Conditions | 24 |
Paths | 22 |
Total Lines | 85 |
Code Lines | 44 |
Lines | 0 |
Ratio | 0 % |
Tests | 35 |
CRAP Score | 24 |
Changes | 1 | ||
Bugs | 0 | Features | 0 |
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:
Complex classes like floatify.js ➔ ... ➔ parse often do a lot of different things. To break such a class down, we need to identify a cohesive component within that class. A common approach to find such a component is to look for fields/methods that share the same prefixes, or suffixes.
Once you have determined the fields that belong together, you can apply the Extract Class refactoring. If the component makes sense as a sub-class, Extract Subclass is also a candidate, and is often faster.
1 | 'use strict'; |
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60 | 231 | var parse = function parse(str) { |
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61 | 231 | var string = str; |
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62 | var spacePos; |
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63 | var spaceSplit; |
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64 | var spaceCount; |
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65 | var dotPos; |
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66 | var commaPos; |
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67 | var lDotPos; |
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68 | var lCommaPos; |
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69 | var dotCount; |
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70 | var commaCount; |
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71 | |||
72 | 231 | string = string.trim(); |
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73 | |||
74 | // 1st dot position |
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75 | 231 | dotPos = string.indexOf('.'); |
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76 | // 1st comma position |
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77 | 231 | commaPos = string.indexOf(','); |
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78 | // 1st space position |
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79 | 231 | spacePos = string.indexOf(' '); |
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80 | |||
81 | 231 | if (dotPos + commaPos + spacePos === -3) { |
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82 | // life is good, no separators |
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83 | 18 | return toFloatFormat(string); |
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84 | } |
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85 | |||
86 | 213 | spaceSplit = string.split(' '); |
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87 | 213 | spaceCount = spaceSplit.length - 1; |
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88 | 213 | dotCount = string.split('.').length - 1; |
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89 | 213 | commaCount = string.split(',').length - 1; |
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90 | |||
91 | // only combination of 2 separators allowed |
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92 | 213 | if (dotCount > 0 && commaCount > 0 && spaceCount > 0) return Number.NaN; |
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93 | |||
94 | // if there is any separator (space, comma, dot) found more than once, |
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95 | // all other must not be found more than once |
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96 | 212 | if (dotCount > 1 && (commaCount > 1 || spaceCount > 1)) return Number.NaN; |
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97 | 208 | if (commaCount > 1 && (dotCount > 1 || spaceCount > 1)) return Number.NaN; |
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98 | 207 | if (spaceCount > 1 && (dotCount > 1 || commaCount > 1)) return Number.NaN; |
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99 | |||
100 | 207 | if (spaceCount > 0) { |
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101 | 72 | if (!string.match(/^(\d{1,3})?(\s\d{3})*([,\.]\d+)?$/)) { |
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102 | 17 | return Number.NaN; |
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103 | } |
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104 | 55 | string = spaceSplit.join(''); |
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105 | } |
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106 | |||
107 | 190 | if (dotPos !== -1 && commaPos !== -1) { |
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108 | // format is using dot and comma |
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109 | |||
110 | // last dot position |
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111 | 61 | lDotPos = string.lastIndexOf('.'); |
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112 | // last comma position |
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113 | 61 | lCommaPos = string.lastIndexOf(','); |
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114 | |||
115 | // order of 1st dot -> comma must be same as last dot -> comma |
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116 | // 123.123.123,123 -> ok 123.123,123.123 -> not ok |
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117 | 61 | if (Math.sign(dotPos - commaPos) !== Math.sign(lDotPos - lCommaPos)) { |
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118 | 3 | return Number.NaN; |
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119 | } |
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120 | |||
121 | // check positions to guess the thousands separator |
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122 | 58 | if (dotPos > commaPos) { |
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123 | 51 | if (dotCount > 1) return Number.NaN; |
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124 | // best guess: . is thousands separator and , is decimal point |
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125 | 50 | return toFloatFormat(string, ',', '.'); |
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126 | } |
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127 | |||
128 | 7 | if (commaCount > 1) return Number.NaN; |
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129 | // best guess: , is thousands separator and . is decimal point |
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130 | 6 | return toFloatFormat(string, '.', ','); |
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131 | } |
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132 | |||
133 | 129 | if (dotPos !== -1) { |
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134 | // only dot(s) in format |
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135 | 85 | return parseParts(string, '.', dotCount); |
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136 | } |
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137 | |||
138 | 44 | if (commaPos !== -1) { |
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139 | // only comma(s) in format |
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140 | 39 | return parseParts(string, ',', commaCount); |
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141 | } |
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142 | |||
143 | 5 | return toFloatFormat(string); |
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144 | }; |
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145 | |||
154 |
Consider adding curly braces around all statements when they are executed conditionally. This is optional if there is only one statement, but leaving them out can lead to unexpected behaviour if another statement is added later.
Consider:
If you or someone else later decides to put another statement in, only the first statement will be executed.
In this case the statement
b = 42
will always be executed, while the logging statement will be executed conditionally.ensures that the proper code will be executed conditionally no matter how many statements are added or removed.