Showing 2,171 of 2,171 total issues
Space inside parentheses detected. Open
klass.include( InstanceMethods ) ;end ;end
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Checks for spaces inside ordinary round parentheses.
Example:
# bad
f( 3)
g = (a + 3 )
# good
f(3)
g = (a + 3)
Do not use prefix _
for a variable that is used. Open
_selector = self.select_values.dup
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- Exclude checks
This cop checks for underscore-prefixed variables that are actually used.
Example:
# bad
[1, 2, 3].each do |_num|
do_something(_num)
end
Example:
# good
[1, 2, 3].each do |num|
do_something(num)
end
Example:
# good
[1, 2, 3].each do |_num|
do_something # not using `_num`
end
Space missing after semicolon. Open
new_args.size > 1 && rel || rel.first ;end
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- Exclude checks
Checks for semicolon (;) not followed by some kind of space.
Example:
# bad
x = 1;y = 2
# good
x = 1; y = 2
Space missing after semicolon. Open
super ;end ;end
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- Exclude checks
Checks for semicolon (;) not followed by some kind of space.
Example:
# bad
x = 1;y = 2
# good
x = 1; y = 2
Space inside parentheses detected. Open
self.send( self.class.default_key )
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- Exclude checks
Checks for spaces inside ordinary round parentheses.
Example:
# bad
f( 3)
g = (a + 3 )
# good
f(3)
g = (a + 3)
Space inside parentheses detected. Open
klass.include( InstanceMethods ) ;end ;end
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- Exclude checks
Checks for spaces inside ordinary round parentheses.
Example:
# bad
f( 3)
g = (a + 3 )
# good
f(3)
g = (a + 3)
Missing top-level module documentation comment. Open
module DefaultKey
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- Exclude checks
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
end
at 22, 54 is not aligned with if
at 19, 12. Open
new_args.size > 1 && rel || rel.first ;end
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- Exclude checks
This cop checks whether the end keywords are aligned properly.
Three modes are supported through the EnforcedStyleAlignWith
configuration parameter:
If it's set to keyword
(which is the default), the end
shall be aligned with the start of the keyword (if, class, etc.).
If it's set to variable
the end
shall be aligned with the
left-hand-side of the variable assignment, if there is one.
If it's set to start_of_line
, the end
shall be aligned with the
start of the line where the matching keyword appears.
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: keyword (default)
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
variable = if true
end
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: variable
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
variable = if true
end
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: startofline
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
puts(if true
end)
Redundant self
detected. Open
rel = self.where(self.primary_key => new_args)
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- Exclude checks
This cop checks for redundant uses of self
.
The usage of self
is only needed when:
Sending a message to same object with zero arguments in presence of a method name clash with an argument or a local variable.
Calling an attribute writer to prevent an local variable assignment.
Note, with using explicit self you can only send messages with public or protected scope, you cannot send private messages this way.
Note we allow uses of self
with operators because it would be awkward
otherwise.
Example:
# bad
def foo(bar)
self.baz
end
# good
def foo(bar)
self.bar # Resolves name clash with the argument.
end
def foo
bar = 1
self.bar # Resolves name clash with the local variable.
end
def foo
%w[x y z].select do |bar|
self.bar == bar # Resolves name clash with argument of the block.
end
end
end
at 33, 39 is not aligned with module
at 28, 3. Open
raise NameError ;end ;end ;end
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- Exclude checks
This cop checks whether the end keywords are aligned properly.
Three modes are supported through the EnforcedStyleAlignWith
configuration parameter:
If it's set to keyword
(which is the default), the end
shall be aligned with the start of the keyword (if, class, etc.).
If it's set to variable
the end
shall be aligned with the
left-hand-side of the variable assignment, if there is one.
If it's set to start_of_line
, the end
shall be aligned with the
start of the line where the matching keyword appears.
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: keyword (default)
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
variable = if true
end
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: variable
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
variable = if true
end
Example: EnforcedStyleAlignWith: startofline
# bad
variable = if true
end
# good
puts(if true
end)
Do not use spaces between ->
and opening brace in lambda literals Open
scope :with_links, -> context do
join_name = table.table_alias || table.name
language_codes = [context[:locales]].flatten
alphabeth_codes = Languageble.alphabeth_list_for(language_codes).flatten
selector = self.select_values.dup
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- Exclude checks
This cop checks for spaces between -> and opening parameter brace in lambda literals.
Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenospace (default)
# bad
a = -> (x, y) { x + y }
# good
a = ->(x, y) { x + y }
Example: EnforcedStyle: require_space
# bad
a = ->(x, y) { x + y }
# good
a = -> (x, y) { x + y }
Use a guard clause instead of wrapping the code inside a conditional expression. Open
if rel.size < new_args.size
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- Exclude checks
Use a guard clause instead of wrapping the code inside a conditional expression
Example:
# bad
def test
if something
work
end
end
# good
def test
return unless something
work
end
# also good
def test
work if something
end
# bad
if something
raise 'exception'
else
ok
end
# good
raise 'exception' if something
ok
Pass &:blank?
as an argument to reject
instead of a block. Open
new_args = args.flatten.reject { |a| a.blank? }
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- Exclude checks
Use symbols as procs when possible.
Example:
# bad
something.map { |s| s.upcase }
# good
something.map(&:upcase)
Avoid the use of the case equality operator ===
. Open
attributes.select {|v| Symbol === v }.each do |attr|
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- Exclude checks
This cop checks for uses of the case equality operator(===).
Example:
# bad
Array === something
(1..100) === 7
/something/ === some_string
# good
something.is_a?(Array)
(1..100).include?(7)
some_string =~ /something/
Space missing after semicolon. Open
rel && rel.merge(and_rel) || and_rel ;end;end
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- Exclude checks
Checks for semicolon (;) not followed by some kind of space.
Example:
# bad
x = 1;y = 2
# good
x = 1; y = 2
Wrap stabby lambda arguments with parentheses. Open
scope :with_links, -> context do
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- Exclude checks
Check for parentheses around stabby lambda arguments.
There are two different styles. Defaults to require_parentheses
.
Example: EnforcedStyle: require_parentheses (default)
# bad
->a,b,c { a + b + c }
# good
->(a,b,c) { a + b + c}
Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenoparentheses
# bad
->(a,b,c) { a + b + c }
# good
->a,b,c { a + b + c}
Redundant self
detected. Open
self.merge(or_rel).distinct
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for redundant uses of self
.
The usage of self
is only needed when:
Sending a message to same object with zero arguments in presence of a method name clash with an argument or a local variable.
Calling an attribute writer to prevent an local variable assignment.
Note, with using explicit self you can only send messages with public or protected scope, you cannot send private messages this way.
Note we allow uses of self
with operators because it would be awkward
otherwise.
Example:
# bad
def foo(bar)
self.baz
end
# good
def foo(bar)
self.bar # Resolves name clash with the argument.
end
def foo
bar = 1
self.bar # Resolves name clash with the local variable.
end
def foo
%w[x y z].select do |bar|
self.bar == bar # Resolves name clash with argument of the block.
end
end
unexpected token error
(Using Ruby 2.1 parser; configure using TargetRubyVersion
parameter, under AllCops
) Open
ref.respond_to?(:source_reflection_name) && ref.source_reflection_name || ref&.name
- Exclude checks
Redundant self
detected. Open
klass = self.model_name.name.constantize
- Read upRead up
- Exclude checks
This cop checks for redundant uses of self
.
The usage of self
is only needed when:
Sending a message to same object with zero arguments in presence of a method name clash with an argument or a local variable.
Calling an attribute writer to prevent an local variable assignment.
Note, with using explicit self you can only send messages with public or protected scope, you cannot send private messages this way.
Note we allow uses of self
with operators because it would be awkward
otherwise.
Example:
# bad
def foo(bar)
self.baz
end
# good
def foo(bar)
self.bar # Resolves name clash with the argument.
end
def foo
bar = 1
self.bar # Resolves name clash with the local variable.
end
def foo
%w[x y z].select do |bar|
self.bar == bar # Resolves name clash with argument of the block.
end
end
Wrap stabby lambda arguments with parentheses. Open
scope :with_descriptions, -> context do
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- Exclude checks
Check for parentheses around stabby lambda arguments.
There are two different styles. Defaults to require_parentheses
.
Example: EnforcedStyle: require_parentheses (default)
# bad
->a,b,c { a + b + c }
# good
->(a,b,c) { a + b + c}
Example: EnforcedStyle: requirenoparentheses
# bad
->(a,b,c) { a + b + c }
# good
->a,b,c { a + b + c}