src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js

Summary

Maintainability
D
3 days
Test Coverage

Function buildCommand has 115 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

function buildCommand(cli, command, commandData, allSettingGroups, printGroup, parents, level) {
    let rows = [];

    rows.push(`##${'#'.repeat(level)} ${command}`);

Severity: Major
Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - About 4 hrs to fix

    Function buildCommand has a Cognitive Complexity of 27 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
    Open

    function buildCommand(cli, command, commandData, allSettingGroups, printGroup, parents, level) {
        let rows = [];
    
        rows.push(`##${'#'.repeat(level)} ${command}`);
    
    
    Severity: Minor
    Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - 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

    File commandsToMarkdown.js has 261 lines of code (exceeds 250 allowed). Consider refactoring.
    Open

    import redent from 'redent';
    import stripAnsi from 'strip-ansi';
    import trimNewlines from 'trim-newlines';
    
    import generateTable from '../generateTable';
    Severity: Minor
    Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - About 2 hrs to fix

      Function build has 52 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
      Open

      function build(cli, commands, allSettingGroups, printGroup, hideCommands, statefulAnchor, parents = [], level = 0) {
          let tableOfContent = [];
          let content = [];
      
          Object.keys(commands)
      Severity: Major
      Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - About 2 hrs to fix

        Function commandsToMarkdown has 27 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
        Open

        export default function commandsToMarkdown(
            name,
            config = {},
            commands,
            settingsLink,
        Severity: Minor
        Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - About 1 hr to fix

          Function build has 8 arguments (exceeds 4 allowed). Consider refactoring.
          Open

          function build(cli, commands, allSettingGroups, printGroup, hideCommands, statefulAnchor, parents = [], level = 0) {
          Severity: Major
          Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - About 1 hr to fix

            Function buildGroup has 7 arguments (exceeds 4 allowed). Consider refactoring.
            Open

            function buildGroup(cli, command, commandData, allSettingGroups, printGroup, parents, level) {
            Severity: Major
            Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - About 50 mins to fix

              Function commandsToMarkdown has 7 arguments (exceeds 4 allowed). Consider refactoring.
              Open

                  name,
                  config = {},
                  commands,
                  settingsLink,
                  mode,
              Severity: Major
              Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - About 50 mins to fix

                Function buildCommand has 7 arguments (exceeds 4 allowed). Consider refactoring.
                Open

                function buildCommand(cli, command, commandData, allSettingGroups, printGroup, parents, level) {
                Severity: Major
                Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - About 50 mins to fix

                  Function commandsToMarkdown has a Cognitive Complexity of 6 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
                  Open

                  export default function commandsToMarkdown(
                      name,
                      config = {},
                      commands,
                      settingsLink,
                  Severity: Minor
                  Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - About 25 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 buildGroup has a Cognitive Complexity of 6 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
                  Open

                  function buildGroup(cli, command, commandData, allSettingGroups, printGroup, parents, level) {
                      const rows = [];
                      rows.push(`##${'#'.repeat(level)} ${command}`);
                      if (commandData.__meta && commandData.__meta.name) {
                          rows.push(`__${commandData.__meta.name}__`);
                  Severity: Minor
                  Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js - About 25 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 trailing comma.
                  Open

                                  level

                  require or disallow trailing commas (comma-dangle)

                  Trailing commas in object literals are valid according to the ECMAScript 5 (and ECMAScript 3!) spec. However, IE8 (when not in IE8 document mode) and below will throw an error when it encounters trailing commas in JavaScript.

                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };

                  Trailing commas simplify adding and removing items to objects and arrays, since only the lines you are modifying must be touched. Another argument in favor of trailing commas is that it improves the clarity of diffs when an item is added or removed from an object or array:

                  Less clear:

                  var foo = {
                  -    bar: "baz",
                  -    qux: "quux"
                  +    bar: "baz"
                   };

                  More clear:

                  var foo = {
                       bar: "baz",
                  -    qux: "quux",
                   };

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces consistent use of trailing commas in object and array literals.

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option or an object option:

                  {
                      "comma-dangle": ["error", "never"],
                      // or
                      "comma-dangle": ["error", {
                          "arrays": "never",
                          "objects": "never",
                          "imports": "never",
                          "exports": "never",
                          "functions": "ignore",
                      }]
                  }
                  • "never" (default) disallows trailing commas
                  • "always" requires trailing commas
                  • "always-multiline" requires trailing commas when the last element or property is in a different line than the closing ] or } and disallows trailing commas when the last element or property is on the same line as the closing ] or }
                  • "only-multiline" allows (but does not require) trailing commas when the last element or property is in a different line than the closing ] or } and disallows trailing commas when the last element or property is on the same line as the closing ] or }

                  Trailing commas in function declarations and function calls are valid syntax since ECMAScript 2017; however, the string option does not check these situations for backwards compatibility.

                  You can also use an object option to configure this rule for each type of syntax. Each of the following options can be set to "never", "always", "always-multiline", "only-multiline", or "ignore". The default for each option is "never" unless otherwise specified.

                  • arrays is for array literals and array patterns of destructuring. (e.g. let [a,] = [1,];)
                  • objects is for object literals and object patterns of destructuring. (e.g. let {a,} = {a: 1};)
                  • imports is for import declarations of ES Modules. (e.g. import {a,} from "foo";)
                  • exports is for export declarations of ES Modules. (e.g. export {a,};)
                  • functions is for function declarations and function calls. (e.g. (function(a,){ })(b,);)
                    functions is set to "ignore" by default for consistency with the string option.

                  never

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "never" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "never"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "never" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "never"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "always" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "always" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  always-multiline

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "always-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var foo = { bar: "baz", qux: "quux", };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2,];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "always-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {bar: "baz", qux: "quux"};
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2,
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  only-multiline

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "only-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "only-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = { bar: "baz", qux: "quux", };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2,];

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "only-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "only-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {bar: "baz", qux: "quux"};
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2,
                  ];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  functions

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the {"functions": "never"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "never"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b,) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b,);
                  new foo(a, b,);

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the {"functions": "never"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "never"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b);
                  new foo(a, b);

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the {"functions": "always"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "always"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b);
                  new foo(a, b);

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the {"functions": "always"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "always"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b,) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b,);
                  new foo(a, b,);

                  When Not To Use It

                  You can turn this rule off if you are not concerned with dangling commas. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                  Missing trailing comma.
                  Open

                                  level

                  require or disallow trailing commas (comma-dangle)

                  Trailing commas in object literals are valid according to the ECMAScript 5 (and ECMAScript 3!) spec. However, IE8 (when not in IE8 document mode) and below will throw an error when it encounters trailing commas in JavaScript.

                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };

                  Trailing commas simplify adding and removing items to objects and arrays, since only the lines you are modifying must be touched. Another argument in favor of trailing commas is that it improves the clarity of diffs when an item is added or removed from an object or array:

                  Less clear:

                  var foo = {
                  -    bar: "baz",
                  -    qux: "quux"
                  +    bar: "baz"
                   };

                  More clear:

                  var foo = {
                       bar: "baz",
                  -    qux: "quux",
                   };

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces consistent use of trailing commas in object and array literals.

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option or an object option:

                  {
                      "comma-dangle": ["error", "never"],
                      // or
                      "comma-dangle": ["error", {
                          "arrays": "never",
                          "objects": "never",
                          "imports": "never",
                          "exports": "never",
                          "functions": "ignore",
                      }]
                  }
                  • "never" (default) disallows trailing commas
                  • "always" requires trailing commas
                  • "always-multiline" requires trailing commas when the last element or property is in a different line than the closing ] or } and disallows trailing commas when the last element or property is on the same line as the closing ] or }
                  • "only-multiline" allows (but does not require) trailing commas when the last element or property is in a different line than the closing ] or } and disallows trailing commas when the last element or property is on the same line as the closing ] or }

                  Trailing commas in function declarations and function calls are valid syntax since ECMAScript 2017; however, the string option does not check these situations for backwards compatibility.

                  You can also use an object option to configure this rule for each type of syntax. Each of the following options can be set to "never", "always", "always-multiline", "only-multiline", or "ignore". The default for each option is "never" unless otherwise specified.

                  • arrays is for array literals and array patterns of destructuring. (e.g. let [a,] = [1,];)
                  • objects is for object literals and object patterns of destructuring. (e.g. let {a,} = {a: 1};)
                  • imports is for import declarations of ES Modules. (e.g. import {a,} from "foo";)
                  • exports is for export declarations of ES Modules. (e.g. export {a,};)
                  • functions is for function declarations and function calls. (e.g. (function(a,){ })(b,);)
                    functions is set to "ignore" by default for consistency with the string option.

                  never

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "never" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "never"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "never" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "never"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "always" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "always" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  always-multiline

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "always-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var foo = { bar: "baz", qux: "quux", };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2,];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "always-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {bar: "baz", qux: "quux"};
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2,
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  only-multiline

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "only-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "only-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = { bar: "baz", qux: "quux", };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2,];

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "only-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "only-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {bar: "baz", qux: "quux"};
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2,
                  ];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  functions

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the {"functions": "never"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "never"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b,) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b,);
                  new foo(a, b,);

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the {"functions": "never"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "never"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b);
                  new foo(a, b);

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the {"functions": "always"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "always"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b);
                  new foo(a, b);

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the {"functions": "always"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "always"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b,) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b,);
                  new foo(a, b,);

                  When Not To Use It

                  You can turn this rule off if you are not concerned with dangling commas. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                  Missing trailing comma.
                  Open

                                      level + 1

                  require or disallow trailing commas (comma-dangle)

                  Trailing commas in object literals are valid according to the ECMAScript 5 (and ECMAScript 3!) spec. However, IE8 (when not in IE8 document mode) and below will throw an error when it encounters trailing commas in JavaScript.

                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };

                  Trailing commas simplify adding and removing items to objects and arrays, since only the lines you are modifying must be touched. Another argument in favor of trailing commas is that it improves the clarity of diffs when an item is added or removed from an object or array:

                  Less clear:

                  var foo = {
                  -    bar: "baz",
                  -    qux: "quux"
                  +    bar: "baz"
                   };

                  More clear:

                  var foo = {
                       bar: "baz",
                  -    qux: "quux",
                   };

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces consistent use of trailing commas in object and array literals.

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option or an object option:

                  {
                      "comma-dangle": ["error", "never"],
                      // or
                      "comma-dangle": ["error", {
                          "arrays": "never",
                          "objects": "never",
                          "imports": "never",
                          "exports": "never",
                          "functions": "ignore",
                      }]
                  }
                  • "never" (default) disallows trailing commas
                  • "always" requires trailing commas
                  • "always-multiline" requires trailing commas when the last element or property is in a different line than the closing ] or } and disallows trailing commas when the last element or property is on the same line as the closing ] or }
                  • "only-multiline" allows (but does not require) trailing commas when the last element or property is in a different line than the closing ] or } and disallows trailing commas when the last element or property is on the same line as the closing ] or }

                  Trailing commas in function declarations and function calls are valid syntax since ECMAScript 2017; however, the string option does not check these situations for backwards compatibility.

                  You can also use an object option to configure this rule for each type of syntax. Each of the following options can be set to "never", "always", "always-multiline", "only-multiline", or "ignore". The default for each option is "never" unless otherwise specified.

                  • arrays is for array literals and array patterns of destructuring. (e.g. let [a,] = [1,];)
                  • objects is for object literals and object patterns of destructuring. (e.g. let {a,} = {a: 1};)
                  • imports is for import declarations of ES Modules. (e.g. import {a,} from "foo";)
                  • exports is for export declarations of ES Modules. (e.g. export {a,};)
                  • functions is for function declarations and function calls. (e.g. (function(a,){ })(b,);)
                    functions is set to "ignore" by default for consistency with the string option.

                  never

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "never" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "never"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "never" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "never"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "always" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "always" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  always-multiline

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "always-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var foo = { bar: "baz", qux: "quux", };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2,];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "always-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {bar: "baz", qux: "quux"};
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2,
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  only-multiline

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "only-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "only-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = { bar: "baz", qux: "quux", };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2,];

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "only-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "only-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {bar: "baz", qux: "quux"};
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2,
                  ];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  functions

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the {"functions": "never"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "never"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b,) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b,);
                  new foo(a, b,);

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the {"functions": "never"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "never"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b);
                  new foo(a, b);

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the {"functions": "always"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "always"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b);
                  new foo(a, b);

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the {"functions": "always"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "always"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b,) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b,);
                  new foo(a, b,);

                  When Not To Use It

                  You can turn this rule off if you are not concerned with dangling commas. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                  Missing trailing comma.
                  Open

                      cli = 'roc'

                  require or disallow trailing commas (comma-dangle)

                  Trailing commas in object literals are valid according to the ECMAScript 5 (and ECMAScript 3!) spec. However, IE8 (when not in IE8 document mode) and below will throw an error when it encounters trailing commas in JavaScript.

                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };

                  Trailing commas simplify adding and removing items to objects and arrays, since only the lines you are modifying must be touched. Another argument in favor of trailing commas is that it improves the clarity of diffs when an item is added or removed from an object or array:

                  Less clear:

                  var foo = {
                  -    bar: "baz",
                  -    qux: "quux"
                  +    bar: "baz"
                   };

                  More clear:

                  var foo = {
                       bar: "baz",
                  -    qux: "quux",
                   };

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces consistent use of trailing commas in object and array literals.

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option or an object option:

                  {
                      "comma-dangle": ["error", "never"],
                      // or
                      "comma-dangle": ["error", {
                          "arrays": "never",
                          "objects": "never",
                          "imports": "never",
                          "exports": "never",
                          "functions": "ignore",
                      }]
                  }
                  • "never" (default) disallows trailing commas
                  • "always" requires trailing commas
                  • "always-multiline" requires trailing commas when the last element or property is in a different line than the closing ] or } and disallows trailing commas when the last element or property is on the same line as the closing ] or }
                  • "only-multiline" allows (but does not require) trailing commas when the last element or property is in a different line than the closing ] or } and disallows trailing commas when the last element or property is on the same line as the closing ] or }

                  Trailing commas in function declarations and function calls are valid syntax since ECMAScript 2017; however, the string option does not check these situations for backwards compatibility.

                  You can also use an object option to configure this rule for each type of syntax. Each of the following options can be set to "never", "always", "always-multiline", "only-multiline", or "ignore". The default for each option is "never" unless otherwise specified.

                  • arrays is for array literals and array patterns of destructuring. (e.g. let [a,] = [1,];)
                  • objects is for object literals and object patterns of destructuring. (e.g. let {a,} = {a: 1};)
                  • imports is for import declarations of ES Modules. (e.g. import {a,} from "foo";)
                  • exports is for export declarations of ES Modules. (e.g. export {a,};)
                  • functions is for function declarations and function calls. (e.g. (function(a,){ })(b,);)
                    functions is set to "ignore" by default for consistency with the string option.

                  never

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "never" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "never"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "never" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "never"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "always" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "always" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  always-multiline

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "always-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var foo = { bar: "baz", qux: "quux", };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2,];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "always-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "always-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {bar: "baz", qux: "quux"};
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2,
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });

                  only-multiline

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "only-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "only-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = { bar: "baz", qux: "quux", };
                  
                  var arr = [1,2,];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2,];

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "only-multiline" option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", "only-multiline"]*/
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux",
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {
                      bar: "baz",
                      qux: "quux"
                  };
                  
                  var foo = {bar: "baz", qux: "quux"};
                  var arr = [1,2];
                  
                  var arr = [1,
                      2];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2,
                  ];
                  
                  var arr = [
                      1,
                      2
                  ];
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux",
                  });
                  
                  foo({
                    bar: "baz",
                    qux: "quux"
                  });

                  functions

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the {"functions": "never"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "never"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b,) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b,);
                  new foo(a, b,);

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the {"functions": "never"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "never"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b);
                  new foo(a, b);

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the {"functions": "always"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "always"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b);
                  new foo(a, b);

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the {"functions": "always"} option:

                  /*eslint comma-dangle: ["error", {"functions": "always"}]*/
                  
                  function foo(a, b,) {
                  }
                  
                  foo(a, b,);
                  new foo(a, b,);

                  When Not To Use It

                  You can turn this rule off if you are not concerned with dangling commas. Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

                  Unexpected parentheses around single function argument having a body with no curly braces
                  Open

                          renderer: (input) => stripAnsi(input),

                  Require parens in arrow function arguments (arrow-parens)

                  Arrow functions can omit parentheses when they have exactly one parameter. In all other cases the parameter(s) must be wrapped in parentheses. This rule enforces the consistent use of parentheses in arrow functions.

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces parentheses around arrow function parameters regardless of arity. For example:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  a => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  (a) => {}

                  Following this style will help you find arrow functions (=>) which may be mistakenly included in a condition when a comparison such as >= was the intent.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  if (a => 2) {
                  }
                  
                  // Good
                  if (a >= 2) {
                  }

                  The rule can also be configured to discourage the use of parens when they are not required:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  (a) => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  a => {}

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option and an object one.

                  String options are:

                  • "always" (default) requires parens around arguments in all cases.
                  • "as-needed" allows omitting parens when there is only one argument.

                  Object properties for variants of the "as-needed" option:

                  • "requireForBlockBody": true modifies the as-needed rule in order to require parens if the function body is in an instructions block (surrounded by braces).

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => a);
                  a(foo => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'}
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  If Statements

                  One of benefits of this option is that it prevents the incorrect use of arrow functions in conditionals:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 2;
                  // ...
                  if (a => b) {
                   console.log('bigger');
                  } else {
                   console.log('smaller');
                  }
                  // outputs 'bigger', not smaller as expected

                  The contents of the if statement is an arrow function, not a comparison.

                  If the arrow function is intentional, it should be wrapped in parens to remove ambiguity.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 0;
                  // ...
                  if ((a) => b) {
                   console.log('truthy value returned');
                  } else {
                   console.log('falsey value returned');
                  }
                  // outputs 'truthy value returned'

                  The following is another example of this behavior:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = a => b ? c: d;
                  // f = ?

                  f is an arrow function which takes a as an argument and returns the result of b ? c: d.

                  This should be rewritten like so:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = (a) => b ? c: d;

                  as-needed

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => a);
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  requireForBlockBody

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

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => a;
                  a => {};
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.map((x) => x * x);
                  a.map(x => {
                    return x * x;
                  });
                  a.then(foo => {});

                  Examples of correct code for the { "requireForBlockBody": true } option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a => ({});
                  () => {};
                  a => a;
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  Further Reading

                  Unexpected parentheses around single function argument having a body with no curly braces
                  Open

                              renderer: (input) => stripAnsi(input),

                  Require parens in arrow function arguments (arrow-parens)

                  Arrow functions can omit parentheses when they have exactly one parameter. In all other cases the parameter(s) must be wrapped in parentheses. This rule enforces the consistent use of parentheses in arrow functions.

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces parentheses around arrow function parameters regardless of arity. For example:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  a => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  (a) => {}

                  Following this style will help you find arrow functions (=>) which may be mistakenly included in a condition when a comparison such as >= was the intent.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  if (a => 2) {
                  }
                  
                  // Good
                  if (a >= 2) {
                  }

                  The rule can also be configured to discourage the use of parens when they are not required:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  (a) => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  a => {}

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option and an object one.

                  String options are:

                  • "always" (default) requires parens around arguments in all cases.
                  • "as-needed" allows omitting parens when there is only one argument.

                  Object properties for variants of the "as-needed" option:

                  • "requireForBlockBody": true modifies the as-needed rule in order to require parens if the function body is in an instructions block (surrounded by braces).

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => a);
                  a(foo => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'}
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  If Statements

                  One of benefits of this option is that it prevents the incorrect use of arrow functions in conditionals:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 2;
                  // ...
                  if (a => b) {
                   console.log('bigger');
                  } else {
                   console.log('smaller');
                  }
                  // outputs 'bigger', not smaller as expected

                  The contents of the if statement is an arrow function, not a comparison.

                  If the arrow function is intentional, it should be wrapped in parens to remove ambiguity.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 0;
                  // ...
                  if ((a) => b) {
                   console.log('truthy value returned');
                  } else {
                   console.log('falsey value returned');
                  }
                  // outputs 'truthy value returned'

                  The following is another example of this behavior:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = a => b ? c: d;
                  // f = ?

                  f is an arrow function which takes a as an argument and returns the result of b ? c: d.

                  This should be rewritten like so:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = (a) => b ? c: d;

                  as-needed

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => a);
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  requireForBlockBody

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

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => a;
                  a => {};
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.map((x) => x * x);
                  a.map(x => {
                    return x * x;
                  });
                  a.then(foo => {});

                  Examples of correct code for the { "requireForBlockBody": true } option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a => ({});
                  () => {};
                  a => a;
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  Further Reading

                  Unexpected parentheses around single function argument having a body with no curly braces
                  Open

                          .filter((element) => hideCommands.indexOf(element) === -1)

                  Require parens in arrow function arguments (arrow-parens)

                  Arrow functions can omit parentheses when they have exactly one parameter. In all other cases the parameter(s) must be wrapped in parentheses. This rule enforces the consistent use of parentheses in arrow functions.

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces parentheses around arrow function parameters regardless of arity. For example:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  a => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  (a) => {}

                  Following this style will help you find arrow functions (=>) which may be mistakenly included in a condition when a comparison such as >= was the intent.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  if (a => 2) {
                  }
                  
                  // Good
                  if (a >= 2) {
                  }

                  The rule can also be configured to discourage the use of parens when they are not required:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  (a) => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  a => {}

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option and an object one.

                  String options are:

                  • "always" (default) requires parens around arguments in all cases.
                  • "as-needed" allows omitting parens when there is only one argument.

                  Object properties for variants of the "as-needed" option:

                  • "requireForBlockBody": true modifies the as-needed rule in order to require parens if the function body is in an instructions block (surrounded by braces).

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => a);
                  a(foo => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'}
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  If Statements

                  One of benefits of this option is that it prevents the incorrect use of arrow functions in conditionals:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 2;
                  // ...
                  if (a => b) {
                   console.log('bigger');
                  } else {
                   console.log('smaller');
                  }
                  // outputs 'bigger', not smaller as expected

                  The contents of the if statement is an arrow function, not a comparison.

                  If the arrow function is intentional, it should be wrapped in parens to remove ambiguity.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 0;
                  // ...
                  if ((a) => b) {
                   console.log('truthy value returned');
                  } else {
                   console.log('falsey value returned');
                  }
                  // outputs 'truthy value returned'

                  The following is another example of this behavior:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = a => b ? c: d;
                  // f = ?

                  f is an arrow function which takes a as an argument and returns the result of b ? c: d.

                  This should be rewritten like so:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = (a) => b ? c: d;

                  as-needed

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => a);
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  requireForBlockBody

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

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => a;
                  a => {};
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.map((x) => x * x);
                  a.map(x => {
                    return x * x;
                  });
                  a.then(foo => {});

                  Examples of correct code for the { "requireForBlockBody": true } option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a => ({});
                  () => {};
                  a => a;
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  Further Reading

                  Unexpected parentheses around single function argument having a body with no curly braces
                  Open

                              renderer: (input) => input && `\`${input}\``,

                  Require parens in arrow function arguments (arrow-parens)

                  Arrow functions can omit parentheses when they have exactly one parameter. In all other cases the parameter(s) must be wrapped in parentheses. This rule enforces the consistent use of parentheses in arrow functions.

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces parentheses around arrow function parameters regardless of arity. For example:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  a => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  (a) => {}

                  Following this style will help you find arrow functions (=>) which may be mistakenly included in a condition when a comparison such as >= was the intent.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  if (a => 2) {
                  }
                  
                  // Good
                  if (a >= 2) {
                  }

                  The rule can also be configured to discourage the use of parens when they are not required:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  (a) => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  a => {}

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option and an object one.

                  String options are:

                  • "always" (default) requires parens around arguments in all cases.
                  • "as-needed" allows omitting parens when there is only one argument.

                  Object properties for variants of the "as-needed" option:

                  • "requireForBlockBody": true modifies the as-needed rule in order to require parens if the function body is in an instructions block (surrounded by braces).

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => a);
                  a(foo => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'}
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  If Statements

                  One of benefits of this option is that it prevents the incorrect use of arrow functions in conditionals:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 2;
                  // ...
                  if (a => b) {
                   console.log('bigger');
                  } else {
                   console.log('smaller');
                  }
                  // outputs 'bigger', not smaller as expected

                  The contents of the if statement is an arrow function, not a comparison.

                  If the arrow function is intentional, it should be wrapped in parens to remove ambiguity.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 0;
                  // ...
                  if ((a) => b) {
                   console.log('truthy value returned');
                  } else {
                   console.log('falsey value returned');
                  }
                  // outputs 'truthy value returned'

                  The following is another example of this behavior:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = a => b ? c: d;
                  // f = ?

                  f is an arrow function which takes a as an argument and returns the result of b ? c: d.

                  This should be rewritten like so:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = (a) => b ? c: d;

                  as-needed

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => a);
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  requireForBlockBody

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

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => a;
                  a => {};
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.map((x) => x * x);
                  a.map(x => {
                    return x * x;
                  });
                  a.then(foo => {});

                  Examples of correct code for the { "requireForBlockBody": true } option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a => ({});
                  () => {};
                  a => a;
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  Further Reading

                  Unexpected parentheses around single function argument having a body with no curly braces
                  Open

                          .filter((potentialGroup) => isCommand(commands)(potentialGroup))

                  Require parens in arrow function arguments (arrow-parens)

                  Arrow functions can omit parentheses when they have exactly one parameter. In all other cases the parameter(s) must be wrapped in parentheses. This rule enforces the consistent use of parentheses in arrow functions.

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces parentheses around arrow function parameters regardless of arity. For example:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  a => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  (a) => {}

                  Following this style will help you find arrow functions (=>) which may be mistakenly included in a condition when a comparison such as >= was the intent.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  if (a => 2) {
                  }
                  
                  // Good
                  if (a >= 2) {
                  }

                  The rule can also be configured to discourage the use of parens when they are not required:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  (a) => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  a => {}

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option and an object one.

                  String options are:

                  • "always" (default) requires parens around arguments in all cases.
                  • "as-needed" allows omitting parens when there is only one argument.

                  Object properties for variants of the "as-needed" option:

                  • "requireForBlockBody": true modifies the as-needed rule in order to require parens if the function body is in an instructions block (surrounded by braces).

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => a);
                  a(foo => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'}
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  If Statements

                  One of benefits of this option is that it prevents the incorrect use of arrow functions in conditionals:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 2;
                  // ...
                  if (a => b) {
                   console.log('bigger');
                  } else {
                   console.log('smaller');
                  }
                  // outputs 'bigger', not smaller as expected

                  The contents of the if statement is an arrow function, not a comparison.

                  If the arrow function is intentional, it should be wrapped in parens to remove ambiguity.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 0;
                  // ...
                  if ((a) => b) {
                   console.log('truthy value returned');
                  } else {
                   console.log('falsey value returned');
                  }
                  // outputs 'truthy value returned'

                  The following is another example of this behavior:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = a => b ? c: d;
                  // f = ?

                  f is an arrow function which takes a as an argument and returns the result of b ? c: d.

                  This should be rewritten like so:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = (a) => b ? c: d;

                  as-needed

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => a);
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  requireForBlockBody

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

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => a;
                  a => {};
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.map((x) => x * x);
                  a.map(x => {
                    return x * x;
                  });
                  a.then(foo => {});

                  Examples of correct code for the { "requireForBlockBody": true } option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a => ({});
                  () => {};
                  a => a;
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  Further Reading

                  Unexpected parentheses around single function argument having a body with no curly braces
                  Open

                          .filter((element) => hideCommands.indexOf(element) === -1)

                  Require parens in arrow function arguments (arrow-parens)

                  Arrow functions can omit parentheses when they have exactly one parameter. In all other cases the parameter(s) must be wrapped in parentheses. This rule enforces the consistent use of parentheses in arrow functions.

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces parentheses around arrow function parameters regardless of arity. For example:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  a => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  (a) => {}

                  Following this style will help you find arrow functions (=>) which may be mistakenly included in a condition when a comparison such as >= was the intent.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  if (a => 2) {
                  }
                  
                  // Good
                  if (a >= 2) {
                  }

                  The rule can also be configured to discourage the use of parens when they are not required:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  (a) => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  a => {}

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option and an object one.

                  String options are:

                  • "always" (default) requires parens around arguments in all cases.
                  • "as-needed" allows omitting parens when there is only one argument.

                  Object properties for variants of the "as-needed" option:

                  • "requireForBlockBody": true modifies the as-needed rule in order to require parens if the function body is in an instructions block (surrounded by braces).

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => a);
                  a(foo => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'}
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  If Statements

                  One of benefits of this option is that it prevents the incorrect use of arrow functions in conditionals:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 2;
                  // ...
                  if (a => b) {
                   console.log('bigger');
                  } else {
                   console.log('smaller');
                  }
                  // outputs 'bigger', not smaller as expected

                  The contents of the if statement is an arrow function, not a comparison.

                  If the arrow function is intentional, it should be wrapped in parens to remove ambiguity.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 0;
                  // ...
                  if ((a) => b) {
                   console.log('truthy value returned');
                  } else {
                   console.log('falsey value returned');
                  }
                  // outputs 'truthy value returned'

                  The following is another example of this behavior:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = a => b ? c: d;
                  // f = ?

                  f is an arrow function which takes a as an argument and returns the result of b ? c: d.

                  This should be rewritten like so:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = (a) => b ? c: d;

                  as-needed

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => a);
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  requireForBlockBody

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

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => a;
                  a => {};
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.map((x) => x * x);
                  a.map(x => {
                    return x * x;
                  });
                  a.then(foo => {});

                  Examples of correct code for the { "requireForBlockBody": true } option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a => ({});
                  () => {};
                  a => a;
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  Further Reading

                  Unexpected parentheses around single function argument having a body with no curly braces
                  Open

                              renderer: (input) => input && `\`${input}\``,

                  Require parens in arrow function arguments (arrow-parens)

                  Arrow functions can omit parentheses when they have exactly one parameter. In all other cases the parameter(s) must be wrapped in parentheses. This rule enforces the consistent use of parentheses in arrow functions.

                  Rule Details

                  This rule enforces parentheses around arrow function parameters regardless of arity. For example:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  a => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  (a) => {}

                  Following this style will help you find arrow functions (=>) which may be mistakenly included in a condition when a comparison such as >= was the intent.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  if (a => 2) {
                  }
                  
                  // Good
                  if (a >= 2) {
                  }

                  The rule can also be configured to discourage the use of parens when they are not required:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  // Bad
                  (a) => {}
                  
                  // Good
                  a => {}

                  Options

                  This rule has a string option and an object one.

                  String options are:

                  • "always" (default) requires parens around arguments in all cases.
                  • "as-needed" allows omitting parens when there is only one argument.

                  Object properties for variants of the "as-needed" option:

                  • "requireForBlockBody": true modifies the as-needed rule in order to require parens if the function body is in an instructions block (surrounded by braces).

                  always

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => a);
                  a(foo => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "always" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "always"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'}
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  If Statements

                  One of benefits of this option is that it prevents the incorrect use of arrow functions in conditionals:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 2;
                  // ...
                  if (a => b) {
                   console.log('bigger');
                  } else {
                   console.log('smaller');
                  }
                  // outputs 'bigger', not smaller as expected

                  The contents of the if statement is an arrow function, not a comparison.

                  If the arrow function is intentional, it should be wrapped in parens to remove ambiguity.

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1;
                  var b = 0;
                  // ...
                  if ((a) => b) {
                   console.log('truthy value returned');
                  } else {
                   console.log('falsey value returned');
                  }
                  // outputs 'truthy value returned'

                  The following is another example of this behavior:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = a => b ? c: d;
                  // f = ?

                  f is an arrow function which takes a as an argument and returns the result of b ? c: d.

                  This should be rewritten like so:

                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  var a = 1, b = 2, c = 3, d = 4;
                  var f = (a) => b ? c: d;

                  as-needed

                  Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => a;
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => a);
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });

                  Examples of correct code for this rule with the "as-needed" option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: ["error", "as-needed"]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  () => {};
                  a => {};
                  a => a;
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.then(foo => {});
                  a.then(foo => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  requireForBlockBody

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

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => a;
                  a => {};
                  a => {'\n'};
                  a.map((x) => x * x);
                  a.map(x => {
                    return x * x;
                  });
                  a.then(foo => {});

                  Examples of correct code for the { "requireForBlockBody": true } option:

                  /*eslint arrow-parens: [2, "as-needed", { "requireForBlockBody": true }]*/
                  /*eslint-env es6*/
                  
                  (a) => {};
                  (a) => {'\n'};
                  a => ({});
                  () => {};
                  a => a;
                  a.then((foo) => {});
                  a.then((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  a((foo) => { if (true) {} });
                  (a, b, c) => a;
                  (a = 10) => a;
                  ([a, b]) => a;
                  ({a, b}) => a;

                  Further Reading

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

                      const table = generateTable(body, newHeader, {
                          groupTitleWrapper: (groupName, level2) => `${pad(level2 + 3, '#')} ${
                              groupName.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + groupName.slice(1)}`,
                      });
                  Severity: Major
                  Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js and 1 other location - About 1 hr to fix
                  src/documentation/markdown/settingsToMarkdown.js on lines 60..62

                  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 73.

                  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

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

                  const settings = {
                      groupTitleWrapper: (groupName, level) => `${pad(level + 3, '#')} ${
                          groupName.charAt(0).toUpperCase() + groupName.slice(1)}`,
                  };
                  Severity: Major
                  Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js and 1 other location - About 1 hr to fix
                  src/documentation/markdown/hooksToMarkdown.js on lines 133..137

                  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 67.

                  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

                  Identical blocks of code found in 3 locations. Consider refactoring.
                  Open

                          canBeEmpty: {
                              name: 'Can be empty',
                              renderer: (input) => {
                                  if (input === true) {
                                      return 'Yes';
                  Severity: Major
                  Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js and 2 other locations - About 55 mins to fix
                  src/documentation/markdown/hooksToMarkdown.js on lines 119..130
                  src/documentation/markdown/settingsToMarkdown.js on lines 42..53

                  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 54.

                  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

                                  name: option.alias ? `-${option.alias}, --${option.name}` : `--${option.name}`,
                  Severity: Minor
                  Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js and 1 other location - About 40 mins to fix
                  src/cli/commands/documentation/generateCommandDocumentation.js on lines 57..57

                  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 49.

                  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

                          if (objects.length > 0) {
                              body = body.concat({
                                  name: 'Command options',
                                  level,
                                  objects,
                  Severity: Minor
                  Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js and 1 other location - About 35 mins to fix
                  src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js on lines 205..211

                  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 46.

                  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

                          if (objects.length > 0) {
                              body = body.concat({
                                  name: 'Arguments',
                                  level,
                                  objects,
                  Severity: Minor
                  Found in src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js and 1 other location - About 35 mins to fix
                  src/documentation/markdown/commandsToMarkdown.js on lines 228..234

                  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 46.

                  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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