Ngl that’s like baby levels of nasty code. The real nasty shit is the stuff with pointless abstractions and call chains that make you question your sanity. Stuff that looks like it’s only purpose was to burn the clock and show off a niche language feature. Or worse than that even is when the project you inherit has decade old dependencies that have all been forked and patched by the old team
If all I had to worry about was organization and naming I’d be over the moon
And hard casting onto the wrong class because a neat function lives in there (who will detect you did that and treat you a little different because you don’t have all the resuired data in that class instance) as a “quick fix”
The real nasty stuff is not code it’s in proprietary blobs which can only be edited through proprietary software. The documentation is shit (because the editor also sells training) and there are no communities (because implementation specialists think having secrets is having an edge).
Ngl that’s like baby levels of nasty code. The real nasty shit is the stuff with pointless abstractions and call chains that make you question your sanity. Stuff that looks like it’s only purpose was to burn the clock and show off a niche language feature. Or worse than that even is when the project you inherit has decade old dependencies that have all been forked and patched by the old team
If all I had to worry about was organization and naming I’d be over the moon
And hard casting onto the wrong class because a neat function lives in there (who will detect you did that and treat you a little different because you don’t have all the resuired data in that class instance) as a “quick fix”
The real nasty stuff is not code it’s in proprietary blobs which can only be edited through proprietary software. The documentation is shit (because the editor also sells training) and there are no communities (because implementation specialists think having secrets is having an edge).
Former coworkers: “oh, these two lines are the same in function x and function y. TIME TO ABSTRACT”
Git commits with message saying “pushing changes” and there are over 50 files with unrelated code in it.
“stuff, lol”
“fixed issue”
“Fix for critical issue.”
Followed by an equally large set of files in a commit with just the message:
“Fixup”
And then the actual fix turns out to be mixed in with “Start sprint 57 - AutoConfiguration Refactor” which follows “Fixup”