Defining and using global variables and global functions, when the convention dictates OOP can be confusing and difficult to use properly for multiple reasons: * You run the risk of name clashes. * Global functions must be stateless, or they can cause difficult-to-track bugs. * Global variables can be updated from anywhere and may no longer hold the value you expect. * It is difficult to properly test classes that use global functions. Instead of being declared globally, such variables and functions should be moved into a class, potentially marked ``++static++``, so they can be used without a class instance. This rule checks that only object-oriented programming is used and that no functions or procedures are declared outside of a class.