Showing 2,704 of 2,705 total issues
Use =~
in places where the MatchData
returned by #match
will not be used. Open
if pol.policy_arn.match(/arn:aws(?:-us-gov)?:iam::aws:policy\//)
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop identifies the use of Regexp#match
or String#match
, which
returns #<MatchData>
/nil
. The return value of =~
is an integral
index/nil
and is more performant.
Example:
# bad
do_something if str.match(/regex/)
while regex.match('str')
do_something
end
# good
method(str =~ /regex/)
return value unless regex =~ 'str'
Useless assignment to variable - loop_if
. Open
loop_if = Proc.new {
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for every useless assignment to local variable in every
scope.
The basic idea for this cop was from the warning of ruby -cw
:
assigned but unused variable - foo
Currently this cop has advanced logic that detects unreferenced reassignments and properly handles varied cases such as branch, loop, rescue, ensure, etc.
Example:
# bad
def some_method
some_var = 1
do_something
end
Example:
# good
def some_method
some_var = 1
do_something(some_var)
end
Use each_key
instead of keys.each
. Open
ext_rule.keys.each { |k|
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- Exclude checks
This cop checks for uses of each_key
and each_value
Hash methods.
Note: If you have an array of two-element arrays, you can put parentheses around the block arguments to indicate that you're not working with a hash, and suppress RuboCop offenses.
Example:
# bad
hash.keys.each { |k| p k }
hash.values.each { |v| p v }
hash.each { |k, _v| p k }
hash.each { |_k, v| p v }
# good
hash.each_key { |k| p k }
hash.each_value { |v| p v }
Use casecmp
instead of upcase ==
. Open
if listener[:protocol].upcase == 'HTTP' or listener[:protocol].upcase == 'HTTPS'
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- Exclude checks
This cop identifies places where a case-insensitive string comparison
can better be implemented using casecmp
.
Example:
# bad
str.downcase == 'abc'
str.upcase.eql? 'ABC'
'abc' == str.downcase
'ABC'.eql? str.upcase
str.downcase == str.downcase
# good
str.casecmp('ABC').zero?
'abc'.casecmp(str).zero?
Use each_value
instead of values.each
. Open
@targetgroups.values.each { |tg|
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for uses of each_key
and each_value
Hash methods.
Note: If you have an array of two-element arrays, you can put parentheses around the block arguments to indicate that you're not working with a hash, and suppress RuboCop offenses.
Example:
# bad
hash.keys.each { |k| p k }
hash.values.each { |v| p v }
hash.each { |k, _v| p k }
hash.each { |_k, v| p v }
# good
hash.each_key { |k| p k }
hash.each_value { |v| p v }
Do not prefix reader method names with get_
. Open
def get_properties
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- Exclude checks
This cop makes sure that accessor methods are named properly.
Example:
# bad
def set_attribute(value)
end
# good
def attribute=(value)
end
# bad
def get_attribute
end
# good
def attribute
end
end
at 368, 10 is not aligned with if
at 338, 17. Open
end
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- Exclude checks
This cop checks whether the end keywords are aligned properly.
Three modes are supported through the EnforcedStyleAlignWith
configuration parameter:
If it's set to keyword
(which is the default), the end
shall be aligned with the start of the keyword (if, class, etc.).
If it's set to variable
the end
shall be aligned with the
left-hand-side of the variable assignment, if there is one.
If it's set to start_of_line
, the end
shall be aligned with the
start of the line where the matching keyword appears.
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: keyword (default)
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
variable = if true
end
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: variable
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
variable = if true
end
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: startofline
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
puts(if true
end)
end
at 1750, 10 is not aligned with if
at 1748, 23. Open
end
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks whether the end keywords are aligned properly.
Three modes are supported through the EnforcedStyleAlignWith
configuration parameter:
If it's set to keyword
(which is the default), the end
shall be aligned with the start of the keyword (if, class, etc.).
If it's set to variable
the end
shall be aligned with the
left-hand-side of the variable assignment, if there is one.
If it's set to start_of_line
, the end
shall be aligned with the
start of the line where the matching keyword appears.
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: keyword (default)
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
variable = if true
end
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: variable
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
variable = if true
end
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: startofline
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
puts(if true
end)
Useless assignment to variable - r_start
. Open
r_start = Time.now
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for every useless assignment to local variable in every
scope.
The basic idea for this cop was from the warning of ruby -cw
:
assigned but unused variable - foo
Currently this cop has advanced logic that detects unreferenced reassignments and properly handles varied cases such as branch, loop, rescue, ensure, etc.
Example:
# bad
def some_method
some_var = 1
do_something
end
Example:
# good
def some_method
some_var = 1
do_something(some_var)
end
Use =~
in places where the MatchData
returned by #match
will not be used. Open
if url.match(/\/#{Regexp.quote(@mu_name)}$/)
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop identifies the use of Regexp#match
or String#match
, which
returns #<MatchData>
/nil
. The return value of =~
is an integral
index/nil
and is more performant.
Example:
# bad
do_something if str.match(/regex/)
while regex.match('str')
do_something
end
# good
method(str =~ /regex/)
return value unless regex =~ 'str'
Use =~
in places where the MatchData
returned by #match
will not be used. Open
cidr = cidr + "/32" if cidr.match(/^\d+\.\d+\.\d+\.\d+$/)
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop identifies the use of Regexp#match
or String#match
, which
returns #<MatchData>
/nil
. The return value of =~
is an integral
index/nil
and is more performant.
Example:
# bad
do_something if str.match(/regex/)
while regex.match('str')
do_something
end
# good
method(str =~ /regex/)
return value unless regex =~ 'str'
Do not suppress exceptions. Open
rescue ::Aws::IAM::Errors::NoSuchEntity
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for rescue blocks with no body.
Example:
# bad
def some_method
do_something
rescue
# do nothing
end
Example:
# bad
begin
do_something
rescue
# do nothing
end
Example:
# good
def some_method
do_something
rescue
handle_exception
end
Example:
# good
begin
do_something
rescue
handle_exception
end
Use each_value
instead of values.each
. Open
@targetgroups.values.each { |tg|
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for uses of each_key
and each_value
Hash methods.
Note: If you have an array of two-element arrays, you can put parentheses around the block arguments to indicate that you're not working with a hash, and suppress RuboCop offenses.
Example:
# bad
hash.keys.each { |k| p k }
hash.values.each { |v| p v }
hash.each { |k, _v| p k }
hash.each { |_k, v| p v }
# good
hash.each_key { |k| p k }
hash.each_value { |v| p v }
Use each_key
instead of keys.each
. Open
rule.keys.each { |key|
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for uses of each_key
and each_value
Hash methods.
Note: If you have an array of two-element arrays, you can put parentheses around the block arguments to indicate that you're not working with a hash, and suppress RuboCop offenses.
Example:
# bad
hash.keys.each { |k| p k }
hash.values.each { |v| p v }
hash.each { |k, _v| p k }
hash.each { |_k, v| p v }
# good
hash.each_key { |k| p k }
hash.each_value { |v| p v }
Unused block argument - m
. If it's necessary, use _
or _m
as an argument name to indicate that it won't be used. Open
r.resource_methods.each_pair { |http_type, m|
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- Exclude checks
This cop checks for unused block arguments.
Example:
# bad
do_something do |used, unused|
puts used
end
do_something do |bar|
puts :foo
end
define_method(:foo) do |bar|
puts :baz
end
Example:
#good
do_something do |used, _unused|
puts used
end
do_something do
puts :foo
end
define_method(:foo) do |_bar|
puts :baz
end
Use =~
in places where the MatchData
returned by #match
will not be used. Open
if arn.match(/:cluster\/(#{deploy_id}[^:]+)$/)
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop identifies the use of Regexp#match
or String#match
, which
returns #<MatchData>
/nil
. The return value of =~
is an integral
index/nil
and is more performant.
Example:
# bad
do_something if str.match(/regex/)
while regex.match('str')
do_something
end
# good
method(str =~ /regex/)
return value unless regex =~ 'str'
end
at 112, 16 is not aligned with if
at 106, 21. Open
end
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks whether the end keywords are aligned properly.
Three modes are supported through the EnforcedStyleAlignWith
configuration parameter:
If it's set to keyword
(which is the default), the end
shall be aligned with the start of the keyword (if, class, etc.).
If it's set to variable
the end
shall be aligned with the
left-hand-side of the variable assignment, if there is one.
If it's set to start_of_line
, the end
shall be aligned with the
start of the line where the matching keyword appears.
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: keyword (default)
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
variable = if true
end
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: variable
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
variable = if true
end
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: startofline
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
puts(if true
end)
Avoid more than 4 levels of block nesting. Open
if retries < 6
retries = retries + 1
sleep 10
retry
else
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for excessive nesting of conditional and looping constructs.
You can configure if blocks are considered using the CountBlocks
option. When set to false
(the default) blocks are not counted
towards the nesting level. Set to true
to count blocks as well.
The maximum level of nesting allowed is configurable.
Do not suppress exceptions. Open
rescue Aws::EC2::Errors::InvalidAttachmentIDNotFound => e
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for rescue blocks with no body.
Example:
# bad
def some_method
do_something
rescue
# do nothing
end
Example:
# bad
begin
do_something
rescue
# do nothing
end
Example:
# good
def some_method
do_something
rescue
handle_exception
end
Example:
# good
begin
do_something
rescue
handle_exception
end
Unused block argument - log_desc
. If it's necessary, use _
or _log_desc
as an argument name to indicate that it won't be used. Open
logs.each_pair { |log_id, log_desc|
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for unused block arguments.
Example:
# bad
do_something do |used, unused|
puts used
end
do_something do |bar|
puts :foo
end
define_method(:foo) do |bar|
puts :baz
end
Example:
#good
do_something do |used, _unused|
puts used
end
do_something do
puts :foo
end
define_method(:foo) do |_bar|
puts :baz
end