Stats::Aggregation#self.normalize_granularity has approx 8 statements Open
def self.normalize_granularity(granularity)
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A method with Too Many Statements
is any method that has a large number of lines.
Too Many Statements
warns about any method that has more than 5 statements. Reek's smell detector for Too Many Statements
counts +1 for every simple statement in a method and +1 for every statement within a control structure (if
, else
, case
, when
, for
, while
, until
, begin
, rescue
) but it doesn't count the control structure itself.
So the following method would score +6 in Reek's statement-counting algorithm:
def parse(arg, argv, &error)
if !(val = arg) and (argv.empty? or /\A-/ =~ (val = argv[0]))
return nil, block, nil # +1
end
opt = (val = parse_arg(val, &error))[1] # +2
val = conv_arg(*val) # +3
if opt and !arg
argv.shift # +4
else
val[0] = nil # +5
end
val # +6
end
(You might argue that the two assigments within the first @if@ should count as statements, and that perhaps the nested assignment should count as +2.)
Stats::Aggregation declares the class variable '@@rules' Open
@@rules = Rules.new
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Class variables form part of the global runtime state, and as such make it easy for one part of the system to accidentally or inadvertently depend on another part of the system. So the system becomes more prone to problems where changing something over here breaks something over there. In particular, class variables can make it hard to set up tests (because the context of the test includes all global state).
For a detailed explanation, check out this article
Example
Given
class Dummy
@@class_variable = :whatever
end
Reek would emit the following warning:
reek test.rb
test.rb -- 1 warning:
[2]:Dummy declares the class variable @@class_variable (ClassVariable)
Getting rid of the smell
You can use class-instance variable to mitigate the problem (as also suggested in the linked article above):
class Dummy
@class_variable = :whatever
end