Line is too long. [121/120] Open
has_one :reply, class_name: 'Dragnet::Reply', foreign_key: :ahoy_visit_id, inverse_of: :ahoy_visit, dependent: :nullify
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Checks the length of lines in the source code.
The maximum length is configurable.
The tab size is configured in the IndentationWidth
of the Layout/IndentationStyle
cop.
It also ignores a shebang line by default.
This cop has some autocorrection capabilities. It can programmatically shorten certain long lines by inserting line breaks into expressions that can be safely split across lines. These include arrays, hashes, and method calls with argument lists.
If autocorrection is enabled, the following Layout cops are recommended to further format the broken lines. (Many of these are enabled by default.)
- ArgumentAlignment
- ArrayAlignment
- BlockAlignment
- BlockDelimiters
- BlockEndNewline
- ClosingParenthesisIndentation
- FirstArgumentIndentation
- FirstArrayElementIndentation
- FirstHashElementIndentation
- FirstParameterIndentation
- HashAlignment
- IndentationWidth
- MultilineArrayLineBreaks
- MultilineBlockLayout
- MultilineHashBraceLayout
- MultilineHashKeyLineBreaks
- MultilineMethodArgumentLineBreaks
- MultilineMethodParameterLineBreaks
- ParameterAlignment
Together, these cops will pretty print hashes, arrays, method calls, etc. For example, let's say the max columns is 25:
Example:
# bad
{foo: "0000000000", bar: "0000000000", baz: "0000000000"}
# good
{foo: "0000000000",
bar: "0000000000", baz: "0000000000"}
# good (with recommended cops enabled)
{
foo: "0000000000",
bar: "0000000000",
baz: "0000000000",
}
Omit the hash value. Open
scope :of_visitor, ->(visitor_token) { where(ahoy_visits: { visitor_token: visitor_token }) }
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Checks hash literal syntax.
It can enforce either the use of the class hash rocket syntax or the use of the newer Ruby 1.9 syntax (when applicable).
A separate offense is registered for each problematic pair.
The supported styles are:
- ruby19 - forces use of the 1.9 syntax (e.g.
{a: 1}
) when hashes have all symbols for keys - hash_rockets - forces use of hash rockets for all hashes
- nomixedkeys - simply checks for hashes with mixed syntaxes
- ruby19nomixed_keys - forces use of ruby 1.9 syntax and forbids mixed syntax hashes
This cop has EnforcedShorthandSyntax
option.
It can enforce either the use of the explicit hash value syntax or
the use of Ruby 3.1's hash value shorthand syntax.
The supported styles are:
- always - forces use of the 3.1 syntax (e.g. {foo:})
- never - forces use of explicit hash literal value
- either - accepts both shorthand and explicit use of hash literal value
- consistent - forces use of the 3.1 syntax only if all values can be omitted in the hash
Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19 (default)
# bad
{:a => 2}
{b: 1, :c => 2}
# good
{a: 2, b: 1}
{:c => 2, 'd' => 2} # acceptable since 'd' isn't a symbol
{d: 1, 'e' => 2} # technically not forbidden
Example: EnforcedStyle: hash_rockets
# bad
{a: 1, b: 2}
{c: 1, 'd' => 5}
# good
{:a => 1, :b => 2}
Example: EnforcedStyle: nomixedkeys
# bad
{:a => 1, b: 2}
{c: 1, 'd' => 2}
# good
{:a => 1, :b => 2}
{c: 1, d: 2}
Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19nomixed_keys
# bad
{:a => 1, :b => 2}
{c: 2, 'd' => 3} # should just use hash rockets
# good
{a: 1, b: 2}
{:c => 3, 'd' => 4}
Example: EnforcedShorthandSyntax: always (default)
# bad
{foo: foo, bar: bar}
# good
{foo:, bar:}
Example: EnforcedShorthandSyntax: never
# bad
{foo:, bar:}
# good
{foo: foo, bar: bar}
Example: EnforcedShorthandSyntax: either
# good
{foo: foo, bar: bar}
# good
{foo: foo, bar:}
# good
{foo:, bar:}
Example: EnforcedShorthandSyntax: consistent
# bad - `foo` and `bar` values can be omitted
{foo: foo, bar: bar}
# bad - `bar` value can be omitted
{foo:, bar: bar}
# bad - mixed syntaxes
{foo:, bar: baz}
# good
{foo:, bar:}
# good - can't omit `baz`
{foo: foo, bar: baz}