rubocop
Annotate
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rubocop | Annotate | |
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39 | 9 | |
12,491 | 4,327 | |
0.3% | - | |
9.8 | 2.4 | |
6 days ago | 11 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | Ruby License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
rubocop
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Must-have gems for mature Rails
gem "rubocop" - https://github.com/rubocop/rubocop | Set up code guidelines for your dev team, I recommend using whatever Standard recommends.
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I Love Ruby
I believe if you use the `||` operator instead of `or`, then things just work out fine. I agree it is really annoying. But I am pretty sure if you use a tool like RuboCop https://github.com/rubocop/rubocop (a static code analysis tool) then it will catch bugs like this. Note that I am not recommending Ruby. But in my experience if you want to work with a language and it has a community style guide and a linter that enforces it, it will save me some heartache.
- Mastering Linters : A Code Quality Assurance Comprehensive Guide using Ruby on Rails
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code review / feedback for improvement
Adopt some sort of consistent formatting. Your top-level module starts off indented, seems like wasted space. May I suggest RuboCop?
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An Introduction to RuboCop for Ruby on Rails
By default, out of the box, RuboCop comes with a default set of pre-configured rules. The documentation will tell you Rubocop's default rules.
- I live and work in the US where protests against police brutality have been ongoing for days, and coming to work this week the word "cop" has an uncomfortable feeling about it.
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Code Reviewing a Ruby on Rails application.
RuboCop is a Ruby static code analyzer (a.k.a. linter) and code formatter. Out of the box it will enforce many of the guidelines outlined in the community Ruby Style Guide. Apart from reporting the problems discovered in your code, RuboCop can also automatically fix many of them for you.
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Xeme: I'd value your opinion on my new Ruby gem
But I will encourage you to adopt Rubocop to enforce the style you want, so that if others want to contribute, they can write with spaces and then run rubocop -a and end up with the styling you prefer. Tabs indentation support was added a couple of years back: https://github.com/rubocop/rubocop/pull/7867
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Welcome to Rails Cheat Sheet
In my last job I encountered my first Rails codebase ever (mostly REST APIs but a few server-rendered views as well). After the initial chaotic impression of the codebase (it was a startup after all) with all the Rails magic on top, I really fell in love with the framework after a more experienced Rails dev introduced a few key conventions and helpful libraries to the codebase.
Out of those, I’d at least add the RuboCop [1] linter and the BetterSpecs [2] guidelines to this list. Both helped tremendously in eliminating bikeshedding in the team and freeing up brainpower to solve actual problems. The first one helped me learn intricacies of Ruby bit by bit right in my IDE and the latter guided us to write tests in a style that’s easy to maintain and trust.
[1] https://github.com/rubocop/rubocop
[2] https://www.betterspecs.org/
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Ruby 2.7.8 Released
RuboCop had a setting for this but it was removed for Ruby 3 because there are valid reasons to pass a hash into a method, and linting it might break code. Here is the issue referencing the commits where it was removed, if you ever need to do this again you could just find an earlier commit.
Annotate
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Must-have gems for mature Rails
gem "annotate" - https://github.com/ctran/annotate_models | Adds DB-schema comments to models. May be unnecessary on RubyMine, YMMW.
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I spent the past 3 months working on a fork of the Annotate models gem
I believe Ctran is aware of this based on his response in this issue https://github.com/ctran/annotate_models/issues/913
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What was the name of the gem that finds all unindexed foreign keys?
A gem that's pretty useful alongside this one is the annotation gem -- it prefixes models with their specific schema dump (as comments) and then updates those descriptive comments on migration. It's one of my go-to gems to install when I rotate onto a new-to-me Rails project (or start a new one) and I'm working to understand the data model.
- Cansado de conferir o schema.rb
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Could really use some help with a plugin rake task issue
Have you looked at annotate for inspiration?
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The database and migrations work is annoying me the most about Rails as a newcomer, am I missing something?
I get it, though. Sounds like you're used to seeing every column definition in there. And that would be handy. There is a gem that you might like: https://github.com/ctran/annotate_models
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Rails application boilerplate for fast MVP development
annotate for annotations
What are some alternatives?
sorbet - A fast, powerful type checker designed for Ruby
Apipie - Ruby on Rails API documentation tool
Rubycritic - A Ruby code quality reporter
RDoc - RDoc produces HTML and online documentation for Ruby projects.
coc-solargraph - Solargraph extension for coc.nvim
YARD - YARD is a Ruby Documentation tool. The Y stands for "Yay!"
bullet - help to kill N+1 queries and unused eager loading
GitHub Changelog Generator - Automatically generate change log from your tags, issues, labels and pull requests on GitHub.
Reek - Code smell detector for Ruby
rspec_api_documentation - Automatically generate API documentation from RSpec
Pronto - Quick automated code review of your changes
Asciidoctor - :gem: A fast, open source text processor and publishing toolchain, written in Ruby, for converting AsciiDoc content to HTML 5, DocBook 5, and other formats.