railsconfig/config

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lib/config/integrations/rails/railtie.rb

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Config::Integrations::Rails::Railtie has no descriptive comment
Open

      class Railtie < ::Rails::Railtie

Classes and modules are the units of reuse and release. It is therefore considered good practice to annotate every class and module with a brief comment outlining its responsibilities.

Example

Given

class Dummy
  # Do things...
end

Reek would emit the following warning:

test.rb -- 1 warning:
  [1]:Dummy has no descriptive comment (IrresponsibleModule)

Fixing this is simple - just an explaining comment:

# The Dummy class is responsible for ...
class Dummy
  # Do things...
end

Config::Integrations::Rails::Railtie#preload calls 'Config.environment' 2 times
Open

            Config.setting_files(::Rails.root.join('config'), Config.environment.nil? ? ::Rails.env : Config.environment.to_sym)

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

Config::Integrations::Rails::Railtie#preload calls '::Rails.root' 2 times
Open

          initializer = ::Rails.root.join('config', 'initializers', 'config.rb')
          require initializer if File.exist?(initializer)

          # Parse the settings before any of the initializers
          Config.load_and_set_settings(

Duplication occurs when two fragments of code look nearly identical, or when two fragments of code have nearly identical effects at some conceptual level.

Reek implements a check for Duplicate Method Call.

Example

Here's a very much simplified and contrived example. The following method will report a warning:

def double_thing()
  @other.thing + @other.thing
end

One quick approach to silence Reek would be to refactor the code thus:

def double_thing()
  thing = @other.thing
  thing + thing
end

A slightly different approach would be to replace all calls of double_thing by calls to @other.double_thing:

class Other
  def double_thing()
    thing + thing
  end
end

The approach you take will depend on balancing other factors in your code.

Config::Integrations::Rails::Railtie#preload performs a nil-check
Open

            Config.setting_files(::Rails.root.join('config'), Config.environment.nil? ? ::Rails.env : Config.environment.to_sym)

A NilCheck is a type check. Failures of NilCheck violate the "tell, don't ask" principle.

Additionally, type checks often mask bigger problems in your source code like not using OOP and / or polymorphism when you should.

Example

Given

class Klass
  def nil_checker(argument)
    if argument.nil?
      puts "argument isn't nil!"
    end
  end
end

Reek would emit the following warning:

test.rb -- 1 warning:
  [3]:Klass#nil_checker performs a nil-check. (NilCheck)

Config::Integrations::Rails::Railtie has the variable name 'f'
Open

          Dir[File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__), '../tasks/*.rake')].each { |f| load f }

An Uncommunicative Variable Name is a variable name that doesn't communicate its intent well enough.

Poor names make it hard for the reader to build a mental picture of what's going on in the code. They can also be mis-interpreted; and they hurt the flow of reading, because the reader must slow down to interpret the names.

Missing top-level class documentation comment.
Open

      class Railtie < ::Rails::Railtie

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, or constant definitions.

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

# good
# Description/Explanation of Person class
class Person
  # ...
end

Line is too long. [128/120]
Open

            Config.setting_files(::Rails.root.join('config'), Config.environment.nil? ? ::Rails.env : Config.environment.to_sym)

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