aws-samples / aws-robomaker-simulation-launcher
Unit Size

The distribution of size of units (measured in lines of code).

Intro
  • Unit size measurements show the distribution of size of units of code (methods, functions...).
  • Units are classified in four categories based on their size (lines of code): 1-20 (small units), 20-50 (medium size units), 51-100 (long units), 101+ (very long units).
  • You should aim at keeping units small (< 20 lines). Long units may become "bloaters", code that have increased to such gargantuan proportions that they are hard to work with.
Learn more...
Unit Size Overall
  • There are 5 units with 210 lines of code in units (30.2% of code).
    • 0 very long units (0 lines of code)
    • 1 long units (81 lines of code)
    • 3 medium size units (114 lines of code)
    • 1 small units (15 lines of code)
    • 0 very small units (0 lines of code)
0% | 38% | 54% | 7% | 0%
Legend:
101+
51-100
21-50
11-20
1-10
Unit Size per Extension
101+
51-100
21-50
11-20
1-10
py0% | 38% | 54% | 7% | 0%
Unit Size per Logical Component
primary logical decomposition
101+
51-100
21-50
11-20
1-10
processAndLaunchBatchSimulations0% | 100% | 0% | 0% | 0%
sendSimSummary0% | 0% | 100% | 0% | 0%
checkStatus0% | 0% | 100% | 0% | 0%
triggerStepFunctions0% | 0% | 100% | 0% | 0%
errorLaunchingSimulations0% | 0% | 0% | 100% | 0%
Alternative Visuals
Longest Units
Top 5 longest units
Unit# linesMcCabe index# params
def lambda_handler()
in processAndLaunchBatchSimulations/app.py
81 27 2
def lambda_handler()
in sendSimSummary/app.py
45 7 2
def lambda_handler()
in checkStatus/app.py
35 7 2
def lambda_handler()
in triggerStepFunctions/app.py
34 5 2
def lambda_handler()
in errorLaunchingSimulations/app.py
15 1 2