clean-code
1.5K
总安装量
1.5K
周安装量
#254
全站排名
安装命令
npx skills add https://github.com/sickn33/antigravity-awesome-skills --skill clean-code
Agent 安装分布
opencode
1.0K
gemini-cli
1.0K
codex
918
claude-code
826
antigravity
735
Skill 文档
Clean Code Skill
This skill embodies the principles of “Clean Code” by Robert C. Martin (Uncle Bob). Use it to transform “code that works” into “code that is clean.”
ð§ Core Philosophy
“Code is clean if it can be read, and enhanced by a developer other than its original author.” â Grady Booch
When to Use
Use this skill when:
- Writing new code: To ensure high quality from the start.
- Reviewing Pull Requests: To provide constructive, principle-based feedback.
- Refactoring legacy code: To identify and remove code smells.
- Improving team standards: To align on industry-standard best practices.
1. Meaningful Names
- Use Intention-Revealing Names:
elapsedTimeInDaysinstead ofd. - Avoid Disinformation: Don’t use
accountListif it’s actually aMap. - Make Meaningful Distinctions: Avoid
ProductDatavsProductInfo. - Use Pronounceable/Searchable Names: Avoid
genymdhms. - Class Names: Use nouns (
Customer,WikiPage). AvoidManager,Data. - Method Names: Use verbs (
postPayment,deletePage).
2. Functions
- Small!: Functions should be shorter than you think.
- Do One Thing: A function should do only one thing, and do it well.
- One Level of Abstraction: Don’t mix high-level business logic with low-level details (like regex).
- Descriptive Names:
isPasswordValidis better thancheck. - Arguments: 0 is ideal, 1-2 is okay, 3+ requires a very strong justification.
- No Side Effects: Functions shouldn’t secretly change global state.
3. Comments
- Don’t Comment Bad CodeâRewrite It: Most comments are a sign of failure to express ourselves in code.
- Explain Yourself in Code:
vs# Check if employee is eligible for full benefits if employee.flags & HOURLY and employee.age > 65:if employee.isEligibleForFullBenefits(): - Good Comments: Legal, Informative (regex intent), Clarification (external libraries), TODOs.
- Bad Comments: Mumbling, Redundant, Misleading, Mandated, Noise, Position Markers.
4. Formatting
- The Newspaper Metaphor: High-level concepts at the top, details at the bottom.
- Vertical Density: Related lines should be close to each other.
- Distance: Variables should be declared near their usage.
- Indentation: Essential for structural readability.
5. Objects and Data Structures
- Data Abstraction: Hide the implementation behind interfaces.
- The Law of Demeter: A module should not know about the innards of the objects it manipulates. Avoid
a.getB().getC().doSomething(). - Data Transfer Objects (DTO): Classes with public variables and no functions.
6. Error Handling
- Use Exceptions instead of Return Codes: Keeps logic clean.
- Write Try-Catch-Finally First: Defines the scope of the operation.
- Don’t Return Null: It forces the caller to check for null every time.
- Don’t Pass Null: Leads to
NullPointerException.
7. Unit Tests
- The Three Laws of TDD:
- Don’t write production code until you have a failing unit test.
- Don’t write more of a unit test than is sufficient to fail.
- Don’t write more production code than is sufficient to pass the failing test.
- F.I.R.S.T. Principles: Fast, Independent, Repeatable, Self-Validating, Timely.
8. Classes
- Small!: Classes should have a single responsibility (SRP).
- The Stepdown Rule: We want the code to read like a top-down narrative.
9. Smells and Heuristics
- Rigidity: Hard to change.
- Fragility: Breaks in many places.
- Immobility: Hard to reuse.
- Viscosity: Hard to do the right thing.
- Needless Complexity/Repetition.
ð ï¸ Implementation Checklist
- Is this function smaller than 20 lines?
- Does this function do exactly one thing?
- Are all names searchable and intention-revealing?
- Have I avoided comments by making the code clearer?
- Am I passing too many arguments?
- Is there a failing test for this change?