bin/rspec
Missing magic comment # frozen_string_literal: true
. Open
Open
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
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This cop is designed to help upgrade to after Ruby 3.0. It will add the
comment # frozen_string_literal: true
to the top of files to
enable frozen string literals. Frozen string literals may be default
after Ruby 3.0. The comment will be added below a shebang and encoding
comment. The frozen string literal comment is only valid in Ruby 2.3+.
Example: EnforcedStyle: always (default)
# The `always` style will always add the frozen string literal comment
# to a file, regardless of the Ruby version or if `freeze` or `<<` are
# called on a string literal.
# bad
module Bar
# ...
end
# good
# frozen_string_literal: true
module Bar
# ...
end
Example: EnforcedStyle: never
# The `never` will enforce that the frozen string literal comment does
# not exist in a file.
# bad
# frozen_string_literal: true
module Baz
# ...
end
# good
module Baz
# ...
end
Use expand_path('spring', __dir__)
instead of expand_path('../spring', __FILE__)
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Open
load File.expand_path('../spring', __FILE__)
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This cop checks for use of the File.expand_path
arguments.
Likewise, it also checks for the Pathname.new
argument.
Contrastive bad case and good case are alternately shown in the following examples.
Example:
# bad
File.expand_path('..', __FILE__)
# good
File.expand_path(__dir__)
# bad
File.expand_path('../..', __FILE__)
# good
File.expand_path('..', __dir__)
# bad
File.expand_path('.', __FILE__)
# good
File.expand_path(__FILE__)
# bad
Pathname(__FILE__).parent.expand_path
# good
Pathname(__dir__).expand_path
# bad
Pathname.new(__FILE__).parent.expand_path
# good
Pathname.new(__dir__).expand_path