Code Smell 293 - You Should Avoid Adding isTesting or Similar Flags

Written by mcsee | Published 2025/03/06
Tech Story Tags: clean-code | refactoring | rust | software-development | code-smells | istesting | hackernoon-top-story | bijection

TLDRWhen you add flags like isTesting, you mix testing and production code. This creates hidden paths that are only active in tests.via the TL;DR App

Don’t let test code sneak into production

TL;DR: Avoid adding isTesting or similar flags.

Problems πŸ˜”

Solutions πŸ˜ƒ

  1. Remove behavior Ifs
  2. Use dependency injection
  3. Model external services (Don't mock them)
  4. Separate configurations
  5. Isolate test logic
  6. Maintain clean behavior boundaries

Refactorings βš™οΈ

https://hackernoon.com/refactoring-014-how-to-remove-if?embedable=true

Context πŸ’¬

When you add flags like isTesting, you mix testing and production code.

This creates hidden paths that are only active in tests.

Also, you don't cover real production code.

You risk shipping testing behavior to production, leading to bugs and unpredictable behavior.

Sample Code πŸ“–

Wrong ❌

struct PaymentService {
    is_testing: bool,
}

impl PaymentService {
    fn process_payment(&self, amount: f64) {
        if self.is_testing {
            println!("Testing mode: Skipping real payment");
            return;
        }
        println!("Processing payment of ${}", amount);
    }
}

Right πŸ‘‰

trait PaymentProcessor {
    fn process(&self, amount: f64);
}

struct RealPaymentProcessor;
impl PaymentProcessor for RealPaymentProcessor {
    fn process(&self, amount: f64) {
        println!("Processing payment of ${}", amount);
    }
}

struct TestingPaymentProcessor;
impl PaymentProcessor for TestingPaymentProcessor {
    // Notice this is not a mock
    fn process(&self, _: f64) {
        println!("No payment: Skipping real transaction");
    }
}

struct PaymentService<T: PaymentProcessor> {
    processor: T,
}

impl<T: PaymentProcessor> PaymentService<T> {
    fn process_payment(&self, amount: f64) {
        self.processor.process(amount);
    }
}

Detection πŸ”

  • [x]Semi-Automatic

You can detect this smell by looking for conditional flags like isTesting, environment == 'test', DEBUG_MODE, and idioms like these.

These indicate that testing behavior is leaking into the production code.

Tags 🏷️

  • Testing

Level πŸ”‹

  • [x]Intermediate

Why the Bijection Is Important πŸ—ΊοΈ

You need a clear separation between test and production code.

When you mix them, you break the one-to-one Bijection between real-world behavior and the program.

Since environments are real-world entities you need to explicitly model them in the MAPPER.

AI Generation πŸ€–

AI-generated code often introduces this smell when you use quick hacks for testing.

Some tools suggest flags like isTesting because they prioritize ease over proper design.

AI Detection πŸ₯ƒ

AI tools can catch this smell if you configure them to flag conditional logic based on testing states.

Try Them! πŸ› 

Remember: AI Assistants make lots of mistakes

Suggested Prompt: Remove IsTesting method and replace it by modeling the environments

Without Proper Instructions

With Specific Instructions

ChatGPT

ChatGPT

Claude

Claude

Perplexity

Perplexity

Copilot

Copilot

Gemini

Gemini

DeepSeek

DeepSeek

Meta AI

Meta AI

Qwen

Qwen

Conclusion 🏁

Avoid using isTesting flags.

Use dependency injection and model the environments to keep test and production logic separate.

Relations πŸ‘©β€β€οΈβ€πŸ’‹β€πŸ‘¨

https://hackernoon.com/how-to-find-the-stinky-parts-of-your-code-part-xxii

https://hackernoon.com/how-to-find-the-stinky-parts-of-your-code-part-xiii

https://hackernoon.com/how-to-find-the-stinky-parts-of-your-code-part-vi-cmj31om

https://hackernoon.com/code-smell-242-zombie-feature-flags?embedable=true

Disclaimer πŸ“˜

Code Smells are my opinion.

Credits πŸ™

Photo by Christian Gertenbach on Unsplash


When you add testing flags, you undermine confidence in production.

Ward Cunningham

https://hackernoon.com/400-thought-provoking-software-engineering-quotes?embedable=true


This article is part of the CodeSmell Series.

https://hackernoon.com/how-to-find-the-stinky-parts-of-your-code-part-i-xqz3evd?embedable=true


Written by mcsee | I’m a sr software engineer specialized in Clean Code, Design and TDD Book "Clean Code Cookbook" 500+ articles written
Published by HackerNoon on 2025/03/06