We were inconsistent on this one. I consider it particularly useful when a method starts with a `return` statement. In other cases, we probably shouldn't have a guard rule in the middle of a method in any case, but that's a different refactoring.
We were inconsistent on this one. I consider it particularly useful when a method starts with a `return` statement. In other cases, we probably shouldn't have a guard rule in the middle of a method in any case, but that's a different refactoring.