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Home/ Questions/Q 7727703
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T05:31:32+00:00 2026-06-01T05:31:32+00:00

I was looking at some code of a fellow developer, and almost cried. In

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I was looking at some code of a fellow developer, and almost cried. In the method definition there are 12 arguments. From my experience..this isn’t good. If it were me, I would have sent in an object of some sort.

Is there another / more preferred way to do this (in other words, what’s the best way to fix this and explain why)?

public long Save (
    String today, 
    String name, 
    String desc, 
    int ID, 
    String otherNm, 
    DateTime dt, 
    int status, 
    String periodID, 
    String otherDt, 
    String submittedDt
)

ignore my poor variable names – they are examples

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T05:31:34+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 5:31 am

    It highly depends on the language.

    In a language without compile-time typechecking (e.g. python, javascript, etc.) you should use keyword arguments (common in python: you can access them like a dictionary passed in as an argument) or objects/dictionaries you manually pass in as arguments (common in javascript).

    However the “argument hell” you described is sometimes “the right way to do things” for certain languages with compile-time typechecking, because using objects will obfuscate the semantics from the typechecker. The solution then would be to use a better language with compile-time typechecking which allows pattern-matching of objects as arguments.

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