Issy Long 45978435e7
rubocop: Use Sorbet/StrictSigil as it's better than comments
- 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
```
2024-08-12 15:24:27 +01:00

73 lines
2.0 KiB
Ruby

# typed: true # rubocop:todo Sorbet/StrictSigil
# frozen_string_literal: true
module RuboCop
module Cop
module Homebrew
# Checks for code that can be simplified using `Object#blank?`.
#
# NOTE: Auto-correction for this cop is unsafe because `' '.empty?` returns `false`,
# but `' '.blank?` returns `true`. Therefore, auto-correction is not compatible
# if the receiver is a non-empty blank string.
#
# ### Example
#
# ```ruby
# # bad
# foo.nil? || foo.empty?
# foo == nil || foo.empty?
#
# # good
# foo.blank?
# ```
class Blank < Base
extend AutoCorrector
MSG = "Use `%<prefer>s` instead of `%<current>s`."
# `(send nil $_)` is not actually a valid match for an offense. Nodes
# that have a single method call on the left hand side
# (`bar || foo.empty?`) will blow up when checking
# `(send (:nil) :== $_)`.
def_node_matcher :nil_or_empty?, <<~PATTERN
(or
{
(send $_ :!)
(send $_ :nil?)
(send $_ :== nil)
(send nil :== $_)
}
{
(send $_ :empty?)
(send (send (send $_ :empty?) :!) :!)
}
)
PATTERN
def on_or(node)
nil_or_empty?(node) do |var1, var2|
return if var1 != var2
message = format(MSG, prefer: replacement(var1), current: node.source)
add_offense(node, message:) do |corrector|
autocorrect(corrector, node)
end
end
end
private
def autocorrect(corrector, node)
variable1, _variable2 = nil_or_empty?(node)
range = node.source_range
corrector.replace(range, replacement(variable1))
end
def replacement(node)
node.respond_to?(:source) ? "#{node.source}.blank?" : "blank?"
end
end
end
end
end