• @[email protected]
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      2 days ago

      That really depends.

      Especially for a function that may see use in a variety of scenarios.

      I’m going to be firmly against anyone suggesting against proper comments - which, I’m sorry, but you are by your own statement.

      Code will change for many, many, many reasons beyond just refactoring.

      Edit: and why it was refactored is important as well.

      There are just so many reasons, and yes, I will continue to be against this newer trend of “dont comment, make codes your comments”.

      All that is, is a great way to make your code harder to manage later. It doesnt take much effort to explain why you’re doing something.

      • @[email protected]OP
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        11 day ago

        Let’s rephrase my opinion, so that we can (hopefully) agree on something : What I’m arguing against is the “ChatGPT-style” (or “tutorial-style”) comments that I’ve seen all over juniors’ code, even before LLMs got widespread

        • @[email protected]
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          11 day ago

          “Adds a and b”?

          Sure, not useful. Thats a what, not a why.

          “Combined value needed for these outputs”

          The “why”. Useful. Shows the purpose, and explains the context it may be used in.

          Assuming the “why” is known is the mistake - and one I see from junior and mid level, I dont care what language it is, its the same. Using refactoring code as an example, without context - the why - can cause problems. What may be more efficient for one resulting value being presented can cause issues for others (let’s say precision as an example of why it could be a problem). Failing to include why something is being done is usually what introduces these problems, someone misses a different context than what they are looking at, and that belongs in a comment.

          A comment on “why” isn’t just important - for any block of code - it is, IMO, a requirement. I have and will continue to respond with “add comments as to why and resubmit”.