Use ||= to initialize variables if they are not already

Cette page n'est pas encore disponible en français, sa traduction est en cours.
Si vous avez des questions ou des retours sur notre projet de traduction actuel, n'hésitez pas à nous contacter.

Metadata

ID: ruby-best-practices/initialization-shorthand

Language: Ruby

Severity: Info

Category: Best Practices

Description

The rule “Use ||= to initialize variables if they are not already” is a best practice in Ruby to ensure clean, readable, and efficient code. The ‘||=’ operator is used to assign a value to a variable only if the variable is currently nil or false. This is a more concise and readable way to express conditional assignment, as opposed to using the unless keyword.

This rule is important because it promotes code clarity and efficiency. Using ‘||=’ for conditional assignment reduces the cognitive load on the developer reading the code, as it clearly expresses the intent in a single, straightforward operation. It also avoids unnecessary assignments when the variable is already initialized, potentially improving performance.

To adhere to this rule, use ‘||=’ whenever you want to assign a value to a variable only if it’s not already initialized. For instance, instead of writing name = 'Bozhidar' unless name, write name ||= 'Bozhidar'. This clearly communicates the intent and ensures the assignment only happens when necessary.

Non-Compliant Code Examples

name = 'Bozhidar' unless name

Compliant Code Examples

name ||= 'Bozhidar'
https://static.datadoghq.com/static/images/logos/github_avatar.svg https://static.datadoghq.com/static/images/logos/vscode_avatar.svg jetbrains

Seamless integrations. Try Datadog Code Analysis

PREVIEWING: mervebolat/span-id-preprocessing