railsconfig/config

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lib/config/integrations/sinatra.rb

Summary

Maintainability
A
1 hr
Test Coverage

Method registered has a Cognitive Complexity of 11 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

  def self.registered(app)
    app.configure do |inner_app|

      env = inner_app.environment || ENV["RACK_ENV"]
      root = inner_app.root
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/config/integrations/sinatra.rb - About 1 hr 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

Config#self.registered has approx 7 statements
Open

  def self.registered(app)
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/config/integrations/sinatra.rb by reek

A method with Too Many Statements is any method that has a large number of lines.

Too Many Statements warns about any method that has more than 5 statements. Reek's smell detector for Too Many Statements counts +1 for every simple statement in a method and +1 for every statement within a control structure (if, else, case, when, for, while, until, begin, rescue) but it doesn't count the control structure itself.

So the following method would score +6 in Reek's statement-counting algorithm:

def parse(arg, argv, &error)
  if !(val = arg) and (argv.empty? or /\A-/ =~ (val = argv[0]))
    return nil, block, nil                                         # +1
  end
  opt = (val = parse_arg(val, &error))[1]                          # +2
  val = conv_arg(*val)                                             # +3
  if opt and !arg
    argv.shift                                                     # +4
  else
    val[0] = nil                                                   # +5
  end
  val                                                              # +6
end

(You might argue that the two assigments within the first @if@ should count as statements, and that perhaps the nested assignment should count as +2.)

Config#self.registered manually dispatches method call
Open

        env = Padrino.env if Padrino.respond_to?(:env)
        root = Padrino.root if Padrino.respond_to?(:root)
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/config/integrations/sinatra.rb by reek

Reek reports a Manual Dispatch smell if it finds source code that manually checks whether an object responds to a method before that method is called. Manual dispatch is a type of Simulated Polymorphism which leads to code that is harder to reason about, debug, and refactor.

Example

class MyManualDispatcher
  attr_reader :foo

  def initialize(foo)
    @foo = foo
  end

  def call
    foo.bar if foo.respond_to?(:bar)
  end
end

Reek would emit the following warning:

test.rb -- 1 warning:
  [9]: MyManualDispatcher manually dispatches method call (ManualDispatch)

Config has no descriptive comment
Open

module Config
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/config/integrations/sinatra.rb by reek

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

Complex method Config::registered (21.1)
Open

  def self.registered(app)
    app.configure do |inner_app|

      env = inner_app.environment || ENV["RACK_ENV"]
      root = inner_app.root
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/config/integrations/sinatra.rb by flog

Flog calculates the ABC score for methods. The ABC score is based on assignments, branches (method calls), and conditions.

You can read more about ABC metrics or the flog tool

Missing top-level module documentation comment.
Open

module Config
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/config/integrations/sinatra.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, 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

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

      env = inner_app.environment || ENV["RACK_ENV"]
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/config/integrations/sinatra.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"

Extra empty line detected at block body beginning.
Open


      env = inner_app.environment || ENV["RACK_ENV"]
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/config/integrations/sinatra.rb by rubocop

This cops checks if empty lines around the bodies of blocks match the configuration.

Example: EnforcedStyle: empty_lines

# good

foo do |bar|

  # ...

end

Example: EnforcedStyle: noemptylines (default)

# good

foo do |bar|
  # ...
end

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

require "config/rack/reloader"
Severity: Minor
Found in lib/config/integrations/sinatra.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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