- Previously I thought that comments were fine to discourage people from
wasting their time trying to bump things that used `undef` that Sorbet
didn't support. But RuboCop is better at this since it'll complain if
the comments are unnecessary.
- Suggested in https://github.com/Homebrew/brew/pull/18018#issuecomment-2283369501.
- I've gone for a mixture of `rubocop:disable` for the files that can't
be `typed: strict` (use of undef, required before everything else, etc)
and `rubocop:todo` for everything else that should be tried to make
strictly typed. There's no functional difference between the two as
`rubocop:todo` is `rubocop:disable` with a different name.
- And I entirely disabled the cop for the docs/ directory since
`typed: strict` isn't going to gain us anything for some Markdown
linting config files.
- This means that now it's easier to track what needs to be done rather
than relying on checklists of files in our big Sorbet issue:
```shell
$ git grep 'typed: true # rubocop:todo Sorbet/StrictSigil' | wc -l
268
```
- And this is confirmed working for new files:
```shell
$ git status
On branch use-rubocop-for-sorbet-strict-sigils
Untracked files:
(use "git add <file>..." to include in what will be committed)
Library/Homebrew/bad.rb
Library/Homebrew/good.rb
nothing added to commit but untracked files present (use "git add" to track)
$ brew style
Offenses:
bad.rb:1:1: C: Sorbet/StrictSigil: Sorbet sigil should be at least strict got true.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
1340 files inspected, 1 offense detected
```
- This still doesn't pass `brew readall` for Casks, but it gets us a
little closer since if `url` has a `version` interpolated in it, the
`version` stanza has to come first.
- See https://github.com/Homebrew/homebrew-cask/pull/143201 for the
current failures.
- This, ie Mojave first, is more common in real Casks than the
alternative of newest to oldest ie Ventura first.
- Doing it this way reduces the number of offenses from ~500 to ~200.
- Complaining about only `on_arm` and `on_intel` was too restrictive
since casks can have many `on_system` blocks (`on_#{arch}` and
`on_#{os}`).
- We're a bit of the way there, anyway. Still doesn't support stanza
ordering within blocks, but that's for another time (there's a
separate issue that's been open for a while - 14017).
- These were previously being manually fixed which is time maintainers
could have spent fixing more important problems.
- I don't work with Casks much at all, so I was unsure as to what the
existing "arch" and "on_arch_conditional" parts were, if they're
deprecated or if things were eventually going to migrate to
`on_#{arch}` blocks?