uchaindb/UClient

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src/ClientApp/app/services/notification.service.ts

Summary

Maintainability
A
35 mins
Test Coverage

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

        if (!this.localStoreManager.exists(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST)) {
            this.localStoreManager.savePermanentData([], NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST);
        }
Severity: Minor
Found in src/ClientApp/app/services/notification.service.ts and 1 other location - About 35 mins to fix
src/ClientApp/app/services/chain-db.service.ts on lines 35..37

Duplicated Code

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

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

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

Tuning

This issue has a mass of 46.

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

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

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

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

Refactorings

Further Reading

Identifier 'idx' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'var'.
Open

        var idx = nlist.findIndex(_ => _.id == id);

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

Array type using 'Array<t>' is forbidden. Use 'T[]' instead.</t>
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: array-type

Requires using either 'T[]' or 'Array<t>' for arrays.</t>

Notes
  • TypeScript Only
  • Has Fix

Config

One of the following arguments must be provided:

  • "array" enforces use of T[] for all types T.
  • "generic" enforces use of Array<T> for all types T.
  • "array-simple" enforces use of T[] if T is a simple type (primitive or type reference).
Examples
"array-type": true,array
"array-type": true,generic
"array-type": true,array-simple
Schema
{
  "type": "string",
  "enum": [
    "array",
    "generic",
    "array-simple"
  ]
}

For more information see this page.

Array type using 'Array<t>' is forbidden. Use 'T[]' instead.</t>
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: array-type

Requires using either 'T[]' or 'Array<t>' for arrays.</t>

Notes
  • TypeScript Only
  • Has Fix

Config

One of the following arguments must be provided:

  • "array" enforces use of T[] for all types T.
  • "generic" enforces use of Array<T> for all types T.
  • "array-simple" enforces use of T[] if T is a simple type (primitive or type reference).
Examples
"array-type": true,array
"array-type": true,generic
"array-type": true,array-simple
Schema
{
  "type": "string",
  "enum": [
    "array",
    "generic",
    "array-simple"
  ]
}

For more information see this page.

Expected property shorthand in object literal ('{summary}').
Open

        nlist.push({ id: id, sender: sender, summary: summary, origin: origin })

Rule: object-literal-shorthand

Enforces/disallows use of ES6 object literal shorthand.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

"always" assumed to be default option, thus with no options provided the rule enforces object literal methods and properties shorthands. With "never" option provided, any shorthand object literal syntax causes an error.

The rule can be configured in a more granular way. With {"property": "never"} provided (which is equivalent to {"property": "never", "method": "always"}), the rule only flags property shorthand assignments, and respectively with {"method": "never"} (equivalent to {"property": "always", "method": "never"}), the rule fails only on method shorthands.

Examples
"object-literal-shorthand": true
"object-literal-shorthand": true,never
"object-literal-shorthand": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "oneOf": [
    {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "never"
      ]
    },
    {
      "type": "object",
      "properties": {
        "property": {
          "type": "string",
          "enum": [
            "never"
          ]
        },
        "method": {
          "type": "string",
          "enum": [
            "never"
          ]
        }
      },
      "minProperties": 1,
      "maxProperties": 2
    }
  ]
}

For more information see this page.

Identifier 'nlist' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'var'.
Open

        var nlist = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST)

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: no-var-keyword

Disallows usage of the var keyword.

Use let or const instead.

Rationale

Declaring variables using var has several edge case behaviors that make var unsuitable for modern code. Variables declared by var have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements. vars have declaration "hoisting" (similar to functions) and can appear to be used before declaration.

Variables declared by const and let instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined, and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const or let.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Not configurable.

Examples
"no-var-keyword": true

For more information see this page.

Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead
Open

        var idx = nlist.findIndex(_ => _.id == id);

Rule: no-var-keyword

Disallows usage of the var keyword.

Use let or const instead.

Rationale

Declaring variables using var has several edge case behaviors that make var unsuitable for modern code. Variables declared by var have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements. vars have declaration "hoisting" (similar to functions) and can appear to be used before declaration.

Variables declared by const and let instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined, and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const or let.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Not configurable.

Examples
"no-var-keyword": true

For more information see this page.

Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead
Open

        var idx = nlist.findIndex(_ => _.id == id);

Rule: no-var-keyword

Disallows usage of the var keyword.

Use let or const instead.

Rationale

Declaring variables using var has several edge case behaviors that make var unsuitable for modern code. Variables declared by var have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements. vars have declaration "hoisting" (similar to functions) and can appear to be used before declaration.

Variables declared by const and let instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined, and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const or let.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Not configurable.

Examples
"no-var-keyword": true

For more information see this page.

Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: no-var-keyword

Disallows usage of the var keyword.

Use let or const instead.

Rationale

Declaring variables using var has several edge case behaviors that make var unsuitable for modern code. Variables declared by var have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements. vars have declaration "hoisting" (similar to functions) and can appear to be used before declaration.

Variables declared by const and let instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined, and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const or let.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Not configurable.

Examples
"no-var-keyword": true

For more information see this page.

Identifier 'nlist' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'var'.
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead
Open

        var nlist = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) as Array<InboxNotification>;

Rule: no-var-keyword

Disallows usage of the var keyword.

Use let or const instead.

Rationale

Declaring variables using var has several edge case behaviors that make var unsuitable for modern code. Variables declared by var have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements. vars have declaration "hoisting" (similar to functions) and can appear to be used before declaration.

Variables declared by const and let instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined, and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const or let.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Not configurable.

Examples
"no-var-keyword": true

For more information see this page.

Identifier 'n' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'var'.
Open

        var n = nlist.find(_ => _.id == id);

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead
Open

        var n = nlist.find(_ => _.id == id);

Rule: no-var-keyword

Disallows usage of the var keyword.

Use let or const instead.

Rationale

Declaring variables using var has several edge case behaviors that make var unsuitable for modern code. Variables declared by var have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements. vars have declaration "hoisting" (similar to functions) and can appear to be used before declaration.

Variables declared by const and let instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined, and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const or let.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Not configurable.

Examples
"no-var-keyword": true

For more information see this page.

Array type using 'Array<t>' is forbidden. Use 'T[]' instead.</t>
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: array-type

Requires using either 'T[]' or 'Array<t>' for arrays.</t>

Notes
  • TypeScript Only
  • Has Fix

Config

One of the following arguments must be provided:

  • "array" enforces use of T[] for all types T.
  • "generic" enforces use of Array<T> for all types T.
  • "array-simple" enforces use of T[] if T is a simple type (primitive or type reference).
Examples
"array-type": true,array
"array-type": true,generic
"array-type": true,array-simple
Schema
{
  "type": "string",
  "enum": [
    "array",
    "generic",
    "array-simple"
  ]
}

For more information see this page.

Identifier 'nlist' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'var'.
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

Array type using 'Array<t>' is forbidden. Use 'T[]' instead.</t>
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: array-type

Requires using either 'T[]' or 'Array<t>' for arrays.</t>

Notes
  • TypeScript Only
  • Has Fix

Config

One of the following arguments must be provided:

  • "array" enforces use of T[] for all types T.
  • "generic" enforces use of Array<T> for all types T.
  • "array-simple" enforces use of T[] if T is a simple type (primitive or type reference).
Examples
"array-type": true,array
"array-type": true,generic
"array-type": true,array-simple
Schema
{
  "type": "string",
  "enum": [
    "array",
    "generic",
    "array-simple"
  ]
}

For more information see this page.

Identifier 'gT' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'let'.
Open

        let gT = (key: string) => this.translationService.getTranslation(key);

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

Array type using 'Array<t>' is forbidden. Use 'T[]' instead.</t>
Open

    getNotificationList(): Observable<Array<InboxNotification>> {

Rule: array-type

Requires using either 'T[]' or 'Array<t>' for arrays.</t>

Notes
  • TypeScript Only
  • Has Fix

Config

One of the following arguments must be provided:

  • "array" enforces use of T[] for all types T.
  • "generic" enforces use of Array<T> for all types T.
  • "array-simple" enforces use of T[] if T is a simple type (primitive or type reference).
Examples
"array-type": true,array
"array-type": true,generic
"array-type": true,array-simple
Schema
{
  "type": "string",
  "enum": [
    "array",
    "generic",
    "array-simple"
  ]
}

For more information see this page.

Expected property shorthand in object literal ('{origin}').
Open

        nlist.push({ id: id, sender: sender, summary: summary, origin: origin })

Rule: object-literal-shorthand

Enforces/disallows use of ES6 object literal shorthand.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

"always" assumed to be default option, thus with no options provided the rule enforces object literal methods and properties shorthands. With "never" option provided, any shorthand object literal syntax causes an error.

The rule can be configured in a more granular way. With {"property": "never"} provided (which is equivalent to {"property": "never", "method": "always"}), the rule only flags property shorthand assignments, and respectively with {"method": "never"} (equivalent to {"property": "always", "method": "never"}), the rule fails only on method shorthands.

Examples
"object-literal-shorthand": true
"object-literal-shorthand": true,never
"object-literal-shorthand": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "oneOf": [
    {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "never"
      ]
    },
    {
      "type": "object",
      "properties": {
        "property": {
          "type": "string",
          "enum": [
            "never"
          ]
        },
        "method": {
          "type": "string",
          "enum": [
            "never"
          ]
        }
      },
      "minProperties": 1,
      "maxProperties": 2
    }
  ]
}

For more information see this page.

Expected property shorthand in object literal ('{sender}').
Open

        nlist.push({ id: id, sender: sender, summary: summary, origin: origin })

Rule: object-literal-shorthand

Enforces/disallows use of ES6 object literal shorthand.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

"always" assumed to be default option, thus with no options provided the rule enforces object literal methods and properties shorthands. With "never" option provided, any shorthand object literal syntax causes an error.

The rule can be configured in a more granular way. With {"property": "never"} provided (which is equivalent to {"property": "never", "method": "always"}), the rule only flags property shorthand assignments, and respectively with {"method": "never"} (equivalent to {"property": "always", "method": "never"}), the rule fails only on method shorthands.

Examples
"object-literal-shorthand": true
"object-literal-shorthand": true,never
"object-literal-shorthand": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "oneOf": [
    {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "never"
      ]
    },
    {
      "type": "object",
      "properties": {
        "property": {
          "type": "string",
          "enum": [
            "never"
          ]
        },
        "method": {
          "type": "string",
          "enum": [
            "never"
          ]
        }
      },
      "minProperties": 1,
      "maxProperties": 2
    }
  ]
}

For more information see this page.

Identifier 'nlist' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'var'.
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead
Open

        var nlist = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST)

Rule: no-var-keyword

Disallows usage of the var keyword.

Use let or const instead.

Rationale

Declaring variables using var has several edge case behaviors that make var unsuitable for modern code. Variables declared by var have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements. vars have declaration "hoisting" (similar to functions) and can appear to be used before declaration.

Variables declared by const and let instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined, and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const or let.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Not configurable.

Examples
"no-var-keyword": true

For more information see this page.

Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead
Open

        var id = '_' + Math.random().toString(36).substr(2, 9);

Rule: no-var-keyword

Disallows usage of the var keyword.

Use let or const instead.

Rationale

Declaring variables using var has several edge case behaviors that make var unsuitable for modern code. Variables declared by var have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements. vars have declaration "hoisting" (similar to functions) and can appear to be used before declaration.

Variables declared by const and let instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined, and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const or let.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Not configurable.

Examples
"no-var-keyword": true

For more information see this page.

Expected property shorthand in object literal ('{id}').
Open

        nlist.push({ id: id, sender: sender, summary: summary, origin: origin })

Rule: object-literal-shorthand

Enforces/disallows use of ES6 object literal shorthand.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

"always" assumed to be default option, thus with no options provided the rule enforces object literal methods and properties shorthands. With "never" option provided, any shorthand object literal syntax causes an error.

The rule can be configured in a more granular way. With {"property": "never"} provided (which is equivalent to {"property": "never", "method": "always"}), the rule only flags property shorthand assignments, and respectively with {"method": "never"} (equivalent to {"property": "always", "method": "never"}), the rule fails only on method shorthands.

Examples
"object-literal-shorthand": true
"object-literal-shorthand": true,never
"object-literal-shorthand": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "oneOf": [
    {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "never"
      ]
    },
    {
      "type": "object",
      "properties": {
        "property": {
          "type": "string",
          "enum": [
            "never"
          ]
        },
        "method": {
          "type": "string",
          "enum": [
            "never"
          ]
        }
      },
      "minProperties": 1,
      "maxProperties": 2
    }
  ]
}

For more information see this page.

== should be ===
Open

        var idx = nlist.findIndex(_ => _.id == id);

Rule: triple-equals

Requires === and !== in place of == and !=.

Config

Two arguments may be optionally provided:

  • "allow-null-check" allows == and != when comparing to null.
  • "allow-undefined-check" allows == and != when comparing to undefined.
Examples
"triple-equals": true
"triple-equals": true,allow-null-check
"triple-equals": true,allow-undefined-check
Schema
{
  "type": "array",
  "items": {
    "type": "string",
    "enum": [
      "allow-null-check",
      "allow-undefined-check"
    ]
  },
  "minLength": 0,
  "maxLength": 2
}

For more information see this page.

Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: no-var-keyword

Disallows usage of the var keyword.

Use let or const instead.

Rationale

Declaring variables using var has several edge case behaviors that make var unsuitable for modern code. Variables declared by var have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements. vars have declaration "hoisting" (similar to functions) and can appear to be used before declaration.

Variables declared by const and let instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined, and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const or let.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Not configurable.

Examples
"no-var-keyword": true

For more information see this page.

Array type using 'Array<t>' is forbidden. Use 'T[]' instead.</t>
Open

        var nlist = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) as Array<InboxNotification>;

Rule: array-type

Requires using either 'T[]' or 'Array<t>' for arrays.</t>

Notes
  • TypeScript Only
  • Has Fix

Config

One of the following arguments must be provided:

  • "array" enforces use of T[] for all types T.
  • "generic" enforces use of Array<T> for all types T.
  • "array-simple" enforces use of T[] if T is a simple type (primitive or type reference).
Examples
"array-type": true,array
"array-type": true,generic
"array-type": true,array-simple
Schema
{
  "type": "string",
  "enum": [
    "array",
    "generic",
    "array-simple"
  ]
}

For more information see this page.

Identifier 'id' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'var'.
Open

        var id = '_' + Math.random().toString(36).substr(2, 9);

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

Identifier 'nlist' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'var'.
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

Identifier 'nlist' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'var'.
Open

        var nlist = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) as Array<InboxNotification>;

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

Missing semicolon
Open

        nlist.push({ id: id, sender: sender, summary: summary, origin: origin })

Rule: semicolon

Enforces consistent semicolon usage at the end of every statement.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

One of the following arguments must be provided:

  • "always" enforces semicolons at the end of every statement.
  • "never" disallows semicolons at the end of every statement except for when they are necessary.

The following arguments may be optionally provided:

  • "ignore-interfaces" skips checking semicolons at the end of interface members.
  • "ignore-bound-class-methods" skips checking semicolons at the end of bound class methods.
  • "strict-bound-class-methods" disables any special handling of bound class methods and treats them as any other assignment. This option overrides "ignore-bound-class-methods".
Examples
"semicolon": true,always
"semicolon": true,never
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-interfaces
"semicolon": true,always,ignore-bound-class-methods
Schema
{
  "type": "array",
  "items": [
    {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "always",
        "never"
      ]
    },
    {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "ignore-interfaces"
      ]
    }
  ],
  "additionalItems": false
}

For more information see this page.

Identifier 'idx' is never reassigned; use 'const' instead of 'var'.
Open

        var idx = nlist.findIndex(_ => _.id == id);

Rule: prefer-const

Requires that variable declarations use const instead of let and var if possible.

If a variable is only assigned to once when it is declared, it should be declared using 'const'

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

An optional object containing the property "destructuring" with two possible values:

  • "any" (default) - If any variable in destructuring can be const, this rule warns for those variables.
  • "all" - Only warns if all variables in destructuring can be const.
Examples
"prefer-const": true
"prefer-const": true,[object Object]
Schema
{
  "type": "object",
  "properties": {
    "destructuring": {
      "type": "string",
      "enum": [
        "all",
        "any"
      ]
    }
  }
}

For more information see this page.

== should be ===
Open

        var n = nlist.find(_ => _.id == id);

Rule: triple-equals

Requires === and !== in place of == and !=.

Config

Two arguments may be optionally provided:

  • "allow-null-check" allows == and != when comparing to null.
  • "allow-undefined-check" allows == and != when comparing to undefined.
Examples
"triple-equals": true
"triple-equals": true,allow-null-check
"triple-equals": true,allow-undefined-check
Schema
{
  "type": "array",
  "items": {
    "type": "string",
    "enum": [
      "allow-null-check",
      "allow-undefined-check"
    ]
  },
  "minLength": 0,
  "maxLength": 2
}

For more information see this page.

== should be ===
Open

        var idx = nlist.findIndex(_ => _.id == id);

Rule: triple-equals

Requires === and !== in place of == and !=.

Config

Two arguments may be optionally provided:

  • "allow-null-check" allows == and != when comparing to null.
  • "allow-undefined-check" allows == and != when comparing to undefined.
Examples
"triple-equals": true
"triple-equals": true,allow-null-check
"triple-equals": true,allow-undefined-check
Schema
{
  "type": "array",
  "items": {
    "type": "string",
    "enum": [
      "allow-null-check",
      "allow-undefined-check"
    ]
  },
  "minLength": 0,
  "maxLength": 2
}

For more information see this page.

" should be '
Open

    public static readonly DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST = "notification_list";

Rule: quotemark

Enforces quote character for string literals.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Five arguments may be optionally provided:

  • "single" enforces single quotes.
  • "double" enforces double quotes.
  • "backtick" enforces backticks.
  • "jsx-single" enforces single quotes for JSX attributes.
  • "jsx-double" enforces double quotes for JSX attributes.
  • "avoid-template" forbids single-line untagged template strings that do not contain string interpolations. Note that backticks may still be used if "avoid-escape" is enabled and both single and double quotes are present in the string (the latter option takes precedence).
  • "avoid-escape" allows you to use the "other" quotemark in cases where escaping would normally be required. For example, [true, "double", "avoid-escape"] would not report a failure on the string literal 'Hello "World"'.
Examples
"quotemark": true,single,avoid-escape,avoid-template
"quotemark": true,single,jsx-double
Schema
{
  "type": "array",
  "items": {
    "type": "string",
    "enum": [
      "single",
      "double",
      "backtick",
      "jsx-single",
      "jsx-double",
      "avoid-escape",
      "avoid-template"
    ]
  },
  "minLength": 0,
  "maxLength": 5
}

For more information see this page.

" should be '
Open

        this.translations.senderName = gT("alarm.service.SenderName");

Rule: quotemark

Enforces quote character for string literals.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Five arguments may be optionally provided:

  • "single" enforces single quotes.
  • "double" enforces double quotes.
  • "backtick" enforces backticks.
  • "jsx-single" enforces single quotes for JSX attributes.
  • "jsx-double" enforces double quotes for JSX attributes.
  • "avoid-template" forbids single-line untagged template strings that do not contain string interpolations. Note that backticks may still be used if "avoid-escape" is enabled and both single and double quotes are present in the string (the latter option takes precedence).
  • "avoid-escape" allows you to use the "other" quotemark in cases where escaping would normally be required. For example, [true, "double", "avoid-escape"] would not report a failure on the string literal 'Hello "World"'.
Examples
"quotemark": true,single,avoid-escape,avoid-template
"quotemark": true,single,jsx-double
Schema
{
  "type": "array",
  "items": {
    "type": "string",
    "enum": [
      "single",
      "double",
      "backtick",
      "jsx-single",
      "jsx-double",
      "avoid-escape",
      "avoid-template"
    ]
  },
  "minLength": 0,
  "maxLength": 5
}

For more information see this page.

Forbidden 'var' keyword, use 'let' or 'const' instead
Open

        var nlist: Array<InboxNotification> = this.localStoreManager.getData(NotificationService.DBKEY_NOTIFICATION_LIST) || [];

Rule: no-var-keyword

Disallows usage of the var keyword.

Use let or const instead.

Rationale

Declaring variables using var has several edge case behaviors that make var unsuitable for modern code. Variables declared by var have their parent function block as their scope, ignoring other control flow statements. vars have declaration "hoisting" (similar to functions) and can appear to be used before declaration.

Variables declared by const and let instead have as their scope the block in which they are defined, and are not allowed to used before declaration or be re-declared with another const or let.

Notes
  • Has Fix

Config

Not configurable.

Examples
"no-var-keyword": true

For more information see this page.

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