@facetimeJS I approach this in very much the same way I used to approach answering when my parents asked "did you clean your room?"
@facetimeJS As a developer, that's what is expected.
@facetimeJS Mmm, it’s definitely pretty. Cuz, prettier 😌
@facetimeJS About 30% of time rest is trying to make it work in labyrinth
@facetimeJS Sure. It’ll be clean to me. Guarantee I can find someone who would have a problem with it!
@facetimeJS Try to. As much as possible. But when the code length increases it gets difficult to follow 😂😅
@facetimeJS I always try to write working code over writing clean code , once it's working then only I start cleaning it 😉
@facetimeJS Better than before but still see issues in code. I am trying to follow SOLID principles. Code will become much cleaner once these principles become habit.
@facetimeJS If you mean readable, well-commented code, respecting the basic code quality standards. Yes, always.
@facetimeJS I'll be able. For isolated system and if someone give me a definition of a Clean Code which is clear and acceptable for me and for all who will support my clean code later.
@facetimeJS I refactor until its absolutely perfect.
@facetimeJS I’m starting to after reading just the first 3 chapters of the Clean code book by @unclebobmartin
@facetimeJS I think many developers don't know what is the actual Clean Code?
@facetimeJS I always wash my hands before starting to code.
@facetimeJS No, I guess it comes with practice.