Showing 365 of 368 total issues
Extra blank line detected. Open
gem 'bootstrap'
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This cops checks for two or more consecutive blank lines.
Example:
# bad - It has two empty lines.
some_method
# one empty line
# two empty lines
some_method
# good
some_method
# one empty line
some_method
Use the new Ruby 1.9 hash syntax. Open
gem 'simplecov', :require => false
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This cop 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
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}
Line is too long. [84/80] Open
subject: I18n.t('notification_mailer.notify_activity.subject_meetup', \
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Line is too long. [90/80] Open
# for example lib/tasks/capistrano.rake, and they will automatically be available to Rake.
- Exclude checks
Gems should be sorted in an alphabetical order within their section of the Gemfile. Gem pg
should appear before rails
. Open
gem 'pg', "~> 0.18"
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Gems should be alphabetically sorted within groups.
Example:
# bad
gem 'rubocop'
gem 'rspec'
# good
gem 'rspec'
gem 'rubocop'
# good
gem 'rubocop'
gem 'rspec'
# good only if TreatCommentsAsGroupSeparators is true
# For code quality
gem 'rubocop'
# For tests
gem 'rspec'
Align the parameters of a method call if they span more than one line. Open
meetup: @meetup.title), \
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Here we check if the parameters on a multi-line method call or definition are aligned.
Example: EnforcedStyle: withfirstparameter (default)
# good
foo :bar,
:baz
# bad
foo :bar,
:baz
Example: EnforcedStyle: withfixedindentation
# good
foo :bar,
:baz
# bad
foo :bar,
:baz
Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation. Open
mail(to: @user.email,
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This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.
See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.
Example:
# bad
class A
def test
puts 'hello'
end
end
# good
class A
def test
puts 'hello'
end
end
Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']
# bad
module A
class B
def test
puts 'hello'
end
end
end
# good
module A
class B
def test
puts 'hello'
end
end
end
Use warn
instead of $stderr.puts
to allow such output to be disabled. Open
$stderr.puts "Download Yarn at https://yarnpkg.com/en/docs/install"
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This cop identifies places where $stderr.puts
can be replaced by
warn
. The latter has the advantage of easily being disabled by,
e.g. the -W0 interpreter flag, or setting $VERBOSE to nil.
Example:
# bad
$stderr.puts('hello')
# good
warn('hello')
Prefer single-quoted strings when you don't need string interpolation or special symbols. Open
default from: "INFUSIÓN <hola@infusionvlc.com>"
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Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.
Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)
# bad
"No special symbols"
"No string interpolation"
"Just text"
# good
'No special symbols'
'No string interpolation'
'Just text'
"Wait! What's #{this}!"
Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes
# bad
'Just some text'
'No special chars or interpolation'
# good
"Just some text"
"No special chars or interpolation"
"Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"
Script file rake doesn't have execute permission. Open
#!/usr/bin/env ruby.exe
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Prefer single-quoted strings when you don't need string interpolation or special symbols. Open
$stderr.puts "Yarn executable was not detected in the system."
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Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.
Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)
# bad
"No special symbols"
"No string interpolation"
"Just text"
# good
'No special symbols'
'No string interpolation'
'Just text'
"Wait! What's #{this}!"
Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes
# bad
'Just some text'
'No special chars or interpolation'
# good
"Just some text"
"No special chars or interpolation"
"Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"
Extra blank line detected. Open
# puts "\n== Copying sample files =="
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This cops checks for two or more consecutive blank lines.
Example:
# bad - It has two empty lines.
some_method
# one empty line
# two empty lines
some_method
# good
some_method
# one empty line
some_method
Missing magic comment # frozen_string_literal: true
. Open
#!/usr/bin/env ruby.exe
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- Exclude checks
This cop is designed to help upgrade to 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
in 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: when_needed (default)
# The `when_needed` style will add the frozen string literal comment
# to files only when the `TargetRubyVersion` is set to 2.3+.
# bad
module Foo
# ...
end
# good
# frozen_string_literal: true
module Foo
# ...
end
Example: EnforcedStyle: always
# 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 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation. Open
mail(to: @user.email,
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- Exclude checks
This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.
See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.
Example:
# bad
class A
def test
puts 'hello'
end
end
# good
class A
def test
puts 'hello'
end
end
Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']
# bad
module A
class B
def test
puts 'hello'
end
end
end
# good
module A
class B
def test
puts 'hello'
end
end
end
Useless assignment to variable - location
. Open
location = locations(:one)
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- 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
Prefer single-quoted strings when you don't need string interpolation or special symbols. Open
require "test_helper"
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- Exclude checks
Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.
Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)
# bad
"No special symbols"
"No string interpolation"
"Just text"
# good
'No special symbols'
'No string interpolation'
'Just text'
"Wait! What's #{this}!"
Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes
# bad
'Just some text'
'No special chars or interpolation'
# good
"Just some text"
"No special chars or interpolation"
"Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"
Missing magic comment # frozen_string_literal: true
. Open
#!/usr/bin/env ruby.exe
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- Exclude checks
This cop is designed to help upgrade to 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
in 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: when_needed (default)
# The `when_needed` style will add the frozen string literal comment
# to files only when the `TargetRubyVersion` is set to 2.3+.
# bad
module Foo
# ...
end
# good
# frozen_string_literal: true
module Foo
# ...
end
Example: EnforcedStyle: always
# 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
Gems should be sorted in an alphabetical order within their section of the Gemfile. Gem omniauth-facebook
should appear before omniauth-twitter
. Open
gem 'omniauth-facebook'
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- Exclude checks
Gems should be alphabetically sorted within groups.
Example:
# bad
gem 'rubocop'
gem 'rspec'
# good
gem 'rspec'
gem 'rubocop'
# good
gem 'rubocop'
gem 'rspec'
# good only if TreatCommentsAsGroupSeparators is true
# For code quality
gem 'rubocop'
# For tests
gem 'rspec'
Prefer single-quoted strings when you don't need string interpolation or special symbols. Open
$stderr.puts "Download Yarn at https://yarnpkg.com/en/docs/install"
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- Exclude checks
Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.
Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)
# bad
"No special symbols"
"No string interpolation"
"Just text"
# good
'No special symbols'
'No string interpolation'
'Just text'
"Wait! What's #{this}!"
Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes
# bad
'Just some text'
'No special chars or interpolation'
# good
"Just some text"
"No special chars or interpolation"
"Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"
include
is used at the top level. Use inside class
or module
. Open
include FileUtils
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- Exclude checks
This cop checks that include
, extend
and prepend
exists at
the top level.
Using these at the top level affects the behavior of Object
.
There will not be using include
, extend
and prepend
at
the top level. Let's use it inside class
or module
.
Example:
# bad
include M
class C
end
# bad
extend M
class C
end
# bad
prepend M
class C
end
# good
class C
include M
end
# good
class C
extend M
end
# good
class C
prepend M
end