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Clean Code in Python

You're reading from   Clean Code in Python Develop maintainable and efficient code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jan 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800560215
Length 422 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Mariano Anaya Mariano Anaya
Author Profile Icon Mariano Anaya
Mariano Anaya
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Toc

Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction, Code Formatting, and Tools 2. Pythonic Code FREE CHAPTER 3. General Traits of Good Code 4. The SOLID Principles 5. Using Decorators to Improve Our Code 6. Getting More Out of Our Objects with Descriptors 7. Generators, Iterators, and Asynchronous Programming 8. Unit Testing and Refactoring 9. Common Design Patterns 10. Clean Architecture 11. Other Books You May Enjoy
12. Index

The single responsibility principle

The single responsibility principle (SRP) states that a software component (in general, a class) must have only one responsibility. The fact that the class has a sole responsibility means that it is in charge of doing just one concrete thing, and as a consequence of that, we can conclude that it must have only one reason to change.

Only if one thing on the domain problem changes will the class have to be updated. If we have to make modifications to a class for different reasons, it means the abstraction is incorrect, and that the class has too many responsibilities. This is probably an indication that there is at least one abstraction missing: more objects need to be created to address the extra responsibility that's overloading the current class in question.

As introduced in Chapter 2, Pythonic Code, this design principle helps us build more cohesive abstractions—objects that do one thing, and just one thing, well, following...

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