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superfluous-else-continue (RET507)#

Derived from the flake8-return linter.

Fix is sometimes available.

What it does#

Checks for else statements with a continue statement in the preceding if block.

Why is this bad?#

The else statement is not needed, as the continue statement will always continue onto the next iteration of a loop. Removing the else will reduce nesting and make the code more readable.

Example#

def foo(bar, baz):
    for i in bar:
        if i < baz:
            continue
        else:
            x = 0

Use instead:

def foo(bar, baz):
    for i in bar:
        if i < baz:
            continue
        x = 0