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Home/ Questions/Q 4254004
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 21, 20262026-05-21T05:01:25+00:00 2026-05-21T05:01:25+00:00

I often feel that after iterating over my code for a number of times

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I often feel that after iterating over my code for a number of times I am left with functions or classes or other lines of code in general which made sense in the previous revision but are not very useful for the new revision. I know that a profiler can tell you what part of your code was called when you run your test cases? But how does one go about identifying what part of the code never got called to remove it so that whats left is more readable? For example, is there a quick way to know which functions in your code are not being called from anywhere and can be safely removed. It may sound like a trivial question for a small code base, but when your code base grows over the years, this becomes an important and not so trivial question.

To summarize the question, for different languages, what is the best approach to remove dead code? Are there any lanaguage agnostic solutions or strategies for this. Or does each language provide a tool for identifying dead code.

We normally program in Java or Python or Objective-C.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-21T05:01:26+00:00Added an answer on May 21, 2026 at 5:01 am

    The term you’re looking for is “code coverage” and there are various tools that will generate that information. You would have to make sure that you exercise every possible path through your code in order to be able to detect “dead code” with such a tool though, which is only possible with a really extensive set of tests.

    Most compilers have some level of dead code detection, but that only detects code that cannot possibly be called, not code that will never be called due to program logic, etc..

    edit:

    for Python specifically: How can you find unused functions in Python code?

    for Java: How to find unused/dead code in java projects, Java: Dead code elimination

    for Objective-C: Xcode — finding dead methods in a project, Cleaning up Objective-C code

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