this post was submitted on 20 Mar 2026
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Hey, I want your opinion on code reviews, what is the best way to use them in a professional environment? Pick one of the following and give me your thoughts (from the most forgiving to the most strict):

  1. no code reviews, they are useless
  2. optional code reviews
  3. mandatory reviews on code that is already merged, optional fixes
  4. mandatory reviews on code before merging (like a pull request), with a time-frame for optional fixes (i.e. whether to fix what has been pointed out is up to the author), merge will occur anyway.
  5. mandatory reviews on code before merging (PR) with mandatory fixes.

Of course in open source development with public contributions, you'll often see (5), but I'm not convinced it could work in professional dev.

Edit: I'm talking about a team of 5 mid to senior devs (no junior or interns) working on a 2-3 year project without many security concerns, but feel free to give me your general opinion.

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[–] atzanteol@sh.itjust.works 26 points 3 days ago

mandatory reviews on code before merging (PR) with mandatory fixes.

This one. Open PR, review by at least one peer, address concerns, merge.

Code review is not punishment - it's part of your job. You should be willing and able to provide meaningful feedback to your peers. It also gives the team an opportunity to see how other people write code and to agree on norms and standards.