Glad to announce that Funkwerk releases cogito [1], a tool that measures cognitive complexity of D code.
>From the Sonar’s paper on cognitive complexity [2]: “[…], Cognitive Complexity has been formulated to address modern language structures, and to produce values that are meaningful at the class and application levels. More importantly, it departs from the practice of evaluating code based on mathematical models so that it can yield assessments of control flow that correspond to programmers’ intuitions about the mental, or cognitive effort required to understand those flows.” cogito takes advantage of the DMD frontend (2.098.1 currently) to analyze the D code. It was our first experience using the DMD frontend for an internal tool. Build and usage instructions are in the README. A pre-built version for Linux x86-64 can be found in release attachments. You can build it yourself with `make install && make build/release/bin/cogito`. There is also a Dockerfile that can be used to run cogito, alternatively the binary can be copied from the resulting Docker container and run on the host system. cogito reports the cognitive complexity of functions, aggregates and modules. There are options to set a limit, so cogito fails if some score is too high. The options are --threshold, --aggregate-threshold and --module-threshold, respectively. On failure only the problematic units are printed. [1] https://github.com/funkwerk/cogito [2] https://www.sonarsource.com/docs/CognitiveComplexity.pdf