John Gordon wrote:
(This is mostly a style question, and perhaps one that has already been
discussed elsewhere. If so, a pointer to that discussion will be
appreciated!)
When I started learning Python, I wrote a lot of methods that looked like
this:
def myMethod(self, arg1, arg2):
if some_good_condition:
if some_other_good_condition:
if yet_another_good_condition:
do_some_useful_stuff()
exitCode = good1
else:
exitCode = bad3
else:
exitCode = bad2
else:
exitCode = bad1
return exitCode
But lately I've been preferring this style:
def myMethod(self, arg1, arg2):
if some_bad_condition:
return bad1
elif some_other_bad_condition:
return bad2
elif yet_another_bad_condition:
return bad3
do_some_useful_stuff()
return good1
I like this style more, mostly because it eliminates a lot of indentation.
However I recall one of my college CS courses stating that "one entry,
one exit" was a good way to write code, and this style has lots of exits.
Are there any concrete advantages of one style over the other?
Thanks.
What about,
def myMethod():
for condition, exitCode in [
(cond1, 'error1'),
(cond2, 'very bad error'),
]:
if not condition:
break
else:
do_some_usefull_stuff() # executed only if the we never hit the
break statement.
exitCode = good1
return exitCode
This version uses the 'for ... else' statement. You can easily add
conditions by simply adding a line in the list, that's it.
Note that this code uses a shadow declaration of exitCode in the for
loop. If you're not comfortable with that, you'll have to use a properly
'declared' variable retCode and write retCode = exitCode before
breaking. Actually I would advise to do so.
JM
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