Category Archives: Computers and Internet

Posts on computer science and the web, rants about OS:es, Window Managers, Platforms for almost publishing content on the web, and the like.

Online Forum Conundrum – or the Evil OP

On bad Google Days, I come across these answers to my very urgent problem X:

Original Poster: I have problem X! Help!

The Unhelpful Guesser: Have you tried [unrelated solution].

Cosufferer: I have the same problem! Please let me know how this goes!

The Problem Specifier: Can you specify under what circumstances X occurs?

Original Poster: I get X when I Y with Z.

Second Cosufferer (quotes Cosufferer): +1 need to know this too!

The Log Meister: Can you post the contents of [list of log file paths].

Third Cosufferer: I am very interested in the solution to this problem!

Original Poster posts the logs but Log Meister is never heard of again.

The Reset Rebooter: Have you tried rebooting? Reinstalling? Upgrading?

Original Poster: @The Reset Rebooter: all of them to no avail…

Fourth Cosufferer: How is this going?

Original Poster (a month later): Anyone? Help!

Original Poster: I have solved the problem! Thanks for all the help!

Me: ?!?!

We love errors!

Experienced programmer: I am disappointed in this application… it doesn’t throw enough errors.

Inexperienced programmer: Huh?!?!

Errors are your friend because they tell you that something went wrong, and you get a list of potential places where it went wrong with line numbers in the code and everything (if you’re in debug mode, and using a somewhat mature framework).

In a contrary, applications that do their damndest to avoid errors usually end up doing nothing, or the wrong thing, without complaint, and your debugging effort is more akin to that of a therapist than a programmer.

Here are a few things to consider.

Don’t swallow exceptions

try {
  //...do something that may throw an error
}
catch (Throwable t) {}

If you don’t know what to do with the error, don’t catch it. If you need to do something, catch the error but throw another if the error is still a problem.

Stopping errors should propagate all the way to the user interface where they can be packaged nicely in a dialog or error page or some other device that prompts the user to provide other input, change the application configuration or call an admin.

If the error prevents the application from doing its job, the error prevents the application from doing its job. Period!

Of course, the best way to deal with user input is to implement data validation to prevent bad data from ever get past the UI of the application (which of course isn’t possible to do in all cases… hence the rest of this article.)

If a resource is involved, look into the try-with-resource-construct in Java or the using-construct in .Net. They will close a resource if there was an error or not.

Don’t throw exceptions with no or whimsical messages

Never throw errors without a message. Or with an ambiguous message:

if (value > max)
  throw new IllegalStateException("Error!");

Do you hate the above code? Good, it’s the classic Mac OS “An error of type 1 has occurred”-error message all over again. (And I’ve actually seen something like it in a mature paid-for product).

Return a meaningful error message. If you can, also add information about why there was an error:

if (ds.Tables[0].Rows.Count == 0)
{
  throw new Exception(
    "Unable to locate super user (user with ID=1)");
}

Imagine you’re the one getting the error message, and you’ll probably know what to do and that you need to do it.

Don’t use return values instead of exceptions

public int doSomething() {
  if (unable to do what I should)
    return -1;
  ..
}

If you run into an error condition, throw exceptions instead of returning values.

A calling method may mistake that -1 for a valid response. It will not mistake an exception in the same way!

There may be a case for returning null in some cases, for instance when there are no data.

Don’t fear null

Null, by the way, is another underutilized feature of programming.

In Java 8 there’s the Optional-class that can be used in cases where the value may or may not exist (e.g. a search).

Before Java 8 you have different options.

For a search, you could return an empty list.

However, when dealing with values that may, or may not, be set, null is the only way to go. (Pre- and post-Java 8).

Consider the following (slightly edited real-life) example:

public List<RowDto> GetItems(
  List<ColumnDto> columns, 
  string userName, 
  string searchTerm, 
  List<int> filters, 
  string sortColumn, 
  bool sortDescending, 
  int numberOfRows)
{
  ..
}

Now consider that the actual implementation of the view that displays items can have default sort ascending or descending.

How do you know when the framework asks for default sort or when the user has decided they want a specific sort (by clicking the headline of the column to sort)?

You don’t.

The sortDescending variable should have been nullable (bool? sortDescending in .Net/C# parlance).

In that case, it would have been possible to check for a null value (signaling default sort) and determine if the sort should be ascending or descending depending on the specification of the view.

Here’s another example where a value may be set or not, but the whole null handling has been hidden from the outside world (not that different from Optional, but with the ability to set the value as well, and several values in the same object…):

public class MyClass {
  public int getValue() {
    if (value == null)
      throw new IllegalStateException(...);
    return value;
  }
  public void setValue(int value) {
    this.value = value;
  }
  public void unsetValue() {
    value = null;
  }
  public boolean isValueSet() {
    return value != null;
  }

  public String getValue2()
  ...

  public Object getValue3()
  ...

  private Integer value;
  private String value2;
  private Object value3;
}

Catch error conditions early and throw exceptions (but do it right…)

Another tip is to catch errors early and throw exceptions. E.g. in Java 8, use the Objects.requireNonNull()-function.

However, always make sure your methods first verify the in-data and only then start changing the state of the object. Otherwise, if that object survives your mishandling, it will likely cause ripple effects throughout the application.

Consider the following:

public void myMethod(Object o1, String s1) {
  if (o1 == null)
    throw new NullPointerException();

  someOtherMethod(o1);
  .. + other work on o1

  if (s1 == null)
    throw new NullPointerException();
  
  .. do some work with s1
}

What happens to the state of this object if o1 is non-null and s1 is null?

Build a better system

One system I’m building generates a static site, but it takes a long time to do this, so I’ve decided to make sure my code is as efficient as it can possibly be:

public Writer writer(File file)
   throws FileNotFoundException
{
   Objects.requireNonNull(file,
      "Argument file is null");
   if (renderedFileList.contains(file)) {
      throw new IllegalStateException(
         "Trying to write the same file twice: " 
         + file);
   }

   renderedFileList.add(file);
   ...
}

This way I can always rest assured my programming never creates the same file more than once, and if I were to get this error, rather than calling it an unnecessary check and remove it, I’d go in and remove the second rendering… unless of course, I’m overwriting files…

After all, that site takes several minutes to render, so I’d rather only render it once!

As I’ve gained experience in programming I’ve come to change my opinion about errors and program crashes from “Oh! F*ck!” when I got them, to “hmmm, what’s up?” when I keep pounding in code without getting them.

Microsoft “Authenticator” and the Cautionary Tale of the Seven Doorstops

So, Microsoft “Authenticator” seems to want me to authenticate about four times a day now.

I think someone in security should call Microsoft and tell them the cautionary tale of the seven doorstops.

It goes like this:

Once upon a time, there was a government agency that had a room that was so secure it could only be reached by passing seven doors that required seven different managers to come and open them with seven different keys.

Unfortunately, this room contained the fax machine, so it was a huge inconvenience because whenever someone wanted to send or receive fax they had to get the seven different managers with their seven keys to open the seven doors.

All this extra administration soon brought the government agency to the brink of collapse!

And then, a resourceful employee went out and bought seven doorstops…

So now, whenever I need to send or receive fax I know where to go…

That final twist is actually based on true (but unverified) events (rumors?)

Back in the day, I heard of someone that used to troll for unprotected WiFi nets… apparently, it happened that he found one in a convenience store (Pressbyrån) and would print something on their printer, walk into the store and tell them to fetch his printout.

The employee was usually so caught off guard/unaware they just went and got the papers.