radare/radare2-webui

View on GitHub
www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js

Summary

Maintainability
C
1 day
Test Coverage

Function add has a Cognitive Complexity of 20 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

    add(widget) {
        if (this.populatedWidgets.indexOf(widget) !== -1) {
            // Can't open the same panel more than once: draw() should be called
            return;
        }
Severity: Minor
Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js - About 2 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

Function add has 45 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

    add(widget) {
        if (this.populatedWidgets.indexOf(widget) !== -1) {
            // Can't open the same panel more than once: draw() should be called
            return;
        }
Severity: Minor
Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js - About 1 hr to fix

    Function initRuler has 28 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
    Open

        initRuler() {
            var context = {};
            var _this = this;
    
            this.rulerProp = {
    Severity: Minor
    Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js - About 1 hr to fix

      Function drawTitle has a Cognitive Complexity of 9 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
      Open

          drawTitle() {
              if (this.currentLayout === Layouts.FULL || this.populatedWidgets.length === 1) {
                  this.title.innerHTML = this.populatedWidgets[0].getName();
              } else {
                  var titles = [];
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js - About 55 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

      Function getWidget has a Cognitive Complexity of 7 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
      Open

          getWidget(name, autobinding) {
              var autobinding = (typeof autobinding === 'undefined'); // Default is true
      
              for (var i = 0 ; i < this.widgets.length ; i++) {
                  if (this.widgets[i].getName() === name) {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js - 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

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          initRuler() {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          getWidgetDOMWrapper(widget) {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          constructor(containerNode, rulerNode, titleNode) {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          drawTitle() {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          moveFocusOnWidget(widget) {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          merge() {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          addFocusListener(obj) {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          getFocus() {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          add(widget) {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          split(layout) {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          isSplitted() {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          applyFocusEvent_(widget) {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      Missing JSDoc comment.
      Open

          setFocus(focus) {
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      require JSDoc comments (require-jsdoc)

      JSDoc is a JavaScript API documentation generator. It uses specially-formatted comments inside of code to generate API documentation automatically. For example, this is what a JSDoc comment looks like for a function:

      /**
       * Adds two numbers together.
       * @param {int} num1 The first number.
       * @param {int} num2 The second number.
       * @returns {int} The sum of the two numbers.
       */
      function sum(num1, num2) {
          return num1 + num2;
      }

      Some style guides require JSDoc comments for all functions as a way of explaining function behavior.

      Rule Details

      This rule requires JSDoc comments for specified nodes. Supported nodes:

      • "FunctionDeclaration"
      • "ClassDeclaration"
      • "MethodDefinition"
      • "ArrowFunctionExpression"

      Options

      This rule has a single object option:

      • "require" requires JSDoc comments for the specified nodes

      Default option settings are:

      {
          "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
              "require": {
                  "FunctionDeclaration": true,
                  "MethodDefinition": false,
                  "ClassDeclaration": false,
                  "ArrowFunctionExpression": false
              }
          }]
      }

      require

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      class Test{
          getDate(){}
      }

      Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "require": { "FunctionDeclaration": true, "MethodDefinition": true, "ClassDeclaration": true, "ArrowFunctionExpression": true } } option:

      /*eslint "require-jsdoc": ["error", {
          "require": {
              "FunctionDeclaration": true,
              "MethodDefinition": true,
              "ClassDeclaration": true
          }
      }]*/
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      function foo() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns test + 10
       * @params {int} test - some number
       * @returns {int} sum of test and 10
       */
      var foo = (test) => {
          return test + 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = () => {
          return 10;
      }
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      var foo = function() {
          return 10;
      }
      
      var array = [1,2,3];
      array.filter(function(item) {
          return item > 2;
      });
      
      /**
       * It returns 10
       */
      class Test{
          /**
          * returns the date
          */
          getDate(){}
      }
      
      setTimeout(() => {}, 10); // since it's an anonymous arrow function

      When Not To Use It

      If you do not require JSDoc for your functions, then you can leave this rule off.

      Related Rules

      'Widget' is not defined.
      Open

              var newWidget = new Widget(name);
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by eslint

      Disallow Undeclared Variables (no-undef)

      This rule can help you locate potential ReferenceErrors resulting from misspellings of variable and parameter names, or accidental implicit globals (for example, from forgetting the var keyword in a for loop initializer).

      Rule Details

      Any reference to an undeclared variable causes a warning, unless the variable is explicitly mentioned in a /*global ...*/ comment.

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

      /*eslint no-undef: "error"*/
      
      var a = someFunction();
      b = 10;

      Examples of correct code for this rule with global declaration:

      /*global someFunction b:true*/
      /*eslint no-undef: "error"*/
      
      var a = someFunction();
      b = 10;

      The b:true syntax in /*global */ indicates that assignment to b is correct.

      Examples of incorrect code for this rule with global declaration:

      /*global b*/
      /*eslint no-undef: "error"*/
      
      b = 10;

      By default, variables declared in /*global */ are read-only, therefore assignment is incorrect.

      Options

      • typeof set to true will warn for variables used inside typeof check (Default false).

      typeof

      Examples of correct code for the default { "typeof": false } option:

      /*eslint no-undef: "error"*/
      
      if (typeof UndefinedIdentifier === "undefined") {
          // do something ...
      }

      You can use this option if you want to prevent typeof check on a variable which has not been declared.

      Examples of incorrect code for the { "typeof": true } option:

      /*eslint no-undef: ["error", { "typeof": true }] */
      
      if(typeof a === "string"){}

      Examples of correct code for the { "typeof": true } option with global declaration:

      /*global a*/
      /*eslint no-undef: ["error", { "typeof": true }] */
      
      if(typeof a === "string"){}

      Environments

      For convenience, ESLint provides shortcuts that pre-define global variables exposed by popular libraries and runtime environments. This rule supports these environments, as listed in Specifying Environments. A few examples are given below.

      browser

      Examples of correct code for this rule with browser environment:

      /*eslint no-undef: "error"*/
      /*eslint-env browser*/
      
      setTimeout(function() {
          alert("Hello");
      });

      node

      Examples of correct code for this rule with node environment:

      /*eslint no-undef: "error"*/
      /*eslint-env node*/
      
      var fs = require("fs");
      module.exports = function() {
          console.log(fs);
      };

      When Not To Use It

      If explicit declaration of global variables is not to your taste.

      Compatibility

      This rule provides compatibility with treatment of global variables in JSHint and JSLint. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

      TODO found
      Open

                      // TODO, handle default width 50% -> doesn't consider previous resizing
      Severity: Minor
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js by fixme

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

                          this.container.children[0].style.width = (this.rulerProp.pos - this.rulerProp.gap) * 100 + '%';
      Severity: Major
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js and 1 other location - About 1 hr to fix
      www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js on lines 164..164

      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 55.

      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

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

              this.container.children[0].style.width = (this.rulerProp.pos - this.rulerProp.gap) * 100 + '%';
      Severity: Major
      Found in www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js and 1 other location - About 1 hr to fix
      www/m/js/layout/ContainerZone.js on lines 226..226

      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 55.

      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

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