ece517-p3/expertiza

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app/models/multiple_choice_checkbox.rb

Summary

Maintainability
A
3 hrs
Test Coverage

Mass assignment is not restricted using attr_accessible
Open

class MultipleChoiceCheckbox < QuizQuestion
Severity: Critical
Found in app/models/multiple_choice_checkbox.rb by brakeman

This warning comes up if a model does not limit what attributes can be set through mass assignment.

In particular, this check looks for attr_accessible inside model definitions. If it is not found, this warning will be issued.

Brakeman also warns on use of attr_protected - especially since it was found to be vulnerable to bypass. Warnings for mass assignment on models using attr_protected will be reported, but at a lower confidence level.

Note that disabling mass assignment globally will suppress these warnings.

Assignment Branch Condition size for edit is too high. [74.76/15]
Open

  def edit
    quiz_question_choices = QuizQuestionChoice.where(question_id: self.id)

    html = '<tr><td>'
    html += '<textarea cols="100" name="question[' + self.id.to_s + '][txt]" '

This cop checks that the ABC size of methods is not higher than the configured maximum. The ABC size is based on assignments, branches (method calls), and conditions. See http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?AbcMetric

Assignment Branch Condition size for complete is too high. [28.86/15]
Open

  def complete
    quiz_question_choices = QuizQuestionChoice.where(question_id: self.id)
    html = "<label for=\"" + self.id.to_s + "\">" + self.txt + "</label><br>"
    for i in 0..3
      txt = quiz_question_choices[i].txt

This cop checks that the ABC size of methods is not higher than the configured maximum. The ABC size is based on assignments, branches (method calls), and conditions. See http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?AbcMetric

Assignment Branch Condition size for view_completed_question is too high. [20.1/15]
Open

  def view_completed_question(user_answer)
    quiz_question_choices = QuizQuestionChoice.where(question_id: self.id)
    html = ''
    quiz_question_choices.each do |answer|
      html += '<b>' + answer.txt + '</b> -- Correct <br>' if answer.iscorrect

This cop checks that the ABC size of methods is not higher than the configured maximum. The ABC size is based on assignments, branches (method calls), and conditions. See http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?AbcMetric

Method isvalid has a Cognitive Complexity of 8 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

  def isvalid(choice_info)
    valid = "valid"
    valid = "Please make sure all questions have text" if self.txt == ''
    correct_count = 0
    choice_info.each do |_idx, value|
Severity: Minor
Found in app/models/multiple_choice_checkbox.rb - About 45 mins to fix

Cognitive Complexity

Cognitive Complexity is a measure of how difficult a unit of code is to intuitively understand. Unlike Cyclomatic Complexity, which determines how difficult your code will be to test, Cognitive Complexity tells you how difficult your code will be to read and comprehend.

A method's cognitive complexity is based on a few simple rules:

  • Code is not considered more complex when it uses shorthand that the language provides for collapsing multiple statements into one
  • Code is considered more complex for each "break in the linear flow of the code"
  • Code is considered more complex when "flow breaking structures are nested"

Further reading

Tagging a string as html safe may be a security risk.
Open

    html.html_safe

This cop checks for the use of output safety calls like htmlsafe, raw, and safeconcat. These methods do not escape content. They simply return a SafeBuffer containing the content as is. Instead, use safe_join to join content and escape it and concat to concatenate content and escape it, ensuring its safety.

Example:

user_content = "hi"

# bad
"

#{user_content}

".html_safe # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer "

hi

" # good content_tag(:p, user_content) # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer "

<b>hi</b>

" # bad out = "" out << "
  • #{user_content}
  • " out << "
  • #{user_content}
  • " out.html_safe # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer "
  • hi
  • hi
  • " # good out = [] out << content_tag(:li, user_content) out << content_tag(:li, user_content) safe_join(out) # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer # "
  • <b>hi</b>
  • <b>hi</b>
  • " # bad out = "

    trusted content

    ".html_safe out.safe_concat(user_content) # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer "

    trusted_content

    hi" # good out = "

    trusted content

    ".html_safe out.concat(user_content) # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer # "

    trusted_content

    <b>hi</b>" # safe, though maybe not good style out = "trusted content" result = out.concat(user_content) # => String "trusted contenthi" # because when rendered in ERB the String will be escaped: # <%= result %> # => trusted content<b>hi</b> # bad (user_content + " " + content_tag(:span, user_content)).html_safe # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer "hi <span><b>hi</b></span>" # good safe_join([user_content, " ", content_tag(:span, user_content)]) # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer # "<b>hi</b> <span>&lt;b&gt;hi&lt;/b&gt;</span>"

    Use each_value instead of each.
    Open

        choice_info.each do |_idx, value|

    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 }

    Tagging a string as html safe may be a security risk.
    Open

        html.html_safe

    This cop checks for the use of output safety calls like htmlsafe, raw, and safeconcat. These methods do not escape content. They simply return a SafeBuffer containing the content as is. Instead, use safe_join to join content and escape it and concat to concatenate content and escape it, ensuring its safety.

    Example:

    user_content = "hi"
    
    # bad
    "

    #{user_content}

    ".html_safe # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer "

    hi

    " # good content_tag(:p, user_content) # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer "

    <b>hi</b>

    " # bad out = "" out << "
  • #{user_content}
  • " out << "
  • #{user_content}
  • " out.html_safe # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer "
  • hi
  • hi
  • " # good out = [] out << content_tag(:li, user_content) out << content_tag(:li, user_content) safe_join(out) # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer # "
  • <b>hi</b>
  • <b>hi</b>
  • " # bad out = "

    trusted content

    ".html_safe out.safe_concat(user_content) # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer "

    trusted_content

    hi" # good out = "

    trusted content

    ".html_safe out.concat(user_content) # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer # "

    trusted_content

    <b>hi</b>" # safe, though maybe not good style out = "trusted content" result = out.concat(user_content) # => String "trusted contenthi" # because when rendered in ERB the String will be escaped: # <%= result %> # => trusted content<b>hi</b> # bad (user_content + " " + content_tag(:span, user_content)).html_safe # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer "hi <span><b>hi</b></span>" # good safe_join([user_content, " ", content_tag(:span, user_content)]) # => ActiveSupport::SafeBuffer # "<b>hi</b> <span>&lt;b&gt;hi&lt;/b&gt;</span>"

    Similar blocks of code found in 2 locations. Consider refactoring.
    Open

      def complete
        quiz_question_choices = QuizQuestionChoice.where(question_id: self.id)
        html = "<label for=\"" + self.id.to_s + "\">" + self.txt + "</label><br>"
        for i in 0..3
          txt = quiz_question_choices[i].txt
    Severity: Major
    Found in app/models/multiple_choice_checkbox.rb and 1 other location - About 2 hrs to fix
    app/models/multiple_choice_radio.rb on lines 28..40

    Duplicated Code

    Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

    Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

    When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

    Tuning

    This issue has a mass of 88.

    We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

    The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

    If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

    See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

    Refactorings

    Further Reading

    Prefer each over for.
    Open

        for i in 0..3

    This cop looks for uses of the for keyword, or each method. The preferred alternative is set in the EnforcedStyle configuration parameter. An each call with a block on a single line is always allowed, however.

    Useless assignment to variable - txt.
    Open

          txt = quiz_question_choices[i].txt

    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

    Prefer each over for.
    Open

        for i in 0..3

    This cop looks for uses of the for keyword, or each method. The preferred alternative is set in the EnforcedStyle configuration parameter. An each call with a block on a single line is always allowed, however.

    Use correct_count.zero? instead of correct_count == 0.
    Open

        if correct_count == 0

    This cop checks for usage of comparison operators (==, >, <) to test numbers as zero, positive, or negative. These can be replaced by their respective predicate methods. The cop can also be configured to do the reverse.

    The cop disregards #nonzero? as it its value is truthy or falsey, but not true and false, and thus not always interchangeable with != 0.

    The cop ignores comparisons to global variables, since they are often populated with objects which can be compared with integers, but are not themselves Interger polymorphic.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: predicate (default)

    # bad
    
    foo == 0
    0 > foo
    bar.baz > 0
    
    # good
    
    foo.zero?
    foo.negative?
    bar.baz.positive?

    Example: EnforcedStyle: comparison

    # bad
    
    foo.zero?
    foo.negative?
    bar.baz.positive?
    
    # good
    
    foo == 0
    0 > foo
    bar.baz > 0

    There are no issues that match your filters.

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