murb/workbook

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lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb

Summary

Maintainability
B
5 hrs
Test Coverage

Method has too many lines. [36/10]
Open

      def to_html options = {}
        options = {style_with_inline_css: false}.merge(options)
        builder = Nokogiri::XML::Builder.new { |doc|
          doc.table do
            doc.thead do
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

This cop checks if the length of a method exceeds some maximum value. Comment lines can optionally be ignored. The maximum allowed length is configurable.

You can set literals you want to fold with CountAsOne. Available are: 'array', 'hash', and 'heredoc'. Each literal will be counted as one line regardless of its actual size.

NOTE: The ExcludedMethods configuration is deprecated and only kept for backwards compatibility. Please use IgnoredMethods instead.

Example: CountAsOne: ['array', 'heredoc']

def m
  array = [       # +1
    1,
    2
  ]

  hash = {        # +3
    key: 'value'
  }

  <<~HEREDOC      # +1
    Heredoc
    content.
  HEREDOC
end               # 5 points

Method to_html has a Cognitive Complexity of 27 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

      def to_html options = {}
        options = {style_with_inline_css: false}.merge(options)
        builder = Nokogiri::XML::Builder.new { |doc|
          doc.table do
            doc.thead do
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb - About 3 hrs 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

Method has too many lines. [18/10]
Open

      def to_html options = {}
        builder = Nokogiri::XML::Builder.new { |doc|
          doc.html {
            doc.body {
              each do |sheet|
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

This cop checks if the length of a method exceeds some maximum value. Comment lines can optionally be ignored. The maximum allowed length is configurable.

You can set literals you want to fold with CountAsOne. Available are: 'array', 'hash', and 'heredoc'. Each literal will be counted as one line regardless of its actual size.

NOTE: The ExcludedMethods configuration is deprecated and only kept for backwards compatibility. Please use IgnoredMethods instead.

Example: CountAsOne: ['array', 'heredoc']

def m
  array = [       # +1
    1,
    2
  ]

  hash = {        # +3
    key: 'value'
  }

  <<~HEREDOC      # +1
    Heredoc
    content.
  HEREDOC
end               # 5 points

Cyclomatic complexity for build_cell_options is too high. [9/7]
Open

      def build_cell_options cell, options = {}
        classnames = cell.format.all_names
        classnames += options[:classnames] if options[:classnames]
        classnames = classnames.join(" ").strip
        td_options = classnames != "" ? {class: classnames} : {}
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

This cop checks that the cyclomatic complexity of methods is not higher than the configured maximum. The cyclomatic complexity is the number of linearly independent paths through a method. The algorithm counts decision points and adds one.

An if statement (or unless or ?:) increases the complexity by one. An else branch does not, since it doesn't add a decision point. The && operator (or keyword and) can be converted to a nested if statement, and ||/or is shorthand for a sequence of ifs, so they also add one. Loops can be said to have an exit condition, so they add one. Blocks that are calls to builtin iteration methods (e.g. `ary.map{...}) also add one, others are ignored.

def each_child_node(*types)               # count begins: 1
  unless block_given?                     # unless: +1
    return to_enum(__method__, *types)

  children.each do |child|                # each{}: +1
    next unless child.is_a?(Node)         # unless: +1

    yield child if types.empty? ||        # if: +1, ||: +1
                   types.include?(child.type)
  end

  self
end                                       # total: 6

Cyclomatic complexity for to_html is too high. [8/7]
Open

      def to_html options = {}
        options = {style_with_inline_css: false}.merge(options)
        builder = Nokogiri::XML::Builder.new { |doc|
          doc.table do
            doc.thead do
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

This cop checks that the cyclomatic complexity of methods is not higher than the configured maximum. The cyclomatic complexity is the number of linearly independent paths through a method. The algorithm counts decision points and adds one.

An if statement (or unless or ?:) increases the complexity by one. An else branch does not, since it doesn't add a decision point. The && operator (or keyword and) can be converted to a nested if statement, and ||/or is shorthand for a sequence of ifs, so they also add one. Loops can be said to have an exit condition, so they add one. Blocks that are calls to builtin iteration methods (e.g. `ary.map{...}) also add one, others are ignored.

def each_child_node(*types)               # count begins: 1
  unless block_given?                     # unless: +1
    return to_enum(__method__, *types)

  children.each do |child|                # each{}: +1
    next unless child.is_a?(Node)         # unless: +1

    yield child if types.empty? ||        # if: +1, ||: +1
                   types.include?(child.type)
  end

  self
end                                       # total: 6

Method has too many lines. [11/10]
Open

      def build_cell_options cell, options = {}
        classnames = cell.format.all_names
        classnames += options[:classnames] if options[:classnames]
        classnames = classnames.join(" ").strip
        td_options = classnames != "" ? {class: classnames} : {}
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

This cop checks if the length of a method exceeds some maximum value. Comment lines can optionally be ignored. The maximum allowed length is configurable.

You can set literals you want to fold with CountAsOne. Available are: 'array', 'hash', and 'heredoc'. Each literal will be counted as one line regardless of its actual size.

NOTE: The ExcludedMethods configuration is deprecated and only kept for backwards compatibility. Please use IgnoredMethods instead.

Example: CountAsOne: ['array', 'heredoc']

def m
  array = [       # +1
    1,
    2
  ]

  hash = {        # +3
    key: 'value'
  }

  <<~HEREDOC      # +1
    Heredoc
    content.
  HEREDOC
end               # 5 points

Perceived complexity for build_cell_options is too high. [9/8]
Open

      def build_cell_options cell, options = {}
        classnames = cell.format.all_names
        classnames += options[:classnames] if options[:classnames]
        classnames = classnames.join(" ").strip
        td_options = classnames != "" ? {class: classnames} : {}
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

This cop tries to produce a complexity score that's a measure of the complexity the reader experiences when looking at a method. For that reason it considers when nodes as something that doesn't add as much complexity as an if or a &&. Except if it's one of those special case/when constructs where there's no expression after case. Then the cop treats it as an if/elsif/elsif... and lets all the when nodes count. In contrast to the CyclomaticComplexity cop, this cop considers else nodes as adding complexity.

Example:

def my_method                   # 1
  if cond                       # 1
    case var                    # 2 (0.8 + 4 * 0.2, rounded)
    when 1 then func_one
    when 2 then func_two
    when 3 then func_three
    when 4..10 then func_other
    end
  else                          # 1
    do_something until a && b   # 2
  end                           # ===
end                             # 7 complexity points

Method to_html has 36 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

      def to_html options = {}
        options = {style_with_inline_css: false}.merge(options)
        builder = Nokogiri::XML::Builder.new { |doc|
          doc.table do
            doc.thead do
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb - About 1 hr to fix

    Block has too many lines. [32/25]
    Open

            builder = Nokogiri::XML::Builder.new { |doc|
              doc.table do
                doc.thead do
                  if header
                    doc.tr do
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    This cop checks if the length of a block exceeds some maximum value. Comment lines can optionally be ignored. The maximum allowed length is configurable. The cop can be configured to ignore blocks passed to certain methods.

    You can set literals you want to fold with CountAsOne. Available are: 'array', 'hash', and 'heredoc'. Each literal will be counted as one line regardless of its actual size.

    NOTE: The ExcludedMethods configuration is deprecated and only kept for backwards compatibility. Please use IgnoredMethods instead.

    Example: CountAsOne: ['array', 'heredoc']

    something do
      array = [         # +1
        1,
        2
      ]
    
      hash = {          # +3
        key: 'value'
      }
    
      msg = <<~HEREDOC  # +1
        Heredoc
        content.
      HEREDOC
    end                 # 5 points

    NOTE: This cop does not apply for Struct definitions.

    Block has too many lines. [30/25]
    Open

              doc.table do
                doc.thead do
                  if header
                    doc.tr do
                      header.each do |cell|
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    This cop checks if the length of a block exceeds some maximum value. Comment lines can optionally be ignored. The maximum allowed length is configurable. The cop can be configured to ignore blocks passed to certain methods.

    You can set literals you want to fold with CountAsOne. Available are: 'array', 'hash', and 'heredoc'. Each literal will be counted as one line regardless of its actual size.

    NOTE: The ExcludedMethods configuration is deprecated and only kept for backwards compatibility. Please use IgnoredMethods instead.

    Example: CountAsOne: ['array', 'heredoc']

    something do
      array = [         # +1
        1,
        2
      ]
    
      hash = {          # +3
        key: 'value'
      }
    
      msg = <<~HEREDOC  # +1
        Heredoc
        content.
      HEREDOC
    end                 # 5 points

    NOTE: This cop does not apply for Struct definitions.

    Method build_cell_options has a Cognitive Complexity of 7 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
    Open

          def build_cell_options cell, options = {}
            classnames = cell.format.all_names
            classnames += options[:classnames] if options[:classnames]
            classnames = classnames.join(" ").strip
            td_options = classnames != "" ? {class: classnames} : {}
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb - About 35 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

    Assignment Branch Condition size for to_html is too high. [<8, 30, 7> 31.83/17]
    Open

          def to_html options = {}
            options = {style_with_inline_css: false}.merge(options)
            builder = Nokogiri::XML::Builder.new { |doc|
              doc.table do
                doc.thead do
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    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 and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABC_Software_Metric.

    Interpreting ABC size:

    • <= 17 satisfactory
    • 18..30 unsatisfactory
    • > 30 dangerous

    You can have repeated "attributes" calls count as a single "branch". For this purpose, attributes are any method with no argument; no attempt is meant to distinguish actual attr_reader from other methods.

    Example: CountRepeatedAttributes: false (default is true)

    # `model` and `current_user`, refenced 3 times each,
     # are each counted as only 1 branch each if
     # `CountRepeatedAttributes` is set to 'false'
    
     def search
       @posts = model.active.visible_by(current_user)
                 .search(params[:q])
       @posts = model.some_process(@posts, current_user)
       @posts = model.another_process(@posts, current_user)
    
       render 'pages/search/page'
     end

    This cop also takes into account IgnoredMethods (defaults to [])

    Assignment Branch Condition size for build_cell_options is too high. [<11, 22, 10> 26.55/17]
    Open

          def build_cell_options cell, options = {}
            classnames = cell.format.all_names
            classnames += options[:classnames] if options[:classnames]
            classnames = classnames.join(" ").strip
            td_options = classnames != "" ? {class: classnames} : {}
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    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 and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ABC_Software_Metric.

    Interpreting ABC size:

    • <= 17 satisfactory
    • 18..30 unsatisfactory
    • > 30 dangerous

    You can have repeated "attributes" calls count as a single "branch". For this purpose, attributes are any method with no argument; no attempt is meant to distinguish actual attr_reader from other methods.

    Example: CountRepeatedAttributes: false (default is true)

    # `model` and `current_user`, refenced 3 times each,
     # are each counted as only 1 branch each if
     # `CountRepeatedAttributes` is set to 'false'
    
     def search
       @posts = model.active.visible_by(current_user)
                 .search(params[:q])
       @posts = model.some_process(@posts, current_user)
       @posts = model.another_process(@posts, current_user)
    
       render 'pages/search/page'
     end

    This cop also takes into account IgnoredMethods (defaults to [])

    Line is too long. [131/120]
    Open

            td_options = td_options.merge({style: cell.format.to_css}) if options[:style_with_inline_css] && (cell.format.to_css != "")
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    This cop 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
    • BlockAlignment
    • BlockDelimiters
    • BlockEndNewline
    • ClosingParenthesisIndentation
    • FirstArgumentIndentation
    • FirstArrayElementIndentation
    • FirstHashElementIndentation
    • FirstParameterIndentation
    • HashAlignment
    • IndentationWidth
    • MultilineArrayLineBreaks
    • MultilineBlockLayout
    • MultilineHashBraceLayout
    • MultilineHashKeyLineBreaks
    • MultilineMethodArgumentLineBreaks
    • 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",
    }

    Line is too long. [124/120]
    Open

                        th_options = build_cell_options cell, options.merge(classnames: [cell.to_sym], data: {key: cell.to_sym})
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    This cop 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
    • BlockAlignment
    • BlockDelimiters
    • BlockEndNewline
    • ClosingParenthesisIndentation
    • FirstArgumentIndentation
    • FirstArrayElementIndentation
    • FirstHashElementIndentation
    • FirstParameterIndentation
    • HashAlignment
    • IndentationWidth
    • MultilineArrayLineBreaks
    • MultilineBlockLayout
    • MultilineHashBraceLayout
    • MultilineHashKeyLineBreaks
    • MultilineMethodArgumentLineBreaks
    • 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",
    }

    Space inside } missing.
    Open

                        th_options = build_cell_options cell, options.merge(classnames: [cell.to_sym], data: {key: cell.to_sym})
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

            td_options = classnames != "" ? {class: classnames} : {}
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Space inside } missing.
    Open

            td_options = td_options.merge({style: cell.format.to_css}) if options[:style_with_inline_css] && (cell.format.to_css != "")
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Space inside } missing.
    Open

            td_options = classnames != "" ? {class: classnames} : {}
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

            td_options = td_options.merge({style: cell.format.to_css}) if options[:style_with_inline_css] && (cell.format.to_css != "")
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Use def with parentheses when there are parameters.
    Open

          def build_cell_options cell, options = {}
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    This cop checks for parentheses around the arguments in method definitions. Both instance and class/singleton methods are checked.

    This cop does not consider endless methods, since parentheses are always required for them.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: require_parentheses (default)

    # The `require_parentheses` style requires method definitions
    # to always use parentheses
    
    # bad
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenoparentheses

    # The `require_no_parentheses` style requires method definitions
    # to never use parentheses
    
    # bad
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenoparenthesesexceptmultiline

    # The `require_no_parentheses_except_multiline` style prefers no
    # parentheses when method definition arguments fit on single line,
    # but prefers parentheses when arguments span multiple lines.
    
    # bad
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end

    Avoid using {...} for multi-line blocks.
    Open

              doc.html {
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Check for uses of braces or do/end around single line or multi-line blocks.

    Methods that can be either procedural or functional and cannot be categorised from their usage alone is ignored. lambda, proc, and it are their defaults. Additional methods can be added to the IgnoredMethods.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: linecountbased (default)

    # bad - single line block
    items.each do |item| item / 5 end
    
    # good - single line block
    items.each { |item| item / 5 }
    
    # bad - multi-line block
    things.map { |thing|
      something = thing.some_method
      process(something)
    }
    
    # good - multi-line block
    things.map do |thing|
      something = thing.some_method
      process(something)
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: semantic

    # Prefer `do...end` over `{...}` for procedural blocks.
    
    # return value is used/assigned
    # bad
    foo = map do |x|
      x
    end
    puts (map do |x|
      x
    end)
    
    # return value is not used out of scope
    # good
    map do |x|
      x
    end
    
    # Prefer `{...}` over `do...end` for functional blocks.
    
    # return value is not used out of scope
    # bad
    each { |x|
      x
    }
    
    # return value is used/assigned
    # good
    foo = map { |x|
      x
    }
    map { |x|
      x
    }.inspect
    
    # The AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is ignored unless the
    # EnforcedStyle is set to `semantic`. If so:
    
    # If the AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is unspecified, or
    # set to `false` or any other falsey value, then semantic purity is
    # maintained, so one-line procedural blocks must use do-end, not
    # braces.
    
    # bad
    collection.each { |element| puts element }
    
    # good
    collection.each do |element| puts element end
    
    # If the AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is set to `true`, or
    # any other truthy value, then one-line procedural blocks may use
    # either style. (There is no setting for requiring braces on them.)
    
    # good
    collection.each { |element| puts element }
    
    # also good
    collection.each do |element| puts element end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: bracesforchaining

    # bad
    words.each do |word|
      word.flip.flop
    end.join("-")
    
    # good
    words.each { |word|
      word.flip.flop
    }.join("-")

    Example: EnforcedStyle: always_braces

    # bad
    words.each do |word|
      word.flip.flop
    end
    
    # good
    words.each { |word|
      word.flip.flop
    }

    Example: BracesRequiredMethods: ['sig']

    # Methods listed in the BracesRequiredMethods list, such as 'sig'
    # in this example, will require `{...}` braces. This option takes
    # precedence over all other configurations except IgnoredMethods.
    
    # bad
    sig do
      params(
        foo: string,
      ).void
    end
    def bar(foo)
      puts foo
    end
    
    # good
    sig {
      params(
        foo: string,
      ).void
    }
    def bar(foo)
      puts foo
    end

    Example: IgnoredMethods: ['lambda', 'proc', 'it' ] (default)

    # good
    foo = lambda do |x|
      puts "Hello, #{x}"
    end
    
    foo = lambda do |x|
      x * 100
    end

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

              td_options = td_options.merge({"data-#{key}".to_sym => value})
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Avoid using {...} for multi-line blocks.
    Open

            builder = Nokogiri::XML::Builder.new { |doc|
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Check for uses of braces or do/end around single line or multi-line blocks.

    Methods that can be either procedural or functional and cannot be categorised from their usage alone is ignored. lambda, proc, and it are their defaults. Additional methods can be added to the IgnoredMethods.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: linecountbased (default)

    # bad - single line block
    items.each do |item| item / 5 end
    
    # good - single line block
    items.each { |item| item / 5 }
    
    # bad - multi-line block
    things.map { |thing|
      something = thing.some_method
      process(something)
    }
    
    # good - multi-line block
    things.map do |thing|
      something = thing.some_method
      process(something)
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: semantic

    # Prefer `do...end` over `{...}` for procedural blocks.
    
    # return value is used/assigned
    # bad
    foo = map do |x|
      x
    end
    puts (map do |x|
      x
    end)
    
    # return value is not used out of scope
    # good
    map do |x|
      x
    end
    
    # Prefer `{...}` over `do...end` for functional blocks.
    
    # return value is not used out of scope
    # bad
    each { |x|
      x
    }
    
    # return value is used/assigned
    # good
    foo = map { |x|
      x
    }
    map { |x|
      x
    }.inspect
    
    # The AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is ignored unless the
    # EnforcedStyle is set to `semantic`. If so:
    
    # If the AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is unspecified, or
    # set to `false` or any other falsey value, then semantic purity is
    # maintained, so one-line procedural blocks must use do-end, not
    # braces.
    
    # bad
    collection.each { |element| puts element }
    
    # good
    collection.each do |element| puts element end
    
    # If the AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is set to `true`, or
    # any other truthy value, then one-line procedural blocks may use
    # either style. (There is no setting for requiring braces on them.)
    
    # good
    collection.each { |element| puts element }
    
    # also good
    collection.each do |element| puts element end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: bracesforchaining

    # bad
    words.each do |word|
      word.flip.flop
    end.join("-")
    
    # good
    words.each { |word|
      word.flip.flop
    }.join("-")

    Example: EnforcedStyle: always_braces

    # bad
    words.each do |word|
      word.flip.flop
    end
    
    # good
    words.each { |word|
      word.flip.flop
    }

    Example: BracesRequiredMethods: ['sig']

    # Methods listed in the BracesRequiredMethods list, such as 'sig'
    # in this example, will require `{...}` braces. This option takes
    # precedence over all other configurations except IgnoredMethods.
    
    # bad
    sig do
      params(
        foo: string,
      ).void
    end
    def bar(foo)
      puts foo
    end
    
    # good
    sig {
      params(
        foo: string,
      ).void
    }
    def bar(foo)
      puts foo
    end

    Example: IgnoredMethods: ['lambda', 'proc', 'it' ] (default)

    # good
    foo = lambda do |x|
      puts "Hello, #{x}"
    end
    
    foo = lambda do |x|
      x * 100
    end

    Modifier form of if makes the line too long.
    Open

            td_options = td_options.merge({style: cell.format.to_css}) if options[:style_with_inline_css] && (cell.format.to_css != "")
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks for if and unless statements that would fit on one line if written as modifier if/unless. The cop also checks for modifier if/unless lines that exceed the maximum line length.

    The maximum line length is configured in the Layout/LineLength cop. The tab size is configured in the IndentationWidth of the Layout/IndentationStyle cop.

    Example:

    # bad
    if condition
      do_stuff(bar)
    end
    
    unless qux.empty?
      Foo.do_something
    end
    
    do_something_with_a_long_name(arg) if long_condition_that_prevents_code_fit_on_single_line
    
    # good
    do_stuff(bar) if condition
    Foo.do_something unless qux.empty?
    
    if long_condition_that_prevents_code_fit_on_single_line
      do_something_with_a_long_name(arg)
    end
    
    if short_condition # a long comment that makes it too long if it were just a single line
      do_something
    end

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

            options = {style_with_inline_css: false}.merge(options)
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Space inside } missing.
    Open

            td_options = td_options.merge({colspan: cell.colspan}) if cell.colspan
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Space inside } missing.
    Open

            options = {style_with_inline_css: false}.merge(options)
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

                        th_options = build_cell_options cell, options.merge(classnames: [cell.to_sym], data: {key: cell.to_sym})
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Use def with parentheses when there are parameters.
    Open

          def to_html options = {}
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    This cop checks for parentheses around the arguments in method definitions. Both instance and class/singleton methods are checked.

    This cop does not consider endless methods, since parentheses are always required for them.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: require_parentheses (default)

    # The `require_parentheses` style requires method definitions
    # to always use parentheses
    
    # bad
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenoparentheses

    # The `require_no_parentheses` style requires method definitions
    # to never use parentheses
    
    # bad
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenoparenthesesexceptmultiline

    # The `require_no_parentheses_except_multiline` style prefers no
    # parentheses when method definition arguments fit on single line,
    # but prefers parentheses when arguments span multiple lines.
    
    # bad
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

            td_options = td_options.merge({rowspan: cell.rowspan}) if cell.rowspan
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Space inside } missing.
    Open

            td_options = td_options.merge({rowspan: cell.rowspan}) if cell.rowspan
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Space inside } missing.
    Open

              td_options = td_options.merge({"data-#{key}".to_sym => value})
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

            td_options = td_options.merge({colspan: cell.colspan}) if cell.colspan
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Checks that braces used for hash literals have or don't have surrounding space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}
    
    # good
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that hash literals have
    # no surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: 1, b: 2 }
    
    # good
    h = {a: 1, b: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

    # The `compact` style normally requires a space inside
    # hash braces, with the exception that successive left
    # braces or right braces are collapsed together in nested hashes.
    
    # bad
    h = { a: { b: 2 } }
    foo = { { a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 } } }
    
    # good
    h = { a: { b: 2 }}
    foo = {{ a: 1 } => { b: { c: 2 }}}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces do not contain spaces.
    
    # bad
    foo = { }
    bar = {    }
    
    # good
    foo = {}
    bar = {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # empty hash braces contain space.
    
    # bad
    foo = {}
    
    # good
    foo = { }
    foo = {  }
    foo = {     }

    Avoid using {...} for multi-line blocks.
    Open

                doc.body {
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Check for uses of braces or do/end around single line or multi-line blocks.

    Methods that can be either procedural or functional and cannot be categorised from their usage alone is ignored. lambda, proc, and it are their defaults. Additional methods can be added to the IgnoredMethods.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: linecountbased (default)

    # bad - single line block
    items.each do |item| item / 5 end
    
    # good - single line block
    items.each { |item| item / 5 }
    
    # bad - multi-line block
    things.map { |thing|
      something = thing.some_method
      process(something)
    }
    
    # good - multi-line block
    things.map do |thing|
      something = thing.some_method
      process(something)
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: semantic

    # Prefer `do...end` over `{...}` for procedural blocks.
    
    # return value is used/assigned
    # bad
    foo = map do |x|
      x
    end
    puts (map do |x|
      x
    end)
    
    # return value is not used out of scope
    # good
    map do |x|
      x
    end
    
    # Prefer `{...}` over `do...end` for functional blocks.
    
    # return value is not used out of scope
    # bad
    each { |x|
      x
    }
    
    # return value is used/assigned
    # good
    foo = map { |x|
      x
    }
    map { |x|
      x
    }.inspect
    
    # The AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is ignored unless the
    # EnforcedStyle is set to `semantic`. If so:
    
    # If the AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is unspecified, or
    # set to `false` or any other falsey value, then semantic purity is
    # maintained, so one-line procedural blocks must use do-end, not
    # braces.
    
    # bad
    collection.each { |element| puts element }
    
    # good
    collection.each do |element| puts element end
    
    # If the AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is set to `true`, or
    # any other truthy value, then one-line procedural blocks may use
    # either style. (There is no setting for requiring braces on them.)
    
    # good
    collection.each { |element| puts element }
    
    # also good
    collection.each do |element| puts element end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: bracesforchaining

    # bad
    words.each do |word|
      word.flip.flop
    end.join("-")
    
    # good
    words.each { |word|
      word.flip.flop
    }.join("-")

    Example: EnforcedStyle: always_braces

    # bad
    words.each do |word|
      word.flip.flop
    end
    
    # good
    words.each { |word|
      word.flip.flop
    }

    Example: BracesRequiredMethods: ['sig']

    # Methods listed in the BracesRequiredMethods list, such as 'sig'
    # in this example, will require `{...}` braces. This option takes
    # precedence over all other configurations except IgnoredMethods.
    
    # bad
    sig do
      params(
        foo: string,
      ).void
    end
    def bar(foo)
      puts foo
    end
    
    # good
    sig {
      params(
        foo: string,
      ).void
    }
    def bar(foo)
      puts foo
    end

    Example: IgnoredMethods: ['lambda', 'proc', 'it' ] (default)

    # good
    foo = lambda do |x|
      puts "Hello, #{x}"
    end
    
    foo = lambda do |x|
      x * 100
    end

    Missing top-level documentation comment for module Workbook::Writers::HtmlWriter.
    Open

        module HtmlWriter
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    This cop checks for missing top-level documentation of classes and modules. Classes with no body are exempt from the check and so are namespace modules - modules that have nothing in their bodies except classes, other modules, constant definitions or constant visibility declarations.

    The documentation requirement is annulled if the class or module has a "#:nodoc:" comment next to it. Likewise, "#:nodoc: all" does the same for all its children.

    Example:

    # bad
    class Person
      # ...
    end
    
    module Math
    end
    
    # good
    # Description/Explanation of Person class
    class Person
      # ...
    end
    
    # allowed
      # Class without body
      class Person
      end
    
      # Namespace - A namespace can be a class or a module
      # Containing a class
      module Namespace
        # Description/Explanation of Person class
        class Person
          # ...
        end
      end
    
      # Containing constant visibility declaration
      module Namespace
        class Private
        end
    
        private_constant :Private
      end
    
      # Containing constant definition
      module Namespace
        Public = Class.new
      end
    
      # Macro calls
      module Namespace
        extend Foo
      end

    Example: AllowedConstants: ['ClassMethods']

    # good
     module A
       module ClassMethods
         # ...
       end
      end

    Use def with parentheses when there are parameters.
    Open

          def write_to_html filename = "#{title}.html", options = {}
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    This cop checks for parentheses around the arguments in method definitions. Both instance and class/singleton methods are checked.

    This cop does not consider endless methods, since parentheses are always required for them.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: require_parentheses (default)

    # The `require_parentheses` style requires method definitions
    # to always use parentheses
    
    # bad
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenoparentheses

    # The `require_no_parentheses` style requires method definitions
    # to never use parentheses
    
    # bad
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenoparenthesesexceptmultiline

    # The `require_no_parentheses_except_multiline` style prefers no
    # parentheses when method definition arguments fit on single line,
    # but prefers parentheses when arguments span multiple lines.
    
    # bad
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end

    Missing top-level documentation comment for module Workbook::Writers::HtmlTableWriter.
    Open

        module HtmlTableWriter
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    This cop checks for missing top-level documentation of classes and modules. Classes with no body are exempt from the check and so are namespace modules - modules that have nothing in their bodies except classes, other modules, constant definitions or constant visibility declarations.

    The documentation requirement is annulled if the class or module has a "#:nodoc:" comment next to it. Likewise, "#:nodoc: all" does the same for all its children.

    Example:

    # bad
    class Person
      # ...
    end
    
    module Math
    end
    
    # good
    # Description/Explanation of Person class
    class Person
      # ...
    end
    
    # allowed
      # Class without body
      class Person
      end
    
      # Namespace - A namespace can be a class or a module
      # Containing a class
      module Namespace
        # Description/Explanation of Person class
        class Person
          # ...
        end
      end
    
      # Containing constant visibility declaration
      module Namespace
        class Private
        end
    
        private_constant :Private
      end
    
      # Containing constant definition
      module Namespace
        Public = Class.new
      end
    
      # Macro calls
      module Namespace
        extend Foo
      end

    Example: AllowedConstants: ['ClassMethods']

    # good
     module A
       module ClassMethods
         # ...
       end
      end

    Avoid using {...} for multi-line blocks.
    Open

            builder = Nokogiri::XML::Builder.new { |doc|
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Check for uses of braces or do/end around single line or multi-line blocks.

    Methods that can be either procedural or functional and cannot be categorised from their usage alone is ignored. lambda, proc, and it are their defaults. Additional methods can be added to the IgnoredMethods.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: linecountbased (default)

    # bad - single line block
    items.each do |item| item / 5 end
    
    # good - single line block
    items.each { |item| item / 5 }
    
    # bad - multi-line block
    things.map { |thing|
      something = thing.some_method
      process(something)
    }
    
    # good - multi-line block
    things.map do |thing|
      something = thing.some_method
      process(something)
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: semantic

    # Prefer `do...end` over `{...}` for procedural blocks.
    
    # return value is used/assigned
    # bad
    foo = map do |x|
      x
    end
    puts (map do |x|
      x
    end)
    
    # return value is not used out of scope
    # good
    map do |x|
      x
    end
    
    # Prefer `{...}` over `do...end` for functional blocks.
    
    # return value is not used out of scope
    # bad
    each { |x|
      x
    }
    
    # return value is used/assigned
    # good
    foo = map { |x|
      x
    }
    map { |x|
      x
    }.inspect
    
    # The AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is ignored unless the
    # EnforcedStyle is set to `semantic`. If so:
    
    # If the AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is unspecified, or
    # set to `false` or any other falsey value, then semantic purity is
    # maintained, so one-line procedural blocks must use do-end, not
    # braces.
    
    # bad
    collection.each { |element| puts element }
    
    # good
    collection.each do |element| puts element end
    
    # If the AllowBracesOnProceduralOneLiners option is set to `true`, or
    # any other truthy value, then one-line procedural blocks may use
    # either style. (There is no setting for requiring braces on them.)
    
    # good
    collection.each { |element| puts element }
    
    # also good
    collection.each do |element| puts element end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: bracesforchaining

    # bad
    words.each do |word|
      word.flip.flop
    end.join("-")
    
    # good
    words.each { |word|
      word.flip.flop
    }.join("-")

    Example: EnforcedStyle: always_braces

    # bad
    words.each do |word|
      word.flip.flop
    end
    
    # good
    words.each { |word|
      word.flip.flop
    }

    Example: BracesRequiredMethods: ['sig']

    # Methods listed in the BracesRequiredMethods list, such as 'sig'
    # in this example, will require `{...}` braces. This option takes
    # precedence over all other configurations except IgnoredMethods.
    
    # bad
    sig do
      params(
        foo: string,
      ).void
    end
    def bar(foo)
      puts foo
    end
    
    # good
    sig {
      params(
        foo: string,
      ).void
    }
    def bar(foo)
      puts foo
    end

    Example: IgnoredMethods: ['lambda', 'proc', 'it' ] (default)

    # good
    foo = lambda do |x|
      puts "Hello, #{x}"
    end
    
    foo = lambda do |x|
      x * 100
    end

    Use def with parentheses when there are parameters.
    Open

          def to_html options = {}
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    This cop checks for parentheses around the arguments in method definitions. Both instance and class/singleton methods are checked.

    This cop does not consider endless methods, since parentheses are always required for them.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: require_parentheses (default)

    # The `require_parentheses` style requires method definitions
    # to always use parentheses
    
    # bad
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenoparentheses

    # The `require_no_parentheses` style requires method definitions
    # to never use parentheses
    
    # bad
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenoparenthesesexceptmultiline

    # The `require_no_parentheses_except_multiline` style prefers no
    # parentheses when method definition arguments fit on single line,
    # but prefers parentheses when arguments span multiple lines.
    
    # bad
    def bar(num1, num2)
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name
      do_something
    end
    
    # good
    def bar num1, num2
      num1 + num2
    end
    
    def foo(descriptive_var_name,
            another_descriptive_var_name,
            last_descriptive_var_name)
      do_something
    end

    Prefer single-quoted strings when you don't need string interpolation or special symbols.
    Open

            td_options = td_options.merge({style: cell.format.to_css}) if options[:style_with_inline_css] && (cell.format.to_css != "")
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    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"

    Use next to skip iteration.
    Open

                        unless cell.value.instance_of?(Workbook::NilValue)
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Use next to skip iteration instead of a condition at the end.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: skipmodifierifs (default)

    # bad
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      if a == 1
        puts a
      end
    end
    
    # good
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      next unless a == 1
      puts a
    end
    
    # good
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      puts a if a == 1
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: always

    # With `always` all conditions at the end of an iteration needs to be
    # replaced by next - with `skip_modifier_ifs` the modifier if like
    # this one are ignored: `[1, 2].each { |a| puts a if a == 1 }`
    
    # bad
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      puts a if a == 1
    end
    
    # bad
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      if a == 1
        puts a
      end
    end
    
    # good
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      next unless a == 1
      puts a
    end

    Use next to skip iteration.
    Open

                    unless row.header?
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Use next to skip iteration instead of a condition at the end.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: skipmodifierifs (default)

    # bad
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      if a == 1
        puts a
      end
    end
    
    # good
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      next unless a == 1
      puts a
    end
    
    # good
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      puts a if a == 1
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: always

    # With `always` all conditions at the end of an iteration needs to be
    # replaced by next - with `skip_modifier_ifs` the modifier if like
    # this one are ignored: `[1, 2].each { |a| puts a if a == 1 }`
    
    # bad
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      puts a if a == 1
    end
    
    # bad
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      if a == 1
        puts a
      end
    end
    
    # good
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      next unless a == 1
      puts a
    end

    Use next to skip iteration.
    Open

                          unless cell.value.instance_of?(Workbook::NilValue)
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    Use next to skip iteration instead of a condition at the end.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: skipmodifierifs (default)

    # bad
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      if a == 1
        puts a
      end
    end
    
    # good
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      next unless a == 1
      puts a
    end
    
    # good
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      puts a if a == 1
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: always

    # With `always` all conditions at the end of an iteration needs to be
    # replaced by next - with `skip_modifier_ifs` the modifier if like
    # this one are ignored: `[1, 2].each { |a| puts a if a == 1 }`
    
    # bad
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      puts a if a == 1
    end
    
    # bad
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      if a == 1
        puts a
      end
    end
    
    # good
    [1, 2].each do |a|
      next unless a == 1
      puts a
    end

    Prefer single-quoted strings when you don't need string interpolation or special symbols.
    Open

    require "spreadsheet"
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    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"

    Prefer single-quoted strings when you don't need string interpolation or special symbols.
    Open

            classnames = classnames.join(" ").strip
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    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"

    Prefer single-quoted strings when you don't need string interpolation or special symbols.
    Open

            File.open(filename, "w") { |f| f.write(to_html(options)) }
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    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"

    Prefer single-quoted strings when you don't need string interpolation or special symbols.
    Open

            td_options = classnames != "" ? {class: classnames} : {}
    Severity: Minor
    Found in lib/workbook/writers/html_writer.rb by rubocop

    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"

    There are no issues that match your filters.

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