snowyu/front-matter-markdown.js

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src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js

Summary

Maintainability
F
4 days
Test Coverage
F
37%

Function exports has a Cognitive Complexity of 51 (exceeds 5 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

module.exports = function(src) {
  var out = []
    , link
    , text
    , href
Severity: Minor
Found in src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js - About 7 hrs to fix

Cognitive Complexity

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

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

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

Further reading

Function exports has 122 lines of code (exceeds 25 allowed). Consider refactoring.
Open

module.exports = function(src) {
  var out = []
    , link
    , text
    , href
Severity: Major
Found in src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js - About 4 hrs to fix

    Infix operators must be spaced.
    Open

            out = out.concat(cap[0].substring(cap[0].indexOf(cap[2])+cap[2].length));

    require spacing around infix operators (space-infix-ops)

    While formatting preferences are very personal, a number of style guides require spaces around operators, such as:

    var sum = 1 + 2;

    The proponents of these extra spaces believe it make the code easier to read and can more easily highlight potential errors, such as:

    var sum = i+++2;

    While this is valid JavaScript syntax, it is hard to determine what the author intended.

    Rule Details

    This rule is aimed at ensuring there are spaces around infix operators.

    Options

    This rule accepts a single options argument with the following defaults:

    "space-infix-ops": ["error", {"int32Hint": false}]

    int32Hint

    Set the int32Hint option to true (default is false) to allow write a|0 without space.

    var foo = bar|0; // `foo` is forced to be signed 32 bit integer

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

    /*eslint space-infix-ops: "error"*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    a+b
    
    a+ b
    
    a +b
    
    a?b:c
    
    const a={b:1};
    
    var {a=0}=bar;
    
    function foo(a=0) { }

    Examples of correct code for this rule:

    /*eslint space-infix-ops: "error"*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    a + b
    
    a       + b
    
    a ? b : c
    
    const a = {b:1};
    
    var {a = 0} = bar;
    
    function foo(a = 0) { }

    Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

    Infix operators must be spaced.
    Open

            out = out.concat(cap[0].substring(cap[0].indexOf(cap[2])+cap[2].length));

    require spacing around infix operators (space-infix-ops)

    While formatting preferences are very personal, a number of style guides require spaces around operators, such as:

    var sum = 1 + 2;

    The proponents of these extra spaces believe it make the code easier to read and can more easily highlight potential errors, such as:

    var sum = i+++2;

    While this is valid JavaScript syntax, it is hard to determine what the author intended.

    Rule Details

    This rule is aimed at ensuring there are spaces around infix operators.

    Options

    This rule accepts a single options argument with the following defaults:

    "space-infix-ops": ["error", {"int32Hint": false}]

    int32Hint

    Set the int32Hint option to true (default is false) to allow write a|0 without space.

    var foo = bar|0; // `foo` is forced to be signed 32 bit integer

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule:

    /*eslint space-infix-ops: "error"*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    a+b
    
    a+ b
    
    a +b
    
    a?b:c
    
    const a={b:1};
    
    var {a=0}=bar;
    
    function foo(a=0) { }

    Examples of correct code for this rule:

    /*eslint space-infix-ops: "error"*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    a + b
    
    a       + b
    
    a ? b : c
    
    const a = {b:1};
    
    var {a = 0} = bar;
    
    function foo(a = 0) { }

    Source: http://eslint.org/docs/rules/

    Expected indentation of 6 spaces but found 8.
    Open

            src = src.substring(cap[0].length);

    enforce consistent indentation (indent)

    There are several common guidelines which require specific indentation of nested blocks and statements, like:

    function hello(indentSize, type) {
        if (indentSize === 4 && type !== 'tab') {
            console.log('Each next indentation will increase on 4 spaces');
        }
    }

    These are the most common scenarios recommended in different style guides:

    • Two spaces, not longer and no tabs: Google, npm, Node.js, Idiomatic, Felix
    • Tabs: jQuery
    • Four spaces: Crockford

    Rule Details

    This rule enforces a consistent indentation style. The default style is 4 spaces.

    Options

    This rule has a mixed option:

    For example, for 2-space indentation:

    {
        "indent": ["error", 2]
    }

    Or for tabbed indentation:

    {
        "indent": ["error", "tab"]
    }

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default options:

    /*eslint indent: "error"*/
    
    if (a) {
      b=c;
      function foo(d) {
        e=f;
      }
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the default options:

    /*eslint indent: "error"*/
    
    if (a) {
        b=c;
        function foo(d) {
            e=f;
        }
    }

    This rule has an object option:

    • "SwitchCase" (default: 0) enforces indentation level for case clauses in switch statements
    • "VariableDeclarator" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for var declarators; can also take an object to define separate rules for var, let and const declarations.
    • "outerIIFEBody" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for file-level IIFEs.
    • "MemberExpression" (off by default) enforces indentation level for multi-line property chains (except in variable declarations and assignments)
    • "FunctionDeclaration" takes an object to define rules for function declarations.
      • parameters (off by default) enforces indentation level for parameters in a function declaration. This can either be a number indicating indentation level, or the string "first" indicating that all parameters of the declaration must be aligned with the first parameter.
      • body (default: 1) enforces indentation level for the body of a function declaration.
    • "FunctionExpression" takes an object to define rules for function expressions.
      • parameters (off by default) enforces indentation level for parameters in a function expression. This can either be a number indicating indentation level, or the string "first" indicating that all parameters of the expression must be aligned with the first parameter.
      • body (default: 1) enforces indentation level for the body of a function expression.
    • "CallExpression" takes an object to define rules for function call expressions.
      • arguments (off by default) enforces indentation level for arguments in a call expression. This can either be a number indicating indentation level, or the string "first" indicating that all arguments of the expression must be aligned with the first argument.
    • "ArrayExpression" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for elements in arrays. It can also be set to the string "first", indicating that all the elements in the array should be aligned with the first element.
    • "ObjectExpression" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for properties in objects. It can be set to the string "first", indicating that all properties in the object should be aligned with the first property.

    Level of indentation denotes the multiple of the indent specified. Example:

    • Indent of 4 spaces with VariableDeclarator set to 2 will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 8 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with VariableDeclarator set to 2 will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 4 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with VariableDeclarator set to {"var": 2, "let": 2, "const": 3} will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 4 spaces for var and let, 6 spaces for const statements.
    • Indent of tab with VariableDeclarator set to 2 will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 2 tabs.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with SwitchCase set to 0 will not indent case clauses with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with SwitchCase set to 1 will indent case clauses with 2 spaces with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with SwitchCase set to 2 will indent case clauses with 4 spaces with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of tab with SwitchCase set to 2 will indent case clauses with 2 tabs with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with MemberExpression set to 0 will indent the multi-line property chains with 0 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with MemberExpression set to 1 will indent the multi-line property chains with 2 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with MemberExpression set to 2 will indent the multi-line property chains with 4 spaces.
    • Indent of 4 spaces with MemberExpression set to 0 will indent the multi-line property chains with 0 spaces.
    • Indent of 4 spaces with MemberExpression set to 1 will indent the multi-line property chains with 4 spaces.
    • Indent of 4 spaces with MemberExpression set to 2 will indent the multi-line property chains with 8 spaces.

    tab

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

    /*eslint indent: ["error", "tab"]*/
    
    if (a) {
         b=c;
    function foo(d) {
               e=f;
     }
    }

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

    /*eslint indent: ["error", "tab"]*/
    
    if (a) {
    /*tab*/b=c;
    /*tab*/function foo(d) {
    /*tab*//*tab*/e=f;
    /*tab*/}
    }

    SwitchCase

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 }]*/
    
    switch(a){
    case "a":
        break;
    case "b":
        break;
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 }]*/
    
    switch(a){
      case "a":
        break;
      case "b":
        break;
    }

    VariableDeclarator

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
        b,
        c;
    let a,
        b,
        c;
    const a = 1,
        b = 2,
        c = 3;

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
      b,
      c;
    let a,
      b,
      c;
    const a = 1,
      b = 2,
      c = 3;

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 2 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 2 }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
        b,
        c;
    let a,
        b,
        c;
    const a = 1,
        b = 2,
        c = 3;

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": { "var": 2, "let": 2, "const": 3 } } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": { "var": 2, "let": 2, "const": 3 } }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
        b,
        c;
    let a,
        b,
        c;
    const a = 1,
          b = 2,
          c = 3;

    outerIIFEBody

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the options 2, { "outerIIFEBody": 0 }:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "outerIIFEBody": 0 }]*/
    
    (function() {
    
      function foo(x) {
        return x + 1;
      }
    
    })();
    
    
    if(y) {
    console.log('foo');
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the options 2, {"outerIIFEBody": 0}:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "outerIIFEBody": 0 }]*/
    
    (function() {
    
    function foo(x) {
      return x + 1;
    }
    
    })();
    
    
    if(y) {
       console.log('foo');
    }

    MemberExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    foo
    .bar
    .baz()

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    foo
      .bar
      .baz();
    
    // Any indentation is permitted in variable declarations and assignments.
    var bip = aardvark.badger
                      .coyote;

    FunctionDeclaration

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    function foo(bar,
      baz,
      qux) {
        qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    function foo(bar,
        baz,
        qux) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    function foo(bar, baz,
      qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    function foo(bar, baz,
                 qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    FunctionExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar,
      baz,
      qux) {
        qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar,
        baz,
        qux) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar, baz,
      qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar, baz,
                       qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    CallExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} }]*/
    
    foo(bar,
        baz,
          qux
    );

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} }]*/
    
    foo(bar,
      baz,
      qux
    );

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"}}]*/
    
    foo(bar, baz,
      baz, boop, beep);

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"}}]*/
    
    foo(bar, baz,
        baz, boop, beep);

    ArrayExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = [
        bar,
    baz,
          qux
    ];

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = [
      bar,
      baz,
      qux
    ];

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ArrayExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = [bar,
      baz,
      qux
    ];

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ArrayExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = [bar,
               baz,
               qux
    ];

    ObjectExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = {
        bar: 1,
    baz: 2,
          qux: 3
    };

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = {
      bar: 1,
      baz: 2,
      qux: 3
    };

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ObjectExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = { bar: 1,
      baz: 2 };

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ObjectExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = { bar: 1,
                baz: 2 };

    Compatibility

    Expected indentation of 6 spaces but found 8.
    Open

            out = out.concat(this.renderer.reffn(cap[1]));

    enforce consistent indentation (indent)

    There are several common guidelines which require specific indentation of nested blocks and statements, like:

    function hello(indentSize, type) {
        if (indentSize === 4 && type !== 'tab') {
            console.log('Each next indentation will increase on 4 spaces');
        }
    }

    These are the most common scenarios recommended in different style guides:

    • Two spaces, not longer and no tabs: Google, npm, Node.js, Idiomatic, Felix
    • Tabs: jQuery
    • Four spaces: Crockford

    Rule Details

    This rule enforces a consistent indentation style. The default style is 4 spaces.

    Options

    This rule has a mixed option:

    For example, for 2-space indentation:

    {
        "indent": ["error", 2]
    }

    Or for tabbed indentation:

    {
        "indent": ["error", "tab"]
    }

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default options:

    /*eslint indent: "error"*/
    
    if (a) {
      b=c;
      function foo(d) {
        e=f;
      }
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the default options:

    /*eslint indent: "error"*/
    
    if (a) {
        b=c;
        function foo(d) {
            e=f;
        }
    }

    This rule has an object option:

    • "SwitchCase" (default: 0) enforces indentation level for case clauses in switch statements
    • "VariableDeclarator" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for var declarators; can also take an object to define separate rules for var, let and const declarations.
    • "outerIIFEBody" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for file-level IIFEs.
    • "MemberExpression" (off by default) enforces indentation level for multi-line property chains (except in variable declarations and assignments)
    • "FunctionDeclaration" takes an object to define rules for function declarations.
      • parameters (off by default) enforces indentation level for parameters in a function declaration. This can either be a number indicating indentation level, or the string "first" indicating that all parameters of the declaration must be aligned with the first parameter.
      • body (default: 1) enforces indentation level for the body of a function declaration.
    • "FunctionExpression" takes an object to define rules for function expressions.
      • parameters (off by default) enforces indentation level for parameters in a function expression. This can either be a number indicating indentation level, or the string "first" indicating that all parameters of the expression must be aligned with the first parameter.
      • body (default: 1) enforces indentation level for the body of a function expression.
    • "CallExpression" takes an object to define rules for function call expressions.
      • arguments (off by default) enforces indentation level for arguments in a call expression. This can either be a number indicating indentation level, or the string "first" indicating that all arguments of the expression must be aligned with the first argument.
    • "ArrayExpression" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for elements in arrays. It can also be set to the string "first", indicating that all the elements in the array should be aligned with the first element.
    • "ObjectExpression" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for properties in objects. It can be set to the string "first", indicating that all properties in the object should be aligned with the first property.

    Level of indentation denotes the multiple of the indent specified. Example:

    • Indent of 4 spaces with VariableDeclarator set to 2 will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 8 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with VariableDeclarator set to 2 will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 4 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with VariableDeclarator set to {"var": 2, "let": 2, "const": 3} will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 4 spaces for var and let, 6 spaces for const statements.
    • Indent of tab with VariableDeclarator set to 2 will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 2 tabs.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with SwitchCase set to 0 will not indent case clauses with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with SwitchCase set to 1 will indent case clauses with 2 spaces with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with SwitchCase set to 2 will indent case clauses with 4 spaces with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of tab with SwitchCase set to 2 will indent case clauses with 2 tabs with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with MemberExpression set to 0 will indent the multi-line property chains with 0 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with MemberExpression set to 1 will indent the multi-line property chains with 2 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with MemberExpression set to 2 will indent the multi-line property chains with 4 spaces.
    • Indent of 4 spaces with MemberExpression set to 0 will indent the multi-line property chains with 0 spaces.
    • Indent of 4 spaces with MemberExpression set to 1 will indent the multi-line property chains with 4 spaces.
    • Indent of 4 spaces with MemberExpression set to 2 will indent the multi-line property chains with 8 spaces.

    tab

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

    /*eslint indent: ["error", "tab"]*/
    
    if (a) {
         b=c;
    function foo(d) {
               e=f;
     }
    }

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

    /*eslint indent: ["error", "tab"]*/
    
    if (a) {
    /*tab*/b=c;
    /*tab*/function foo(d) {
    /*tab*//*tab*/e=f;
    /*tab*/}
    }

    SwitchCase

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 }]*/
    
    switch(a){
    case "a":
        break;
    case "b":
        break;
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 }]*/
    
    switch(a){
      case "a":
        break;
      case "b":
        break;
    }

    VariableDeclarator

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
        b,
        c;
    let a,
        b,
        c;
    const a = 1,
        b = 2,
        c = 3;

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
      b,
      c;
    let a,
      b,
      c;
    const a = 1,
      b = 2,
      c = 3;

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 2 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 2 }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
        b,
        c;
    let a,
        b,
        c;
    const a = 1,
        b = 2,
        c = 3;

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": { "var": 2, "let": 2, "const": 3 } } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": { "var": 2, "let": 2, "const": 3 } }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
        b,
        c;
    let a,
        b,
        c;
    const a = 1,
          b = 2,
          c = 3;

    outerIIFEBody

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the options 2, { "outerIIFEBody": 0 }:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "outerIIFEBody": 0 }]*/
    
    (function() {
    
      function foo(x) {
        return x + 1;
      }
    
    })();
    
    
    if(y) {
    console.log('foo');
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the options 2, {"outerIIFEBody": 0}:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "outerIIFEBody": 0 }]*/
    
    (function() {
    
    function foo(x) {
      return x + 1;
    }
    
    })();
    
    
    if(y) {
       console.log('foo');
    }

    MemberExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    foo
    .bar
    .baz()

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    foo
      .bar
      .baz();
    
    // Any indentation is permitted in variable declarations and assignments.
    var bip = aardvark.badger
                      .coyote;

    FunctionDeclaration

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    function foo(bar,
      baz,
      qux) {
        qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    function foo(bar,
        baz,
        qux) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    function foo(bar, baz,
      qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    function foo(bar, baz,
                 qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    FunctionExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar,
      baz,
      qux) {
        qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar,
        baz,
        qux) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar, baz,
      qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar, baz,
                       qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    CallExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} }]*/
    
    foo(bar,
        baz,
          qux
    );

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} }]*/
    
    foo(bar,
      baz,
      qux
    );

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"}}]*/
    
    foo(bar, baz,
      baz, boop, beep);

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"}}]*/
    
    foo(bar, baz,
        baz, boop, beep);

    ArrayExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = [
        bar,
    baz,
          qux
    ];

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = [
      bar,
      baz,
      qux
    ];

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ArrayExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = [bar,
      baz,
      qux
    ];

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ArrayExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = [bar,
               baz,
               qux
    ];

    ObjectExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = {
        bar: 1,
    baz: 2,
          qux: 3
    };

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = {
      bar: 1,
      baz: 2,
      qux: 3
    };

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ObjectExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = { bar: 1,
      baz: 2 };

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ObjectExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = { bar: 1,
                baz: 2 };

    Compatibility

    Expected indentation of 6 spaces but found 8.
    Open

            continue;

    enforce consistent indentation (indent)

    There are several common guidelines which require specific indentation of nested blocks and statements, like:

    function hello(indentSize, type) {
        if (indentSize === 4 && type !== 'tab') {
            console.log('Each next indentation will increase on 4 spaces');
        }
    }

    These are the most common scenarios recommended in different style guides:

    • Two spaces, not longer and no tabs: Google, npm, Node.js, Idiomatic, Felix
    • Tabs: jQuery
    • Four spaces: Crockford

    Rule Details

    This rule enforces a consistent indentation style. The default style is 4 spaces.

    Options

    This rule has a mixed option:

    For example, for 2-space indentation:

    {
        "indent": ["error", 2]
    }

    Or for tabbed indentation:

    {
        "indent": ["error", "tab"]
    }

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default options:

    /*eslint indent: "error"*/
    
    if (a) {
      b=c;
      function foo(d) {
        e=f;
      }
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the default options:

    /*eslint indent: "error"*/
    
    if (a) {
        b=c;
        function foo(d) {
            e=f;
        }
    }

    This rule has an object option:

    • "SwitchCase" (default: 0) enforces indentation level for case clauses in switch statements
    • "VariableDeclarator" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for var declarators; can also take an object to define separate rules for var, let and const declarations.
    • "outerIIFEBody" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for file-level IIFEs.
    • "MemberExpression" (off by default) enforces indentation level for multi-line property chains (except in variable declarations and assignments)
    • "FunctionDeclaration" takes an object to define rules for function declarations.
      • parameters (off by default) enforces indentation level for parameters in a function declaration. This can either be a number indicating indentation level, or the string "first" indicating that all parameters of the declaration must be aligned with the first parameter.
      • body (default: 1) enforces indentation level for the body of a function declaration.
    • "FunctionExpression" takes an object to define rules for function expressions.
      • parameters (off by default) enforces indentation level for parameters in a function expression. This can either be a number indicating indentation level, or the string "first" indicating that all parameters of the expression must be aligned with the first parameter.
      • body (default: 1) enforces indentation level for the body of a function expression.
    • "CallExpression" takes an object to define rules for function call expressions.
      • arguments (off by default) enforces indentation level for arguments in a call expression. This can either be a number indicating indentation level, or the string "first" indicating that all arguments of the expression must be aligned with the first argument.
    • "ArrayExpression" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for elements in arrays. It can also be set to the string "first", indicating that all the elements in the array should be aligned with the first element.
    • "ObjectExpression" (default: 1) enforces indentation level for properties in objects. It can be set to the string "first", indicating that all properties in the object should be aligned with the first property.

    Level of indentation denotes the multiple of the indent specified. Example:

    • Indent of 4 spaces with VariableDeclarator set to 2 will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 8 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with VariableDeclarator set to 2 will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 4 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with VariableDeclarator set to {"var": 2, "let": 2, "const": 3} will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 4 spaces for var and let, 6 spaces for const statements.
    • Indent of tab with VariableDeclarator set to 2 will indent the multi-line variable declarations with 2 tabs.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with SwitchCase set to 0 will not indent case clauses with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with SwitchCase set to 1 will indent case clauses with 2 spaces with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with SwitchCase set to 2 will indent case clauses with 4 spaces with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of tab with SwitchCase set to 2 will indent case clauses with 2 tabs with respect to switch statements.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with MemberExpression set to 0 will indent the multi-line property chains with 0 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with MemberExpression set to 1 will indent the multi-line property chains with 2 spaces.
    • Indent of 2 spaces with MemberExpression set to 2 will indent the multi-line property chains with 4 spaces.
    • Indent of 4 spaces with MemberExpression set to 0 will indent the multi-line property chains with 0 spaces.
    • Indent of 4 spaces with MemberExpression set to 1 will indent the multi-line property chains with 4 spaces.
    • Indent of 4 spaces with MemberExpression set to 2 will indent the multi-line property chains with 8 spaces.

    tab

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

    /*eslint indent: ["error", "tab"]*/
    
    if (a) {
         b=c;
    function foo(d) {
               e=f;
     }
    }

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

    /*eslint indent: ["error", "tab"]*/
    
    if (a) {
    /*tab*/b=c;
    /*tab*/function foo(d) {
    /*tab*//*tab*/e=f;
    /*tab*/}
    }

    SwitchCase

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 }]*/
    
    switch(a){
    case "a":
        break;
    case "b":
        break;
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "SwitchCase": 1 }]*/
    
    switch(a){
      case "a":
        break;
      case "b":
        break;
    }

    VariableDeclarator

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
        b,
        c;
    let a,
        b,
        c;
    const a = 1,
        b = 2,
        c = 3;

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 1 }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
      b,
      c;
    let a,
      b,
      c;
    const a = 1,
      b = 2,
      c = 3;

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 2 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": 2 }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
        b,
        c;
    let a,
        b,
        c;
    const a = 1,
        b = 2,
        c = 3;

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "VariableDeclarator": { "var": 2, "let": 2, "const": 3 } } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "VariableDeclarator": { "var": 2, "let": 2, "const": 3 } }]*/
    /*eslint-env es6*/
    
    var a,
        b,
        c;
    let a,
        b,
        c;
    const a = 1,
          b = 2,
          c = 3;

    outerIIFEBody

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the options 2, { "outerIIFEBody": 0 }:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "outerIIFEBody": 0 }]*/
    
    (function() {
    
      function foo(x) {
        return x + 1;
      }
    
    })();
    
    
    if(y) {
    console.log('foo');
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the options 2, {"outerIIFEBody": 0}:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "outerIIFEBody": 0 }]*/
    
    (function() {
    
    function foo(x) {
      return x + 1;
    }
    
    })();
    
    
    if(y) {
       console.log('foo');
    }

    MemberExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 } options:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    foo
    .bar
    .baz()

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "MemberExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    foo
      .bar
      .baz();
    
    // Any indentation is permitted in variable declarations and assignments.
    var bip = aardvark.badger
                      .coyote;

    FunctionDeclaration

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    function foo(bar,
      baz,
      qux) {
        qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    function foo(bar,
        baz,
        qux) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    function foo(bar, baz,
      qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionDeclaration": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    function foo(bar, baz,
                 qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    FunctionExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar,
      baz,
      qux) {
        qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"body": 1, "parameters": 2} }]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar,
        baz,
        qux) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar, baz,
      qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"FunctionExpression": {"parameters": "first"}}]*/
    
    var foo = function(bar, baz,
                       qux, boop) {
      qux();
    }

    CallExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} }]*/
    
    foo(bar,
        baz,
          qux
    );

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": 1} }]*/
    
    foo(bar,
      baz,
      qux
    );

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"}}]*/
    
    foo(bar, baz,
      baz, boop, beep);

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"} } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"CallExpression": {"arguments": "first"}}]*/
    
    foo(bar, baz,
        baz, boop, beep);

    ArrayExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = [
        bar,
    baz,
          qux
    ];

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ArrayExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = [
      bar,
      baz,
      qux
    ];

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ArrayExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = [bar,
      baz,
      qux
    ];

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ArrayExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ArrayExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = [bar,
               baz,
               qux
    ];

    ObjectExpression

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = {
        bar: 1,
    baz: 2,
          qux: 3
    };

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, { "ObjectExpression": 1 }]*/
    
    var foo = {
      bar: 1,
      baz: 2,
      qux: 3
    };

    Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ObjectExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = { bar: 1,
      baz: 2 };

    Examples of correct code for this rule with the 2, { "ObjectExpression": "first" } option:

    /*eslint indent: ["error", 2, {"ObjectExpression": "first"}]*/
    
    var foo = { bar: 1,
                baz: 2 };

    Compatibility

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

          if(cap[1] === 'a' && cap[2] && !this.inLink) {
            // Opening tag
            out = out.concat(cap[0].substring(0, cap[0].indexOf(cap[2])));
            // In between the tag
            out = out.concat(this.output(cap[2]));
    Severity: Major
    Found in src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js and 1 other location - About 6 hrs to fix
    src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js on lines 57..67

    Duplicated Code

    Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

    Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

    When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

    Tuning

    This issue has a mass of 168.

    We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

    The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

    If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

    See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

    Refactorings

    Further Reading

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

          if(cap[1] && !isHTMLBlock(cap[1]) && cap[2]) {
            // Opening tag
            out = out.concat(cap[0].substring(0, cap[0].indexOf(cap[2])));
            // In between the tag
            out = out.concat(this.output(cap[2]));
    Severity: Major
    Found in src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js and 1 other location - About 6 hrs to fix
    src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js on lines 44..54

    Duplicated Code

    Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

    Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

    When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

    Tuning

    This issue has a mass of 168.

    We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

    The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

    If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

    See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

    Refactorings

    Further Reading

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

        if (cap = this.rules.em.exec(src)) {
          src = src.substring(cap[0].length);
          out = out.concat(this.renderer.em(this.output(cap[2] || cap[1])));
          continue;
        }
    Severity: Major
    Found in src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js and 1 other location - About 3 hrs to fix
    src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js on lines 112..116

    Duplicated Code

    Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

    Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

    When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

    Tuning

    This issue has a mass of 102.

    We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

    The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

    If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

    See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

    Refactorings

    Further Reading

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

        if (cap = this.rules.strong.exec(src)) {
          src = src.substring(cap[0].length);
          out = out.concat(this.renderer.strong(this.output(cap[2] || cap[1])));
          continue;
        }
    Severity: Major
    Found in src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js and 1 other location - About 3 hrs to fix
    src/markdown/ast-inline-lexer-output-new.js on lines 119..123

    Duplicated Code

    Duplicated code can lead to software that is hard to understand and difficult to change. The Don't Repeat Yourself (DRY) principle states:

    Every piece of knowledge must have a single, unambiguous, authoritative representation within a system.

    When you violate DRY, bugs and maintenance problems are sure to follow. Duplicated code has a tendency to both continue to replicate and also to diverge (leaving bugs as two similar implementations differ in subtle ways).

    Tuning

    This issue has a mass of 102.

    We set useful threshold defaults for the languages we support but you may want to adjust these settings based on your project guidelines.

    The threshold configuration represents the minimum mass a code block must have to be analyzed for duplication. The lower the threshold, the more fine-grained the comparison.

    If the engine is too easily reporting duplication, try raising the threshold. If you suspect that the engine isn't catching enough duplication, try lowering the threshold. The best setting tends to differ from language to language.

    See codeclimate-duplication's documentation for more information about tuning the mass threshold in your .codeclimate.yml.

    Refactorings

    Further Reading

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