SimpleCov
strong_migrations
SimpleCov | strong_migrations | |
---|---|---|
11 | 17 | |
4,708 | 3,859 | |
0.1% | - | |
6.6 | 7.9 | |
4 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Ruby | Ruby | |
MIT License | MIT 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.
SimpleCov
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Must-have gems for mature Rails
gem "simplecov" - https://github.com/simplecov-ruby/simplecov | Gather spec coverage stats locally and on CI, aim for those 90+%.
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Evaluating More Coverage in Ruby 3.2
Have you wondered how much of the logic in your views is exercised in your test suite? Thanks to this change, now you can see that in tools like SimpleCov.
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My First Code Commit in Ruby
My talk is about different best practices - specifically when adhering to them breaks down. One of those best practices is high test coverage. I start to work on the content for my presentation by building the code samples that I want to use in the slides. For the code coverage section, I'm writing some code with some tests. I'm using SimpleCov to generate code coverage results.
- Falha de cobertura: Divagações sobre testes de software
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Improve Code in Your Ruby Application with RubyCritic
SimpleCov - a tool to check Ruby application code coverage. You can configure it to run alongside your tests. It provides metrics on code coverage so that you can identify what you need to pay attention to and where to invest your time to create better test cases.
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Paying Down Technical Debt
Ensure that you have sufficient test coverage. You can use code coverage analysis tools like SimpleCov to gain insight into gaps in your coverage.
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How to test all workers in one big loop?
simplecov might the answer you need, it generates a report of the lines of code your test suite hits.
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How to Improve Code Quality on a Ruby on Rails Application
Use SimpleCov to generate a report of how many statements are covered by your test suite. It won't assess the test suite quality, though.
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Ruby's Got You Covered
There are many tools for measuring test coverage, but one is SimpleCov. It also supports branches coverage. To measure coverage of production code, check out Coverband, which you can set up to use oneshot lines mode.
- Como configurar ambiente de testes em Ruby on Rails com RSpec
strong_migrations
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Careful with That Lock, Eugene
In the Rails world, the gem strong_migrations can be used to detect these: https://github.com/ankane/strong_migrations
The docs include a handy articulation of fixes.
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Must-have gems for mature Rails
gem "strong_migrations" - https://github.com/ankane/strong_migrations | Helps devs write non-blocking migrations, a must-have.
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Migration Best Practice
Frameworks will have a preferred solution. We use Rails with the strong_migrations gem which is great: https://github.com/ankane/strong_migrations
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How does Rails handle out of order migrations (when working on different local branches)
There’s no real way to test, but you can use gems like https://github.com/ankane/strong_migrations and not allow to merge branches unless they are up-to-date with main.
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[AskJS] Is there any alternative to the strong migrations gem?
The strong migrations gem in Rails alerts when you're trying to make a migration that may be dangerous. Does anyone know an alternative for Javascript? Or maybe for raw SQL.
- Adding first and last name to existing app running on Heroku
- Enforcing Zero Downtime Django Migrations
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When Postgres blocks: tips for dealing with locks
Half of the problems in this article are migration related.
I am extremely grateful that some people have created awesome libraries like strong migrations https://github.com/ankane/strong_migrations. Even if you are not using rails, bookmark its readme, it is an awesome cheat-sheet when writing a migration.
- Best practices as code using RuboCop
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Why I Enjoy PostgreSQL – Infrastructure Engineer's Perspective
I would suggest taking a look at strong migrations[1]. It's a rails project, but the readme does a great job explaining what it checks for and what safe alternative to use instead. I still link to their explanations in PRs for non-rails projects.
[1]: https://github.com/ankane/strong_migrations#checks
What are some alternatives?
Coverband - Ruby production code coverage collection and reporting (line of code usage)
safe-pg-migrations - Make your PostgreSQL migrations safe
Rubocop - A Ruby static code analyzer and formatter, based on the community Ruby style guide. [Moved to: https://github.com/rubocop/rubocop]
phony_rails - This Gem adds useful methods to your Rails app to validate, display and save phone numbers. It uses the super awesome Phony gem (https://github.com/floere/phony).
Rubycritic - A Ruby code quality reporter
money-rails - Integration of RubyMoney - Money with Rails
undercover - undercover warns about methods, classes and blocks that were changed without tests, to help you easily find untested code and reduce the number of bugs. It does so by analysing data from git diffs, code structure and SimpleCov coverage reports
lockbox - Modern encryption for Ruby and Rails
Pronto - Quick automated code review of your changes
data-migrate - Migrate and update data alongside your database structure.
rails_best_practices - a code metric tool for rails projects
Pagy - 🏆 The Best Pagination Ruby Gem 🥇