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Small methods make your code easier to understand, in particular if combined with a good name. Besides, if your method is small, finding a good name is usually much easier.
For example, if you find yourself adding comments to a method's body, this is usually a good sign to extract the commented part to a new method, and use the comment as a starting point when coming up with a good name for this new method.
Commonly applied refactorings include:
If many parameters/temporary variables are present:
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22 | function doSomething() |
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23 | { |
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24 | if (true) {} |
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25 | if (true) {} |
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26 | if (true) {} |
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27 | if (true) {} |
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28 | if (true && true && true && true) {} |
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29 | if (true && true && true && true) {} |
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30 | if (true && true && true && true) {} |
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31 | if (true && true && true && true) {} |
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32 | if (true && true && true && true) {} |
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33 | } |
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34 | } |
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Adding explicit visibility (
private
,protected
, orpublic
) is generally recommend to communicate to other developers how, and from where this method is intended to be used.