251
The JUnit Framework 252
Conclusion 265

Chapter 16: Refactoring SerialDate 267
First, Make It Work 268
Then Make It Right 270
Conclusion 284
Bibliography 284

Chapter 17: Smells and Heuristics 285
Comments 286
Environment 287
Functions 288
General 288
Java 307
Names 309
Tests 313
Conclusion 314
Bibliography 315

Appendix A: Concurrency II 317
Client/Server Example 317
Possible Paths of Execution 321
Knowing Your Library 326
Dependencies Between Methods Can Break Concurrent Code 329
Increasing Throughput 333
Deadlock 335
Testing Multithreaded Code 339
Tool Support for Testing Thread-Based Code 342
Conclusion 342
Tutorial: Full Code Examples 343

Appendix B: [...].date.SerialDate 349

Appendix C: Cross References of Heuristics 409

Epilogue &nbs
Details
Erscheinungsjahr: 2009
Genre: Importe, Informatik
Rubrik: Naturwissenschaften & Technik
Medium: Taschenbuch
ISBN-13: 9780132350884
ISBN-10: 0132350882
Sprache: Englisch
Einband: Kartoniert / Broschiert
Autor: Martin, Robert C.
Hersteller: Prentice Hall
Pearson Education Limited
Pearson Professional
Verantwortliche Person für die EU: Prentice Hall, St.-Martin-Straße 82, D-81541 München, salesde@pearson.com
Abbildungen: illustrations
Maße: 179 x 233 x 21 mm
Von/Mit: Robert C. Martin
Erscheinungsdatum: 30.01.2009
Gewicht: 0,806 kg
Artikel-ID: 101811318
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