this post was submitted on 05 Sep 2024
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Programming
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This doesn't seem overly useful.
It's a list taken out of a bunch of books with no regard for how something can be the best path in one language and a smell in another language.
Look at this page for example: https://luzkan.github.io/smells/imperative-loops
It suggests using functional loop methods (
.map()
,.reduce()
,.filter()
) instead of using imperative loops (for
,for in
,for each
) but completely disregards the facts that imperative loops also have access to thebreak
,continue
, andreturn
keywords to improve performance.For example: If I have an unsorted list of 1000 cars which includes a whole bunch of information per car (e.g. color, year manufactured, etc...), and I want to know if there were any cars were manufactured before the year 1980, I can run an imperative loop through the list and early return true if I find one, and only returning false if I haven't found one by the end of the list.
If the third car was made in 1977, then I have only iterated through 3 cars to find my answer.
But if I were to try this with only functional loops, I would have to iterate through all 1000 cars before I had my answer.
A website with blind rules like this is going to lead to worse code.
..what? At least with Java Streams or Kotlin Sequences, they absolutely abort early with something like
.filter().first()
.@mbtrhcs @spartanatreyu well Java Streams try to, but it's not too hard to get them to accidentally process too much, or even blow up completely.
(This isn't a comment on coding styles or the article though)