Showing 591 of 591 total issues
Use safe navigation (&.
) instead of checking if an object exists before calling the method. Open
if client_data
client_data.decorate.top_email_field
end
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop transforms usages of a method call safeguarded by a non nil
check for the variable whose method is being called to
safe navigation (&.
).
Configuration option: ConvertCodeThatCanStartToReturnNil
The default for this is false
. When configured to true
, this will
check for code in the format !foo.nil? && foo.bar
. As it is written,
the return of this code is limited to false
and whatever the return
of the method is. If this is converted to safe navigation,
foo&.bar
can start returning nil
as well as what the method
returns.
Example:
# bad
foo.bar if foo
foo.bar(param1, param2) if foo
foo.bar { |e| e.something } if foo
foo.bar(param) { |e| e.something } if foo
foo.bar if !foo.nil?
foo.bar unless !foo
foo.bar unless foo.nil?
foo && foo.bar
foo && foo.bar(param1, param2)
foo && foo.bar { |e| e.something }
foo && foo.bar(param) { |e| e.something }
# good
foo&.bar
foo&.bar(param1, param2)
foo&.bar { |e| e.something }
foo&.bar(param) { |e| e.something }
foo.nil? || foo.bar
!foo || foo.bar
# Methods that `nil` will `respond_to?` should not be converted to
# use safe navigation
foo.to_i if foo
Freeze mutable objects assigned to constants. Open
NO_APPROVER_FOUND = "No Approver Found"
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks whether some constant value isn't a mutable literal (e.g. array or hash).
Example:
# bad
CONST = [1, 2, 3]
# good
CONST = [1, 2, 3].freeze
Align the elements of an array literal if they span more than one line. Open
free_event travel_required estimated_travel_expenses)
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
Here we check if the elements of a multi-line array literal are aligned.
Example:
# bad
a = [1, 2, 3,
4, 5, 6]
array = ['run',
'forrest',
'run']
# good
a = [1, 2, 3,
4, 5, 6]
a = ['run',
'forrest',
'run']
Pass &:completer
as an argument to column
instead of a block. Open
tbl.column("Completer") { |step| step.completer }
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
Use symbols as procs when possible.
Example:
# bad
something.map { |s| s.upcase }
# good
something.map(&:upcase)
Use if id.blank?
instead of unless id.present?
. Open
next unless id.present?
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cops checks for code that can be changed to blank?
.
Settings:
NilOrEmpty: Convert checks for nil
or empty?
to blank?
NotPresent: Convert usages of not present?
to blank?
UnlessPresent: Convert usages of unless
present?
to blank?
Example:
# NilOrEmpty: true
# bad
foo.nil? || foo.empty?
foo == nil || foo.empty?
# good
foo.blank?
# NotPresent: true
# bad
!foo.present?
# good
foo.blank?
# UnlessPresent: true
# bad
something unless foo.present?
unless foo.present?
something
end
# good
something if foo.blank?
if foo.blank?
something
end
Specify an :inverse_of
option. Open
has_many :subscriptions, class_name: ScheduledReport, foreign_key: :report_id
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop looks for has(one|many) and belongsto associations where
ActiveRecord can't automatically determine the inverse association
because of a scope or the options used. This can result in unnecessary
queries in some circumstances. :inverse_of
must be manually specified
for associations to work in both ways, or set to false
to opt-out.
Example:
# good
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
has_many :posts
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
Example:
# bad
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
has_many :posts, -> { order(published_at: :desc) }
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
# good
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
has_many(:posts,
-> { order(published_at: :desc) },
inverse_of: :blog
)
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
# good
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
with_options inverse_of: :blog do
has_many :posts, -> { order(published_at: :desc) }
end
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
Example:
# bad
class Picture < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :imageable, polymorphic: true
end
class Employee < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable
end
class Product < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable
end
# good
class Picture < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :imageable, polymorphic: true
end
class Employee < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable, inverse_of: :imageable
end
class Product < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable, inverse_of: :imageable
end
Example:
# bad
# However, RuboCop can not detect this pattern...
class Physician < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :patients, through: :appointments
end
class Appointment < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :physician
belongs_to :patient
end
class Patient < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :physicians, through: :appointments
end
# good
class Physician < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :patients, through: :appointments
end
class Appointment < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :physician, inverse_of: :appointments
belongs_to :patient, inverse_of: :appointments
end
class Patient < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :physicians, through: :appointments
end
@see http://guides.rubyonrails.org/association_basics.html#bi-directional-associations @see http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Associations/ClassMethods.html#module-ActiveRecord::Associations::ClassMethods-label-Setting+Inverses
Specify an :inverse_of
option. Open
belongs_to :assigner, class_name: "User", foreign_key: "assigner_id"
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop looks for has(one|many) and belongsto associations where
ActiveRecord can't automatically determine the inverse association
because of a scope or the options used. This can result in unnecessary
queries in some circumstances. :inverse_of
must be manually specified
for associations to work in both ways, or set to false
to opt-out.
Example:
# good
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
has_many :posts
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
Example:
# bad
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
has_many :posts, -> { order(published_at: :desc) }
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
# good
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
has_many(:posts,
-> { order(published_at: :desc) },
inverse_of: :blog
)
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
# good
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
with_options inverse_of: :blog do
has_many :posts, -> { order(published_at: :desc) }
end
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
Example:
# bad
class Picture < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :imageable, polymorphic: true
end
class Employee < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable
end
class Product < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable
end
# good
class Picture < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :imageable, polymorphic: true
end
class Employee < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable, inverse_of: :imageable
end
class Product < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable, inverse_of: :imageable
end
Example:
# bad
# However, RuboCop can not detect this pattern...
class Physician < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :patients, through: :appointments
end
class Appointment < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :physician
belongs_to :patient
end
class Patient < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :physicians, through: :appointments
end
# good
class Physician < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :patients, through: :appointments
end
class Appointment < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :physician, inverse_of: :appointments
belongs_to :patient, inverse_of: :appointments
end
class Patient < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :physicians, through: :appointments
end
@see http://guides.rubyonrails.org/association_basics.html#bi-directional-associations @see http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Associations/ClassMethods.html#module-ActiveRecord::Associations::ClassMethods-label-Setting+Inverses
Models should subclass ApplicationRecord
. Open
class Step < ActiveRecord::Base
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks that models subclass ApplicationRecord with Rails 5.0.
Example:
# good class Rails5Model < ApplicationRecord # ... end
# bad class Rails4Model < ActiveRecord::Base # ... end
private
(on line 23) does not make singleton methods private. Use private_class_method
or private
inside a class << self
block instead. Open
def self.approver_with_role(role_name)
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for private
or protected
access modifiers which are
applied to a singleton method. These access modifiers do not make
singleton methods private/protected. private_class_method
can be
used for that.
Example:
# bad
class C
private
def self.method
puts 'hi'
end
end
Example:
# good
class C
def self.method
puts 'hi'
end
private_class_method :method
end
Example:
# good
class C
class << self
private
def method
puts 'hi'
end
end
end
Implicit braces are forbidden Open
constructor: (@$fieldOrWrappers) ->
- Exclude checks
Empty function Open
constructor: (@$root, @key, @val) ->
- Exclude checks
Freeze mutable objects assigned to constants. Open
EMERGENCY_APPROVER_EMAIL = "Emergency - Verbal Approval"
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks whether some constant value isn't a mutable literal (e.g. array or hash).
Example:
# bad
CONST = [1, 2, 3]
# good
CONST = [1, 2, 3].freeze
Align the elements of an array literal if they span more than one line. Open
event_provider type_of_event cost_per_unit start_date
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
Here we check if the elements of a multi-line array literal are aligned.
Example:
# bad
a = [1, 2, 3,
4, 5, 6]
array = ['run',
'forrest',
'run']
# good
a = [1, 2, 3,
4, 5, 6]
a = ['run',
'forrest',
'run']
Pass &:frequency
as an argument to column
instead of a block. Open
tbl.column("Freqency") { |scheduled_report| scheduled_report.frequency }
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
Use symbols as procs when possible.
Example:
# bad
something.map { |s| s.upcase }
# good
something.map(&:upcase)
Specify an :inverse_of
option. Open
has_one :api_token, -> { fresh }, foreign_key: "step_id"
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop looks for has(one|many) and belongsto associations where
ActiveRecord can't automatically determine the inverse association
because of a scope or the options used. This can result in unnecessary
queries in some circumstances. :inverse_of
must be manually specified
for associations to work in both ways, or set to false
to opt-out.
Example:
# good
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
has_many :posts
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
Example:
# bad
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
has_many :posts, -> { order(published_at: :desc) }
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
# good
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
has_many(:posts,
-> { order(published_at: :desc) },
inverse_of: :blog
)
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
# good
class Blog < ApplicationRecord
with_options inverse_of: :blog do
has_many :posts, -> { order(published_at: :desc) }
end
end
class Post < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :blog
end
Example:
# bad
class Picture < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :imageable, polymorphic: true
end
class Employee < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable
end
class Product < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable
end
# good
class Picture < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :imageable, polymorphic: true
end
class Employee < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable, inverse_of: :imageable
end
class Product < ApplicationRecord
has_many :pictures, as: :imageable, inverse_of: :imageable
end
Example:
# bad
# However, RuboCop can not detect this pattern...
class Physician < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :patients, through: :appointments
end
class Appointment < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :physician
belongs_to :patient
end
class Patient < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :physicians, through: :appointments
end
# good
class Physician < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :patients, through: :appointments
end
class Appointment < ApplicationRecord
belongs_to :physician, inverse_of: :appointments
belongs_to :patient, inverse_of: :appointments
end
class Patient < ApplicationRecord
has_many :appointments
has_many :physicians, through: :appointments
end
@see http://guides.rubyonrails.org/association_basics.html#bi-directional-associations @see http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Associations/ClassMethods.html#module-ActiveRecord::Associations::ClassMethods-label-Setting+Inverses
Use if email.blank?
instead of unless email.present?
. Open
raise(EmailRequired, "email missing") unless email.present?
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cops checks for code that can be changed to blank?
.
Settings:
NilOrEmpty: Convert checks for nil
or empty?
to blank?
NotPresent: Convert usages of not present?
to blank?
UnlessPresent: Convert usages of unless
present?
to blank?
Example:
# NilOrEmpty: true
# bad
foo.nil? || foo.empty?
foo == nil || foo.empty?
# good
foo.blank?
# NotPresent: true
# bad
!foo.present?
# good
foo.blank?
# UnlessPresent: true
# bad
something unless foo.present?
unless foo.present?
something
end
# good
something if foo.blank?
if foo.blank?
something
end
Pass &:status
as an argument to column
instead of a block. Open
tbl.column("Status") { |proposal| proposal.status }
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
Use symbols as procs when possible.
Example:
# bad
something.map { |s| s.upcase }
# good
something.map(&:upcase)
Specify a :dependent
option. Open
has_many :ahoy_events, class_name: "Ahoy::Event"
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop looks for has_many
or has_one
associations that don't
specify a :dependent
option.
It doesn't register an offense if :through
option was specified.
Example:
# bad
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :comments
has_one :avatar
end
# good
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :comments, dependent: :restrict_with_exception
has_one :avatar, dependent: :destroy
has_many :patients, through: :appointments
end
Specify a :dependent
option. Open
has_many :subscriptions, class_name: ScheduledReport, foreign_key: :report_id
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop looks for has_many
or has_one
associations that don't
specify a :dependent
option.
It doesn't register an offense if :through
option was specified.
Example:
# bad
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :comments
has_one :avatar
end
# good
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
has_many :comments, dependent: :restrict_with_exception
has_one :avatar, dependent: :destroy
has_many :patients, through: :appointments
end
Use safe navigation (&.
) instead of checking if an object exists before calling the method. Open
if parent
parent.restart!
end
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop transforms usages of a method call safeguarded by a non nil
check for the variable whose method is being called to
safe navigation (&.
).
Configuration option: ConvertCodeThatCanStartToReturnNil
The default for this is false
. When configured to true
, this will
check for code in the format !foo.nil? && foo.bar
. As it is written,
the return of this code is limited to false
and whatever the return
of the method is. If this is converted to safe navigation,
foo&.bar
can start returning nil
as well as what the method
returns.
Example:
# bad
foo.bar if foo
foo.bar(param1, param2) if foo
foo.bar { |e| e.something } if foo
foo.bar(param) { |e| e.something } if foo
foo.bar if !foo.nil?
foo.bar unless !foo
foo.bar unless foo.nil?
foo && foo.bar
foo && foo.bar(param1, param2)
foo && foo.bar { |e| e.something }
foo && foo.bar(param) { |e| e.something }
# good
foo&.bar
foo&.bar(param1, param2)
foo&.bar { |e| e.something }
foo&.bar(param) { |e| e.something }
foo.nil? || foo.bar
!foo || foo.bar
# Methods that `nil` will `respond_to?` should not be converted to
# use safe navigation
foo.to_i if foo