shapeable/prototype-web

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web-app/app/controllers/api/v1/users_controller.rb

Summary

Maintainability
A
3 hrs
Test Coverage

Class has too many lines. [101/100]
Open

    class UsersController < Api::BaseController
        include JsonResponses
        skip_before_filter :verify_authenticity_token  
        swagger_controller :users, "User Management", resource_path: "/api/users"
        

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

Assignment Branch Condition size for create is too high. [30.48/15]
Open

        def create
            if params[:user]
                user = User.new(users_params)
                if user.save
                    if params['alarm']

This cop checks that the ABC size of methods is not higher than the configured maximum. The ABC size is based on assignments, branches (method calls), and conditions. See http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?AbcMetric

Method has too many lines. [22/10]
Open

        def create
            if params[:user]
                user = User.new(users_params)
                if user.save
                    if params['alarm']

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

Method create has a Cognitive Complexity of 19 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

        def create
            if params[:user]
                user = User.new(users_params)
                if user.save
                    if params['alarm']
Severity: Minor
Found in web-app/app/controllers/api/v1/users_controller.rb - About 2 hrs to fix

Cognitive Complexity

Cognitive Complexity is a measure of how difficult a unit of code is to intuitively understand. Unlike Cyclomatic Complexity, which determines how difficult your code will be to test, Cognitive Complexity tells you how difficult your code will be to read and comprehend.

A method's cognitive complexity is based on a few simple rules:

  • Code is not considered more complex when it uses shorthand that the language provides for collapsing multiple statements into one
  • Code is considered more complex for each "break in the linear flow of the code"
  • Code is considered more complex when "flow breaking structures are nested"

Further reading

Method has too many lines. [12/10]
Open

    def get_user(user)
     return {id: user.id,
            email: user.email,
            phone_number:  user.phone_number,
            gender: user.gender,

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

Avoid deeply nested control flow statements.
Open

                                unless alarm.nil?
                                    UserAlarm.create(user_id: user.id, alarm_id: alarm.id)
                                end
Severity: Major
Found in web-app/app/controllers/api/v1/users_controller.rb - About 45 mins to fix

    Avoid more than 3 levels of block nesting.
    Open

                                if params['alarm'][alarm_name] == true
                                    alarm = Alarm.find_by(name: alarm_name)
                                    unless alarm.nil?
                                        UserAlarm.create(user_id: user.id, alarm_id: alarm.id)
                                    end

    This cop checks for excessive nesting of conditional and looping constructs.

    You can configure if blocks are considered using the CountBlocks option. When set to false (the default) blocks are not counted towards the nesting level. Set to true to count blocks as well.

    The maximum level of nesting allowed is configurable.

    Use each_key instead of keys.each.
    Open

                            params['alarm'].keys.each do |alarm_name|

    This cop checks for uses of each_key and each_value Hash methods.

    Note: If you have an array of two-element arrays, you can put parentheses around the block arguments to indicate that you're not working with a hash, and suppress RuboCop offenses.

    Example:

    # bad
    hash.keys.each { |k| p k }
    hash.values.each { |v| p v }
    hash.each { |k, _v| p k }
    hash.each { |_k, v| p v }
    
    # good
    hash.each_key { |k| p k }
    hash.each_value { |v| p v }

    Space missing inside }.
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

    Checks that block braces have or don't have surrounding space inside them on configuration. For blocks taking parameters, it checks that the left brace has or doesn't have trailing space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that block braces have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {puts e}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { puts e }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that block braces don't
    # have surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each { puts e }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {puts e}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces don't have a space in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {   }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each { }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces have at least a spece in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each {   }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true (default)

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `true` enforces that
    # there is a space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `false` enforces that
    # there is no space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }

    Trailing whitespace detected.
    Open

        private 

    Trailing whitespace detected.
    Open

          end 

    Redundant return detected.
    Open

            return users.collect do |user|

    This cop checks for redundant return expressions.

    Example:

    def test
      return something
    end
    
    def test
      one
      two
      three
      return something
    end

    It should be extended to handle methods whose body is if/else or a case expression with a default branch.

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

            swagger_controller :users, "User Management", resource_path: "/api/users"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                notes "This lists a user and his alarms"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                summary "Create new alarm"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                param :user, :email, :string, :required, "User email"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                param :user, :phone_number, :string, :required, "User phone number"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Align the elements of a hash literal if they span more than one line.
    Open

                lenguage: user.lenguage,

    Check that the keys, separators, and values of a multi-line hash literal are aligned according to configuration. The configuration options are:

    - key (left align keys)
    - separator (align hash rockets and colons, right align keys)
    - table (left align keys, hash rockets, and values)

    The treatment of hashes passed as the last argument to a method call can also be configured. The options are:

    - always_inspect
    - always_ignore
    - ignore_implicit (without curly braces)
    - ignore_explicit (with curly braces)

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: key (default)
    # EnforcedColonStyle: key (default)
    
    # good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    
    # bad
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: separator
    # EnforcedColonStyle: separator
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
    # EnforcedColonStyle: table
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba:  baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Inconsistent indentation detected.
    Open

                respond_to do |format|
                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 
                end

    This cops checks for inconsistent indentation.

    Example:

    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
         puts 'world'
      end
    end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                if params[:user]

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Use the new Ruby 1.9 hash syntax.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

    This cop checks hash literal syntax.

    It can enforce either the use of the class hash rocket syntax or the use of the newer Ruby 1.9 syntax (when applicable).

    A separate offense is registered for each problematic pair.

    The supported styles are:

    • ruby19 - forces use of the 1.9 syntax (e.g. {a: 1}) when hashes have all symbols for keys
    • hash_rockets - forces use of hash rockets for all hashes
    • nomixedkeys - simply checks for hashes with mixed syntaxes
    • ruby19nomixed_keys - forces use of ruby 1.9 syntax and forbids mixed syntax hashes

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19 (default)

    # bad
    {:a => 2}
    {b: 1, :c => 2}
    
    # good
    {a: 2, b: 1}
    {:c => 2, 'd' => 2} # acceptable since 'd' isn't a symbol
    {d: 1, 'e' => 2} # technically not forbidden

    Example: EnforcedStyle: hash_rockets

    # bad
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 5}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: nomixedkeys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 2}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 1, d: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19nomixed_keys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 2, 'd' => 3} # should just use hash rockets
    
    # good
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {:c => 3, 'd' => 4}

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

            return users.collect do |user|

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    end at 77, 16 is not aligned with respond_to do |format| at 75, 17.
    Open

                    end

    This cop checks whether the end keywords are aligned properly for do end blocks.

    Three modes are supported through the EnforcedStyleAlignWith configuration parameter:

    start_of_block : the end shall be aligned with the start of the line where the do appeared.

    start_of_line : the end shall be aligned with the start of the line where the expression started.

    either (which is the default) : the end is allowed to be in either location. The autofixer will default to start_of_line.

    Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: either (default)

    # bad
    
    foo.bar
       .each do
         baz
           end
    
    # good
    
    variable = lambda do |i|
      i
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: startofblock

    # bad
    
    foo.bar
       .each do
         baz
           end
    
    # good
    
    foo.bar
      .each do
         baz
       end

    Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: startofline

    # bad
    
    foo.bar
       .each do
         baz
           end
    
    # good
    
    foo.bar
      .each do
         baz
    end

    Redundant return detected.
    Open

         return {id: user.id,

    This cop checks for redundant return expressions.

    Example:

    def test
      return something
    end
    
    def test
      one
      two
      three
      return something
    end

    It should be extended to handle methods whose body is if/else or a case expression with a default branch.

    Line is too long. [102/80]
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

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

                param :user, :email_actived, :boolean, :required, "User email actived"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Redundant curly braces around a hash parameter.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

    This cop checks for braces around the last parameter in a method call if the last parameter is a hash. It supports braces, no_braces and context_dependent styles.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: braces

    # The `braces` style enforces braces around all method
    # parameters that are hashes.
    
    # bad
    some_method(x, y, a: 1, b: 2)
    
    # good
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2})

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_braces (default)

    # The `no_braces` style checks that the last parameter doesn't
    # have braces around it.
    
    # bad
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2})
    
    # good
    some_method(x, y, a: 1, b: 2)

    Example: EnforcedStyle: context_dependent

    # The `context_dependent` style checks that the last parameter
    # doesn't have braces around it, but requires braces if the
    # second to last parameter is also a hash literal.
    
    # bad
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2})
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2}, a: 1, b: 2)
    
    # good
    some_method(x, y, a: 1, b: 2)
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2}, {a: 1, b: 2})

    Redundant curly braces around a hash parameter.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

    This cop checks for braces around the last parameter in a method call if the last parameter is a hash. It supports braces, no_braces and context_dependent styles.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: braces

    # The `braces` style enforces braces around all method
    # parameters that are hashes.
    
    # bad
    some_method(x, y, a: 1, b: 2)
    
    # good
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2})

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_braces (default)

    # The `no_braces` style checks that the last parameter doesn't
    # have braces around it.
    
    # bad
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2})
    
    # good
    some_method(x, y, a: 1, b: 2)

    Example: EnforcedStyle: context_dependent

    # The `context_dependent` style checks that the last parameter
    # doesn't have braces around it, but requires braces if the
    # second to last parameter is also a hash literal.
    
    # bad
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2})
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2}, a: 1, b: 2)
    
    # good
    some_method(x, y, a: 1, b: 2)
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2}, {a: 1, b: 2})

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

                response :not_acceptable, "The request you made is not acceptable"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                param :user, :lenguage, :string, :required, "User lenguage"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Keep a blank line before and after private.
    Open

        private 

    Access modifiers should be surrounded by blank lines.

    Example:

    # bad
    class Foo
      def bar; end
      private
      def baz; end
    end
    
    # good
    class Foo
      def bar; end
    
      private
    
      def baz; end
    end

    Surrounding space missing for operator =>.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

    Checks that operators have space around them, except for ** which should not have surrounding space.

    Example:

    # bad
    total = 3*4
    "apple"+"juice"
    my_number = 38/4
    a ** b
    
    # good
    total = 3 * 4
    "apple" + "juice"
    my_number = 38 / 4
    a**b

    Trailing whitespace detected.
    Open

                        format.json {render :json => generate_error(t("api.error_params")), status: :not_acceptable} 

    Line is too long. [90/80]
    Open

                                        UserAlarm.create(user_id: user.id, alarm_id: alarm.id)

    Align the elements of a hash literal if they span more than one line.
    Open

                phone_number:  user.phone_number,

    Check that the keys, separators, and values of a multi-line hash literal are aligned according to configuration. The configuration options are:

    - key (left align keys)
    - separator (align hash rockets and colons, right align keys)
    - table (left align keys, hash rockets, and values)

    The treatment of hashes passed as the last argument to a method call can also be configured. The options are:

    - always_inspect
    - always_ignore
    - ignore_implicit (without curly braces)
    - ignore_explicit (with curly braces)

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: key (default)
    # EnforcedColonStyle: key (default)
    
    # good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    
    # bad
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: separator
    # EnforcedColonStyle: separator
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
    # EnforcedColonStyle: table
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba:  baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                summary "Create new alarm"

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Extra empty line detected at class body end.
    Open

    
        end

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: empty_lines

    # good
    
    class Foo
    
      def bar
        # ...
      end
    
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: emptylinesexcept_namespace

    # good
    
    class Foo
      class Bar
    
        # ...
    
      end
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: emptylinesspecial

    # good
    class Foo
    
      def bar; end
    
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: noemptylines (default)

    # good
    
    class Foo
      def bar
        # ...
      end
    end

    Space missing inside }.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

    Checks that block braces have or don't have surrounding space inside them on configuration. For blocks taking parameters, it checks that the left brace has or doesn't have trailing space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that block braces have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {puts e}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { puts e }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that block braces don't
    # have surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each { puts e }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {puts e}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces don't have a space in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {   }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each { }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces have at least a spece in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each {   }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true (default)

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `true` enforces that
    # there is a space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `false` enforces that
    # there is no space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }

    Inconsistent indentation detected.
    Open

        def alarms_activated(user)
          return UserAlarm.where(user_id: user.id).each do |alarm|
            {
                id: alarm.id,
                alarm_id: alarm.alarm_id

    This cops checks for inconsistent indentation.

    Example:

    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
         puts 'world'
      end
    end

    Trailing whitespace detected.
    Open

            

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

            include JsonResponses

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Use the new Ruby 1.9 hash syntax.
    Open

                        format.json {render :json => generate_error(t("api.error_params")), status: :not_acceptable} 

    This cop checks hash literal syntax.

    It can enforce either the use of the class hash rocket syntax or the use of the newer Ruby 1.9 syntax (when applicable).

    A separate offense is registered for each problematic pair.

    The supported styles are:

    • ruby19 - forces use of the 1.9 syntax (e.g. {a: 1}) when hashes have all symbols for keys
    • hash_rockets - forces use of hash rockets for all hashes
    • nomixedkeys - simply checks for hashes with mixed syntaxes
    • ruby19nomixed_keys - forces use of ruby 1.9 syntax and forbids mixed syntax hashes

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19 (default)

    # bad
    {:a => 2}
    {b: 1, :c => 2}
    
    # good
    {a: 2, b: 1}
    {:c => 2, 'd' => 2} # acceptable since 'd' isn't a symbol
    {d: 1, 'e' => 2} # technically not forbidden

    Example: EnforcedStyle: hash_rockets

    # bad
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 5}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: nomixedkeys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 2}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 1, d: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19nomixed_keys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 2, 'd' => 3} # should just use hash rockets
    
    # good
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {:c => 3, 'd' => 4}

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

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

                param :user, :gender, :string, :required, "User gender"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                                        UserAlarm.create(user_id: user.id, alarm_id: alarm.id)

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

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

                response :not_acceptable, "The request you made is not acceptable"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

            {

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Space missing inside }.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

    Checks that block braces have or don't have surrounding space inside them on configuration. For blocks taking parameters, it checks that the left brace has or doesn't have trailing space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that block braces have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {puts e}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { puts e }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that block braces don't
    # have surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each { puts e }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {puts e}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces don't have a space in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {   }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each { }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces have at least a spece in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each {   }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true (default)

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `true` enforces that
    # there is a space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `false` enforces that
    # there is no space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }

    Line is too long. [81/80]
    Open

            swagger_controller :users, "User Management", resource_path: "/api/users"

    Align the elements of a hash literal if they span more than one line.
    Open

                sms_actived: user.sms_actived,

    Check that the keys, separators, and values of a multi-line hash literal are aligned according to configuration. The configuration options are:

    - key (left align keys)
    - separator (align hash rockets and colons, right align keys)
    - table (left align keys, hash rockets, and values)

    The treatment of hashes passed as the last argument to a method call can also be configured. The options are:

    - always_inspect
    - always_ignore
    - ignore_implicit (without curly braces)
    - ignore_explicit (with curly braces)

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: key (default)
    # EnforcedColonStyle: key (default)
    
    # good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    
    # bad
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: separator
    # EnforcedColonStyle: separator
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
    # EnforcedColonStyle: table
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba:  baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Line is too long. [82/80]
    Open

                param :user, :email_actived, :boolean, :required, "User email actived"

    end at 109, 4 is not aligned with UserAlarm.where(user_id: user.id).each do |alarm| at 104, 13 or return UserAlarm.where(user_id: user.id).each do |alarm| at 104, 6.
    Open

        end

    This cop checks whether the end keywords are aligned properly for do end blocks.

    Three modes are supported through the EnforcedStyleAlignWith configuration parameter:

    start_of_block : the end shall be aligned with the start of the line where the do appeared.

    start_of_line : the end shall be aligned with the start of the line where the expression started.

    either (which is the default) : the end is allowed to be in either location. The autofixer will default to start_of_line.

    Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: either (default)

    # bad
    
    foo.bar
       .each do
         baz
           end
    
    # good
    
    variable = lambda do |i|
      i
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: startofblock

    # bad
    
    foo.bar
       .each do
         baz
           end
    
    # good
    
    foo.bar
      .each do
         baz
       end

    Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: startofline

    # bad
    
    foo.bar
       .each do
         baz
           end
    
    # good
    
    foo.bar
      .each do
         baz
    end

    Line is too long. [113/80]
    Open

                        format.json {render :json => generate_error(t("api.error_params")), status: :not_acceptable} 

    Use the new Ruby 1.9 hash syntax.
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

    This cop checks hash literal syntax.

    It can enforce either the use of the class hash rocket syntax or the use of the newer Ruby 1.9 syntax (when applicable).

    A separate offense is registered for each problematic pair.

    The supported styles are:

    • ruby19 - forces use of the 1.9 syntax (e.g. {a: 1}) when hashes have all symbols for keys
    • hash_rockets - forces use of hash rockets for all hashes
    • nomixedkeys - simply checks for hashes with mixed syntaxes
    • ruby19nomixed_keys - forces use of ruby 1.9 syntax and forbids mixed syntax hashes

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19 (default)

    # bad
    {:a => 2}
    {b: 1, :c => 2}
    
    # good
    {a: 2, b: 1}
    {:c => 2, 'd' => 2} # acceptable since 'd' isn't a symbol
    {d: 1, 'e' => 2} # technically not forbidden

    Example: EnforcedStyle: hash_rockets

    # bad
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 5}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: nomixedkeys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 2}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 1, d: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19nomixed_keys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 2, 'd' => 3} # should just use hash rockets
    
    # good
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {:c => 3, 'd' => 4}

    Use the new Ruby 1.9 hash syntax.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

    This cop checks hash literal syntax.

    It can enforce either the use of the class hash rocket syntax or the use of the newer Ruby 1.9 syntax (when applicable).

    A separate offense is registered for each problematic pair.

    The supported styles are:

    • ruby19 - forces use of the 1.9 syntax (e.g. {a: 1}) when hashes have all symbols for keys
    • hash_rockets - forces use of hash rockets for all hashes
    • nomixedkeys - simply checks for hashes with mixed syntaxes
    • ruby19nomixed_keys - forces use of ruby 1.9 syntax and forbids mixed syntax hashes

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19 (default)

    # bad
    {:a => 2}
    {b: 1, :c => 2}
    
    # good
    {a: 2, b: 1}
    {:c => 2, 'd' => 2} # acceptable since 'd' isn't a symbol
    {d: 1, 'e' => 2} # technically not forbidden

    Example: EnforcedStyle: hash_rockets

    # bad
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 5}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: nomixedkeys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 2}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 1, d: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19nomixed_keys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 2, 'd' => 3} # should just use hash rockets
    
    # good
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {:c => 3, 'd' => 4}

    Redundant return detected.
    Open

          return UserAlarm.where(user_id: user.id).each do |alarm|

    This cop checks for redundant return expressions.

    Example:

    def test
      return something
    end
    
    def test
      one
      two
      three
      return something
    end

    It should be extended to handle methods whose body is if/else or a case expression with a default branch.

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

                param :user, :year_of_birth, :integer, :required, "User year of birth"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                param :alarm, :actived, :boolean, :required, "Alarms actived"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Align the elements of a hash literal if they span more than one line.
    Open

                created_at: user.created_at,

    Check that the keys, separators, and values of a multi-line hash literal are aligned according to configuration. The configuration options are:

    - key (left align keys)
    - separator (align hash rockets and colons, right align keys)
    - table (left align keys, hash rockets, and values)

    The treatment of hashes passed as the last argument to a method call can also be configured. The options are:

    - always_inspect
    - always_ignore
    - ignore_implicit (without curly braces)
    - ignore_explicit (with curly braces)

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: key (default)
    # EnforcedColonStyle: key (default)
    
    # good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    
    # bad
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: separator
    # EnforcedColonStyle: separator
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
    # EnforcedColonStyle: table
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba:  baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                        if params['alarm']

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

            params.require(:user).permit(:email, :phone_number, :gender, :year_of_birth, :lenguage, :email_actived, :sms_actived)

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

         return {id: user.id,

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

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

    Trailing whitespace detected.
    Open

            skip_before_filter :verify_authenticity_token  

    Inconsistent indentation detected.
    Open

        def users_params
            params.require(:user).permit(:email, :phone_number, :gender, :year_of_birth, :lenguage, :email_actived, :sms_actived)
        end

    This cops checks for inconsistent indentation.

    Example:

    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
         puts 'world'
      end
    end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                    user = User.new(users_params)

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Line is too long. [125/80]
    Open

            params.require(:user).permit(:email, :phone_number, :gender, :year_of_birth, :lenguage, :email_actived, :sms_actived)

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

                response :ok, "Success"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Use 2 (not 5) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                     respond_to do |format|

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Line is too long. [105/80]
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

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

                summary "Fetches User and his alarms"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Align the elements of a hash literal if they span more than one line.
    Open

                email_actived: user.email_actived,

    Check that the keys, separators, and values of a multi-line hash literal are aligned according to configuration. The configuration options are:

    - key (left align keys)
    - separator (align hash rockets and colons, right align keys)
    - table (left align keys, hash rockets, and values)

    The treatment of hashes passed as the last argument to a method call can also be configured. The options are:

    - always_inspect
    - always_ignore
    - ignore_implicit (without curly braces)
    - ignore_explicit (with curly braces)

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: key (default)
    # EnforcedColonStyle: key (default)
    
    # good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    
    # bad
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: separator
    # EnforcedColonStyle: separator
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
    # EnforcedColonStyle: table
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba:  baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Inconsistent indentation detected.
    Open

        def get_user(user)
         return {id: user.id,
                email: user.email,
                phone_number:  user.phone_number,
                gender: user.gender,

    This cops checks for inconsistent indentation.

    Example:

    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
         puts 'world'
      end
    end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                summary "Fetches all User items"

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                summary "Fetches User and his alarms"

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                get_user(user)

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Use 2 spaces for indentation in a hash, relative to the start of the line where the left curly brace is.
    Open

                id: alarm.id,

    This cops checks the indentation of the first key in a hash literal where the opening brace and the first key are on separate lines. The other keys' indentations are handled by the AlignHash cop.

    By default, Hash literals that are arguments in a method call with parentheses, and where the opening curly brace of the hash is on the same line as the opening parenthesis of the method call, shall have their first key indented one step (two spaces) more than the position inside the opening parenthesis.

    Other hash literals shall have their first key indented one step more than the start of the line where the opening curly brace is.

    This default style is called 'specialinsideparentheses'. Alternative styles are 'consistent' and 'align_braces'. Here are examples:

    Example: EnforcedStyle: specialinsideparentheses (default)

    # The `special_inside_parentheses` style enforces that the first key
    # in a hash literal where the opening brace and the first key are on
    # separate lines is indented one step (two spaces) more than the
    # position inside the opening parentheses.
    
    # bad
    hash = {
      key: :value
    }
    and_in_a_method_call({
      no: :difference
                         })
    
    # good
    special_inside_parentheses
    hash = {
      key: :value
    }
    but_in_a_method_call({
                           its_like: :this
                         })

    Example: EnforcedStyle: consistent

    # The `consistent` style enforces that the first key in a hash
    # literal where the opening brace and the first key are on
    # seprate lines is indented the same as a hash literal which is not
    # defined inside a method call.
    
    # bad
    hash = {
      key: :value
    }
    but_in_a_method_call({
                           its_like: :this
                          })
    
    # good
    hash = {
      key: :value
    }
    and_in_a_method_call({
      no: :difference
    })

    Example: EnforcedStyle: align_braces

    # The `align_brackets` style enforces that the opening and closing
    # braces are indented to the same position.
    
    # bad
    and_now_for_something = {
                              completely: :different
    }
    
    # good
    and_now_for_something = {
                              completely: :different
                            }

    Surrounding space missing for operator =>.
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

    Checks that operators have space around them, except for ** which should not have surrounding space.

    Example:

    # bad
    total = 3*4
    "apple"+"juice"
    my_number = 38/4
    a ** b
    
    # good
    total = 3 * 4
    "apple" + "juice"
    my_number = 38 / 4
    a**b

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

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

    Trailing whitespace detected.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

    Line is too long. [82/80]
    Open

                param :user, :year_of_birth, :integer, :required, "User year of birth"

    Redundant curly braces around a hash parameter.
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

    This cop checks for braces around the last parameter in a method call if the last parameter is a hash. It supports braces, no_braces and context_dependent styles.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: braces

    # The `braces` style enforces braces around all method
    # parameters that are hashes.
    
    # bad
    some_method(x, y, a: 1, b: 2)
    
    # good
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2})

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_braces (default)

    # The `no_braces` style checks that the last parameter doesn't
    # have braces around it.
    
    # bad
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2})
    
    # good
    some_method(x, y, a: 1, b: 2)

    Example: EnforcedStyle: context_dependent

    # The `context_dependent` style checks that the last parameter
    # doesn't have braces around it, but requires braces if the
    # second to last parameter is also a hash literal.
    
    # bad
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2})
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2}, a: 1, b: 2)
    
    # good
    some_method(x, y, a: 1, b: 2)
    some_method(x, y, {a: 1, b: 2}, {a: 1, b: 2})

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

            swagger_controller :users, "User Management", resource_path: "/api/users"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                response :ok, "Success"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Indent access modifiers like private.
    Open

        private 

    Modifiers should be indented as deep as method definitions, or as deep as the class/module keyword, depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: indent (default)

    # bad
    class Plumbus
    private
      def smooth; end
    end
    
    # good
    class Plumbus
      private
      def smooth; end
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyle: outdent

    # bad
    class Plumbus
      private
      def smooth; end
    end
    
    # good
    class Plumbus
    private
      def smooth; end
    end

    Use 2 (not 1) spaces for indentation.
    Open

         return {id: user.id,

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Closing hash brace must be on the same line as the last hash element when opening brace is on the same line as the first hash element.
    Open

                }

    This cop checks that the closing brace in a hash literal is either on the same line as the last hash element, or a new line.

    When using the symmetrical (default) style:

    If a hash's opening brace is on the same line as the first element of the hash, then the closing brace should be on the same line as the last element of the hash.

    If a hash's opening brace is on the line above the first element of the hash, then the closing brace should be on the line below the last element of the hash.

    When using the new_line style:

    The closing brace of a multi-line hash literal must be on the line after the last element of the hash.

    When using the same_line style:

    The closing brace of a multi-line hash literal must be on the same line as the last element of the hash.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: symmetrical (default)

    # bad
      { a: 1,
        b: 2
      }
      # bad
      {
        a: 1,
        b: 2 }
    
      # good
      { a: 1,
        b: 2 }
    
      # good
      {
        a: 1,
        b: 2
      }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: new_line

    # bad
      {
        a: 1,
        b: 2 }
    
      # bad
      { a: 1,
        b: 2 }
    
      # good
      { a: 1,
        b: 2
      }
    
      # good
      {
        a: 1,
        b: 2
      }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: same_line

    # bad
      { a: 1,
        b: 2
      }
    
      # bad
      {
        a: 1,
        b: 2
      }
    
      # good
      {
        a: 1,
        b: 2 }
    
      # good
      { a: 1,
        b: 2 }

    Surrounding space missing for operator =>.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

    Checks that operators have space around them, except for ** which should not have surrounding space.

    Example:

    # bad
    total = 3*4
    "apple"+"juice"
    my_number = 38/4
    a ** b
    
    # good
    total = 3 * 4
    "apple" + "juice"
    my_number = 38 / 4
    a**b

    Trailing whitespace detected.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

    Align the elements of a hash literal if they span more than one line.
    Open

                alarms_activated: alarms_activated(user)

    Check that the keys, separators, and values of a multi-line hash literal are aligned according to configuration. The configuration options are:

    - key (left align keys)
    - separator (align hash rockets and colons, right align keys)
    - table (left align keys, hash rockets, and values)

    The treatment of hashes passed as the last argument to a method call can also be configured. The options are:

    - always_inspect
    - always_ignore
    - ignore_implicit (without curly braces)
    - ignore_explicit (with curly braces)

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: key (default)
    # EnforcedColonStyle: key (default)
    
    # good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    
    # bad
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: separator
    # EnforcedColonStyle: separator
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
    # EnforcedColonStyle: table
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba:  baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    end at 86, 6 is not aligned with def at 82, 4.
    Open

          end 

    This cop checks whether the end keywords of method definitions are aligned properly.

    Two modes are supported through the EnforcedStyleAlignWith configuration parameter. If it's set to start_of_line (which is the default), the end shall be aligned with the start of the line where the def keyword is. If it's set to def, the end shall be aligned with the def keyword.

    Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: startofline (default)

    # bad
    
    private def foo
                end
    
    # good
    
    private def foo
    end

    Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: def

    # bad
    
    private def foo
                end
    
    # good
    
    private def foo
            end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                        format.json {render :json => generate_error(t("api.error_params")), status: :not_acceptable} 

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

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

    Line is too long. [115/80]
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

    Missing top-level class documentation comment.
    Open

        class UsersController < Api::BaseController

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

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

    Example:

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

    Use the new Ruby 1.9 hash syntax.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

    This cop checks hash literal syntax.

    It can enforce either the use of the class hash rocket syntax or the use of the newer Ruby 1.9 syntax (when applicable).

    A separate offense is registered for each problematic pair.

    The supported styles are:

    • ruby19 - forces use of the 1.9 syntax (e.g. {a: 1}) when hashes have all symbols for keys
    • hash_rockets - forces use of hash rockets for all hashes
    • nomixedkeys - simply checks for hashes with mixed syntaxes
    • ruby19nomixed_keys - forces use of ruby 1.9 syntax and forbids mixed syntax hashes

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19 (default)

    # bad
    {:a => 2}
    {b: 1, :c => 2}
    
    # good
    {a: 2, b: 1}
    {:c => 2, 'd' => 2} # acceptable since 'd' isn't a symbol
    {d: 1, 'e' => 2} # technically not forbidden

    Example: EnforcedStyle: hash_rockets

    # bad
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 5}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: nomixedkeys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 2}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 1, d: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19nomixed_keys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 2, 'd' => 3} # should just use hash rockets
    
    # good
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {:c => 3, 'd' => 4}

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

                param :user, :sms_actived, :boolean, :required, "User SMS actived"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Use the new Ruby 1.9 hash syntax.
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

    This cop checks hash literal syntax.

    It can enforce either the use of the class hash rocket syntax or the use of the newer Ruby 1.9 syntax (when applicable).

    A separate offense is registered for each problematic pair.

    The supported styles are:

    • ruby19 - forces use of the 1.9 syntax (e.g. {a: 1}) when hashes have all symbols for keys
    • hash_rockets - forces use of hash rockets for all hashes
    • nomixedkeys - simply checks for hashes with mixed syntaxes
    • ruby19nomixed_keys - forces use of ruby 1.9 syntax and forbids mixed syntax hashes

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19 (default)

    # bad
    {:a => 2}
    {b: 1, :c => 2}
    
    # good
    {a: 2, b: 1}
    {:c => 2, 'd' => 2} # acceptable since 'd' isn't a symbol
    {d: 1, 'e' => 2} # technically not forbidden

    Example: EnforcedStyle: hash_rockets

    # bad
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 5}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: nomixedkeys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 2}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 1, d: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19nomixed_keys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 2, 'd' => 3} # should just use hash rockets
    
    # good
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {:c => 3, 'd' => 4}

    Align the elements of a hash literal if they span more than one line.
    Open

                year_of_birth: user.year_of_birth,

    Check that the keys, separators, and values of a multi-line hash literal are aligned according to configuration. The configuration options are:

    - key (left align keys)
    - separator (align hash rockets and colons, right align keys)
    - table (left align keys, hash rockets, and values)

    The treatment of hashes passed as the last argument to a method call can also be configured. The options are:

    - always_inspect
    - always_ignore
    - ignore_implicit (without curly braces)
    - ignore_explicit (with curly braces)

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: key (default)
    # EnforcedColonStyle: key (default)
    
    # good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    
    # bad
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: separator
    # EnforcedColonStyle: separator
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
    # EnforcedColonStyle: table
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba:  baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Inconsistent indentation detected.
    Open

        def get_users(users)
            return users.collect do |user|
                get_user(user)
            end
          end 

    This cops checks for inconsistent indentation.

    Example:

    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
         puts 'world'
      end
    end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                                if params['alarm'][alarm_name] == true

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Space missing inside {.
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

    Checks that block braces have or don't have surrounding space inside them on configuration. For blocks taking parameters, it checks that the left brace has or doesn't have trailing space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that block braces have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {puts e}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { puts e }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that block braces don't
    # have surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each { puts e }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {puts e}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces don't have a space in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {   }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each { }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces have at least a spece in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each {   }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true (default)

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `true` enforces that
    # there is a space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `false` enforces that
    # there is no space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }

    Space missing inside {.
    Open

                        format.json {render :json => generate_error(t("api.error_params")), status: :not_acceptable} 

    Checks that block braces have or don't have surrounding space inside them on configuration. For blocks taking parameters, it checks that the left brace has or doesn't have trailing space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that block braces have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {puts e}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { puts e }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that block braces don't
    # have surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each { puts e }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {puts e}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces don't have a space in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {   }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each { }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces have at least a spece in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each {   }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true (default)

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `true` enforces that
    # there is a space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `false` enforces that
    # there is no space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }

    Space missing inside }.
    Open

                        format.json {render :json => generate_error(t("api.error_params")), status: :not_acceptable} 

    Checks that block braces have or don't have surrounding space inside them on configuration. For blocks taking parameters, it checks that the left brace has or doesn't have trailing space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that block braces have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {puts e}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { puts e }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that block braces don't
    # have surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each { puts e }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {puts e}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces don't have a space in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {   }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each { }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces have at least a spece in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each {   }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true (default)

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `true` enforces that
    # there is a space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `false` enforces that
    # there is no space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }

    Use next to skip iteration.
    Open

                                if params['alarm'][alarm_name] == true

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: skipmodifierifs (default)

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: always

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

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

                param :user, :id, :integer, :required, "User id"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                response :ok, "Success"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                notes "This creates a new alarm"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                param :alarm, :name, :hash, :required, "Hash alarms name"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Align the elements of a hash literal if they span more than one line.
    Open

                email: user.email,

    Check that the keys, separators, and values of a multi-line hash literal are aligned according to configuration. The configuration options are:

    - key (left align keys)
    - separator (align hash rockets and colons, right align keys)
    - table (left align keys, hash rockets, and values)

    The treatment of hashes passed as the last argument to a method call can also be configured. The options are:

    - always_inspect
    - always_ignore
    - ignore_implicit (without curly braces)
    - ignore_explicit (with curly braces)

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: key (default)
    # EnforcedColonStyle: key (default)
    
    # good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    
    # bad
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: separator
    # EnforcedColonStyle: separator
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
    # EnforcedColonStyle: table
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba:  baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                                    alarm = Alarm.find_by(name: alarm_name)

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Space missing inside {.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

    Checks that block braces have or don't have surrounding space inside them on configuration. For blocks taking parameters, it checks that the left brace has or doesn't have trailing space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that block braces have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {puts e}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { puts e }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that block braces don't
    # have surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each { puts e }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {puts e}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces don't have a space in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {   }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each { }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces have at least a spece in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each {   }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true (default)

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `true` enforces that
    # there is a space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `false` enforces that
    # there is no space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }

    Space inside } missing.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

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

    Trailing whitespace detected.
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

    Use the new Ruby 1.9 hash syntax.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:users=> get_users(users)}), status: :ok} 

    This cop checks hash literal syntax.

    It can enforce either the use of the class hash rocket syntax or the use of the newer Ruby 1.9 syntax (when applicable).

    A separate offense is registered for each problematic pair.

    The supported styles are:

    • ruby19 - forces use of the 1.9 syntax (e.g. {a: 1}) when hashes have all symbols for keys
    • hash_rockets - forces use of hash rockets for all hashes
    • nomixedkeys - simply checks for hashes with mixed syntaxes
    • ruby19nomixed_keys - forces use of ruby 1.9 syntax and forbids mixed syntax hashes

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19 (default)

    # bad
    {:a => 2}
    {b: 1, :c => 2}
    
    # good
    {a: 2, b: 1}
    {:c => 2, 'd' => 2} # acceptable since 'd' isn't a symbol
    {d: 1, 'e' => 2} # technically not forbidden

    Example: EnforcedStyle: hash_rockets

    # bad
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 5}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: nomixedkeys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, b: 2}
    {c: 1, 'd' => 2}
    
    # good
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 1, d: 2}

    Example: EnforcedStyle: ruby19nomixed_keys

    # bad
    {:a => 1, :b => 2}
    {c: 2, 'd' => 3} # should just use hash rockets
    
    # good
    {a: 1, b: 2}
    {:c => 3, 'd' => 4}

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

                response :not_acceptable, "The request you made is not acceptable"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Align the elements of a hash literal if they span more than one line.
    Open

                updated_at: user.updated_at,

    Check that the keys, separators, and values of a multi-line hash literal are aligned according to configuration. The configuration options are:

    - key (left align keys)
    - separator (align hash rockets and colons, right align keys)
    - table (left align keys, hash rockets, and values)

    The treatment of hashes passed as the last argument to a method call can also be configured. The options are:

    - always_inspect
    - always_ignore
    - ignore_implicit (without curly braces)
    - ignore_explicit (with curly braces)

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: key (default)
    # EnforcedColonStyle: key (default)
    
    # good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    
    # bad
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: separator
    # EnforcedColonStyle: separator
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
    # EnforcedColonStyle: table
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba:  baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Use 2 (not 3) spaces for indentation.
    Open

               user = User.find(params[:id])

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Space missing inside {.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

    Checks that block braces have or don't have surrounding space inside them on configuration. For blocks taking parameters, it checks that the left brace has or doesn't have trailing space depending on configuration.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space (default)

    # The `space` style enforces that block braces have
    # surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {puts e}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { puts e }

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

    # The `no_space` style enforces that block braces don't
    # have surrounding space.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each { puts e }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {puts e}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: no_space (default)

    # The `no_space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces don't have a space in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {   }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each { }
    
    # good
    some_array.each {}

    Example: EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces: space

    # The `space` EnforcedStyleForEmptyBraces style enforces that
    # block braces have at least a spece in between when empty.
    
    # bad
    some_array.each {}
    
    # good
    some_array.each { }
    some_array.each {  }
    some_array.each {   }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true (default)

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `true` enforces that
    # there is a space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }

    Example: SpaceBeforeBlockParameters: true

    # The SpaceBeforeBlockParameters style set to `false` enforces that
    # there is no space between `{` and `|`. Overrides `EnforcedStyle`
    # if there is a conflict.
    
    # bad
    [1, 2, 3].each { |n| n * 2 }
    
    # good
    [1, 2, 3].each {|n| n * 2 }

    Space inside { missing.
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

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

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

                summary "Fetches all User items"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    Align the elements of a hash literal if they span more than one line.
    Open

                gender: user.gender,

    Check that the keys, separators, and values of a multi-line hash literal are aligned according to configuration. The configuration options are:

    - key (left align keys)
    - separator (align hash rockets and colons, right align keys)
    - table (left align keys, hash rockets, and values)

    The treatment of hashes passed as the last argument to a method call can also be configured. The options are:

    - always_inspect
    - always_ignore
    - ignore_implicit (without curly braces)
    - ignore_explicit (with curly braces)

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: key (default)
    # EnforcedColonStyle: key (default)
    
    # good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    
    # bad
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: separator
    # EnforcedColonStyle: separator
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
       ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba => baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }

    Example:

    # EnforcedHashRocketStyle: table
    # EnforcedColonStyle: table
    
    #good
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba:  baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
      :ba  => baz
    }
    
    #bad
    {
      foo: bar,
      ba: baz
    }
    {
      :foo => bar,
       :ba => baz
    }

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                users = User.all

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation.
    Open

                            params['alarm'].keys.each do |alarm_name|

    This cops checks for indentation that doesn't use the specified number of spaces.

    See also the IndentationConsistency cop which is the companion to this one.

    Example:

    # bad
    class A
     def test
      puts 'hello'
     end
    end
    
    # good
    class A
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end

    Example: IgnoredPatterns: ['^\s*module']

    # bad
    module A
    class B
      def test
      puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end
    
    # good
    module A
    class B
      def test
        puts 'hello'
      end
    end
    end

    Space inside } missing.
    Open

                    format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :ok} 

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

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

    Space inside } missing.
    Open

                            format.json {render :json => generate_success({:user=> get_user(user)}), status: :created} 

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: no_space

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

    Example: EnforcedStyle: compact

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

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

                notes "This lists all the active users"

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

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

                        format.json {render :json => generate_error(t("api.error_params")), status: :not_acceptable} 

    Checks if uses of quotes match the configured preference.

    Example: EnforcedStyle: single_quotes (default)

    # bad
    "No special symbols"
    "No string interpolation"
    "Just text"
    
    # good
    'No special symbols'
    'No string interpolation'
    'Just text'
    "Wait! What's #{this}!"

    Example: EnforcedStyle: double_quotes

    # bad
    'Just some text'
    'No special chars or interpolation'
    
    # good
    "Just some text"
    "No special chars or interpolation"
    "Every string in #{project} uses double_quotes"

    There are no issues that match your filters.

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