Using “self documenting” as a blanket excuse to not document things that need it is inexcusable, yes, but I’d rather work on code written by somebody who seriously thinks about how to make it clean and self documenting, and then documents whatever still needs it as well, than on code written by somebody who doesn’t make that effort, but documents heavily. And as for people who claim they’re documenting everything, when the documentation is functionfooTheBar() // foos the bar, they can eat a bag of docs.
100% agree. Sometimes I start a comment and realize I’ve either explained exactly what it’s doing and delete it or just update my variables to be more concise.
My job doesn’t like when I document the parameters and return type/value of methods. I think that that is really important in a dynamic language like Ruby and sets expectations that the method should ONLY return that type.
Using “self documenting” as a blanket excuse to not document things that need it is inexcusable, yes, but I’d rather work on code written by somebody who seriously thinks about how to make it clean and self documenting, and then documents whatever still needs it as well, than on code written by somebody who doesn’t make that effort, but documents heavily. And as for people who claim they’re documenting everything, when the documentation is
function fooTheBar() // foos the bar
, they can eat a bag of docs.100% agree. Sometimes I start a comment and realize I’ve either explained exactly what it’s doing and delete it or just update my variables to be more concise.
My job doesn’t like when I document the parameters and return type/value of methods. I think that that is really important in a dynamic language like Ruby and sets expectations that the method should ONLY return that type.