So I'm reading some Perl code. I usually stay away from Perl as much as I can, but I'm trying to figure out some undocumented behavior of the MusicBrainz RDF server so I have to UTSL. Anyway, I get to this line:
      return ("No artist name or artist id given.", $data, 0, undef) 
and I get confused, because I saw the artist ID check but not the artist name check. So I start reading backwards to see if I missed something; maybe the artist name check happened in some non-obvious function call? I go skimming through various other files to see if some other code is filling in the artist ID or something. Eventually, I give up and come back to that line, and I notice that the next line is:
          if ($data->{artist} eq '');
and I smack my head. I'm willing to chalk this up to bad style (and I hope people would agree this is bad style), but now I'm wondering: when is it ever good style to put the conditional guard after the code it's guarding? Or, more generally, when is it ever good style for the order of code (in the same basic block) to be the opposite of the order of execution?

From: [identity profile] dougo.livejournal.com

Re: Quoting from the perlstyle man page


Thinking more about this, maybe what's really bothering me is that Perl post-conditionals are both non-sequential and infix. I think I wouldn't mind so much if it had prefix syntax:
post-if return ("No artist name or artist id given.", $data, 0, undef)
        ($data->{artist} eq '');
Hm, maybe that's still a bad idea. Nevermind.
.

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