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private string GetTime(string strShiftCode, string strTime)
{
string strReturn = "";
switch (strTime)
{
case "01":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "02":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "03":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "04":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "05":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "06":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "07":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "08":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "09":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "10":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "11":
strReturn = "AM";
break;
case "12":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "13":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "14":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "15":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "16":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "17":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "18":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "19":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "20":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "21":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "22":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "23":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
case "24":
strReturn = "PM";
break;
}
return strReturn;
}
Found this one on one of the project assigned to me today.... It really is about quality control..
One variable passed is never been used in function and do I really need a function ?
My solution :
string strReturn = Int32.Parse(strTime.Trim())<12 ? "AM" : "PM";
Zen and the art of software maintenance : rm -rf *
Math is like love : a simple idea but it can get complicated.
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In any case I would also look at all places where the function is called. There this unused parameter must be passed. It's better when you find out what this 'ShiftCode' may have been intended for.
And from the clouds a mighty voice spoke: "Smile and be happy, for it could come worse!"
And I smiled and was happy And it came worse.
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It's also wrong : "24" is "AM"
Cheers
If you can read this, you don't have Papyrus installed
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And that again may also be wrong. Are the hours not enumerated 0 - 23, totally VB unfriendly?
And from the clouds a mighty voice spoke: "Smile and be happy, for it could come worse!"
And I smiled and was happy And it came worse.
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The application is used to monitor Robots in factory so may be hour 24 is AM for them... I don't speak Robolang yet ...
Zen and the art of software maintenance : rm -rf *
Math is like love : a simple idea but it can get complicated.
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Yes, you and I (and probalby most people) would calculate that way.
In the past I have once or twice seen the time expressed as 24:xx.
Anyhoo, if you inspect the code you will see 11 AM's and 13 PM's.
Cheers
If you can read this, you don't have Papyrus installed
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Time and dates can be hell, even if you have a decent framework at your disposal. If you do such things on the fly: Good luck.
And from the clouds a mighty voice spoke: "Smile and be happy, for it could come worse!"
And I smiled and was happy And it came worse.
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You never get "24" it's "00"
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That depends entirely on the input, we're not dealing with a real time format here.
As said by others here, thse method is wrong in many respects.
My comment denoted that there are 11 "AM" entries and 13 "PM" entries.
So if "24" is input, the output should logically be "AM", not "PM".
Cheers
If you can read this, you don't have Papyrus installed
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ISO 8601 allows 24:00 as the end of the day, so it would be PM; AM starts at 00:00 (not that ISO 8601 recognizes AM/PM of course).
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Do 24:00 and 00:00 occur at the same time then, just different notations?
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Yes, different notations for the same timepoint.
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Same timepoint, but different datepoint
modified 19-Nov-18 21:01pm.
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The Army (at least) took 2400 as the end of the day...and never acknowledged 0000 as existing. :p
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Then one second after that would be 240001 or 000001?
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000001
But we just started the new logs at 0001Z. That minute inbetween was just ignored.
Actually, come to think of it, we never used 2400Z, either. The day ended at 2359Z and the next started at 0001Z. :p
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If you are dealing with instantaneity, 12:00:00 and 24:00:00 (or 0:00:00, if you prefer) are neither AM nor PM: the first is Noon and the second is Midnight.
Just think of it as evolution in action.
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But there is a fix for that issue...
string ampm = GetTime("Blahblahblah", strTime);
if (strTime = "24" && ampm = "PM")
{
ampm = "AM";
}
See! It's easy.
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I agree that the original implementation is bad but beware that your fix could introduce some new issues. For example passing "2" will result in a different result than before ("AM" vs ""). This might even be Ok but passing "test" will generate an exception where the old implementation would just have returned an empty string.
Robert
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I am not changing the existing app at the moment .. my job is to add fixes to the app if it fails but it is working OK since last 2 years and used as production app in factory to control robots...One of the developer responsible for its maintenance is leaving so all his projects are coming to me...Just for this app my approach is going to be " Hey Why change it if it is working " ... and there are at least 5 developers worked on it at different times with their own way of coding like the Gem I found...
Zen and the art of software maintenance : rm -rf *
Math is like love : a simple idea but it can get complicated.
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That is quite spectacularly bad.
- Unused parameter
- Misnamed function (it is getting the hour part suffix, not Time)
- Using strings to manage date/time info, and relying on the exact string (i.e. 2 != 02)
- Incorrect coding or non-standard representation (01-24 instead of 00-23)
- Duplicating framework functionality (myDateTime.ToString("hh tt"))
- Repeat code in case blocks instead of a single test for all included conditions
Anyone spot any more?
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I laughed out loud when I saw this one...
Possibly the funniest function I've seen in the hall of shame.
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Some more:
- no test to verify input value range or format (this would be neglectable if using correct types as you've already implied with your point 'Using strings')
- using switch without default case
- using hard coded strings for "AM" and "PM"
- combining a yes/no test with an unrelated display functionality into one function (note that a test for AM and PM implies that a 24h format is being converted to a 12h format, and thus the test needs to be repeated in order to convert the number part!)
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BobJanova wrote: Anyone spot any more?
No need to set a string to return from the function. A simple return "AM"; or return "PM"; would suffice.
I'm not a programmer but I play one at the office
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