Class: RuboCop::Cop::VariableForce::Variable
- Inherits:
-
Object
- Object
- RuboCop::Cop::VariableForce::Variable
- Defined in:
- lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb
Overview
A Variable represents existence of a local variable. This holds a variable declaration node, and some states of the variable.
Constant Summary collapse
- VARIABLE_DECLARATION_TYPES =
(VARIABLE_ASSIGNMENT_TYPES + ARGUMENT_DECLARATION_TYPES).freeze
Instance Attribute Summary collapse
-
#assignments ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute assignments.
-
#captured_by_block ⇒ Object
(also: #captured_by_block?)
readonly
Returns the value of attribute captured_by_block.
-
#declaration_node ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute declaration_node.
-
#name ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute name.
-
#references ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute references.
-
#scope ⇒ Object
readonly
Returns the value of attribute scope.
Instance Method Summary collapse
- #argument? ⇒ Boolean
- #assign(node) ⇒ Object
- #block_argument? ⇒ Boolean
- #capture_with_block! ⇒ Object
- #explicit_block_local_variable? ⇒ Boolean
-
#initialize(name, declaration_node, scope) ⇒ Variable
constructor
A new instance of Variable.
- #keyword_argument? ⇒ Boolean
- #method_argument? ⇒ Boolean
- #reference!(node) ⇒ Object
- #referenced? ⇒ Boolean
- #should_be_unused? ⇒ Boolean
-
#used? ⇒ Boolean
This is a convenient way to check whether the variable is used in its entire variable lifetime.
Constructor Details
#initialize(name, declaration_node, scope) ⇒ Variable
Returns a new instance of Variable.
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 17 def initialize(name, declaration_node, scope) unless VARIABLE_DECLARATION_TYPES.include?(declaration_node.type) raise ArgumentError, "Node type must be any of #{VARIABLE_DECLARATION_TYPES}, " \ "passed #{declaration_node.type}" end @name = name.to_sym @declaration_node = declaration_node @scope = scope @assignments = [] @references = [] @captured_by_block = false end |
Instance Attribute Details
#assignments ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute assignments.
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 13 def assignments @assignments end |
#captured_by_block ⇒ Object (readonly) Also known as: captured_by_block?
Returns the value of attribute captured_by_block.
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 13 def captured_by_block @captured_by_block end |
#declaration_node ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute declaration_node.
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 13 def declaration_node @declaration_node end |
#name ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute name.
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 13 def name @name end |
#references ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute references.
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 13 def references @references end |
#scope ⇒ Object (readonly)
Returns the value of attribute scope.
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 13 def scope @scope end |
Instance Method Details
#argument? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 81 def argument? ARGUMENT_DECLARATION_TYPES.include?(@declaration_node.type) end |
#assign(node) ⇒ Object
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 33 def assign(node) @assignments << Assignment.new(node, self) end |
#block_argument? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 89 def block_argument? argument? && @scope.node.block_type? end |
#capture_with_block! ⇒ Object
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 61 def capture_with_block! @captured_by_block = true end |
#explicit_block_local_variable? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 97 def explicit_block_local_variable? @declaration_node.shadowarg_type? end |
#keyword_argument? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 93 def keyword_argument? %i[kwarg kwoptarg].include?(@declaration_node.type) end |
#method_argument? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 85 def method_argument? argument? && %i[def defs].include?(@scope.node.type) end |
#reference!(node) ⇒ Object
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 41 def reference!(node) reference = Reference.new(node, @scope) @references << reference consumed_branches = Set.new @assignments.reverse_each do |assignment| next if consumed_branches.include?(assignment.branch) unless assignment.run_exclusively_with?(reference) assignment.reference! end break if !assignment.branch || assignment.branch == reference.branch unless assignment.branch.may_run_incompletely? consumed_branches << assignment.branch end end end |
#referenced? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 37 def referenced? !@references.empty? end |
#should_be_unused? ⇒ Boolean
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 77 def should_be_unused? name.to_s.start_with?('_') end |
#used? ⇒ Boolean
This is a convenient way to check whether the variable is used in its entire variable lifetime. For more precise usage check, refer Assignment#used?.
Once the variable is captured by a block, we have no idea when, where and how many times the block would be invoked and it means we cannot track the usage of the variable. So we consider it’s used to suppress false positive offenses.
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# File 'lib/rubocop/cop/variable_force/variable.rb', line 73 def used? @captured_by_block || referenced? end |