This tag has been burninated. Please do not recreate it. If you need advice on which tag to use, see the answer below. If you see this tag reappearing, it may need to be blacklisted.
One little problem that confronts you Got a monkey on your back Just one more fix, Lord might do the trick One hell of a price for you to get your kicks Lynyrd Skynyrd
That smell? It's code-smell.
- 295 open questions, 317 total.
- 40 followers, likely wearing tie-dyed shirts.
- Includes some primo vintage stuff:
- How many parameters are too many?, '08, 158
hits, er votes - https://stackoverflow.com/questions/1240739/boolean-parameters-do-they-smell From back in '09, 54 votes.
- I could go on, but I got da munchies.
- How many parameters are too many?, '08, 158
To its credit, the tag is unambiguous, however it's a topic that is, by its very nature, subjective. Not that there isn't a more-or-less unanimous agreement about whether particular pieces of software are odiferous, rather that answers about what to do about them tend to be primarliy-opinion-based. Peruse these questions and you find gems of advice based on experience. However the tag attracts a lot of questions that simply ask opinions, such as What is the reason for these PMD rules?, with 6 or 7 opinion-filled answers. Or the whole "Is [term] a code smell?" series (105 in all!):
- Is too many Left Joins a code smell??
- In Python, is use of `del` statement a code smell?
- Are empty interfaces code smell?
- https://stackoverflow.com/questions/773500/are-private-methods-in-general-a-code-smell
- Excessive use of `this` in C++
- Alternatives to passing a flag into a method?
- The field must have a documentation header - Style Cop - Code smell?
- Using a generic type argument in place of an argument of type System.Type. Is it a smell?
- Using many dictionaries within dictionaries in my code
- Is an Initialize method a code smell?
- Tying a method to implementation classes
I propose code-smell be deodorized. Many of the questions should be closed as Primarily-Opinion-Based. Most of them, though, are relevant discussions of software architecture or implementation details, and appear to be tagged appropriately, so detagging & spot cleaning is all they need.
Bonus: the grand-daddy of them all. (Apologies in advance; it's a deleted question.)