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RuboCop Rails

Gem Version CI

A RuboCop extension focused on enforcing Rails best practices and coding conventions.

Note: This repository manages rubocop-rails gem (>= 2.0.0). rubocop-rails gem (<= 1.5.0) has been renamed to rubocop-rails_config gem.

Installation

Just install the rubocop-rails gem

$ gem install rubocop-rails

or if you use bundler put this in your Gemfile

gem 'rubocop-rails', require: false

Usage

You need to tell RuboCop to load the Rails extension. There are three ways to do this:

RuboCop configuration file

Put this into your .rubocop.yml.

require: rubocop-rails

Alternatively, use the following array notation when specifying multiple extensions.

require:
  - rubocop-other-extension
  - rubocop-rails

Now you can run rubocop and it will automatically load the RuboCop Rails cops together with the standard cops.

Command line

$ rubocop --require rubocop-rails

Note: --rails option is required while rubocop command supports --rails option.

Rake task

require 'rubocop/rake_task'

RuboCop::RakeTask.new do |task|
  task.requires << 'rubocop-rails'
end

RuboCop Rails configuration

The following settings specific to RuboCop Rails can be configured in .rubocop.yml.

AllCops: TargetRailsVersion

What version of Rails is the inspected code using? If a value is specified for TargetRailsVersion then it is used. Acceptable values are specified as a float (e.g., 7.2); the patch version of Rails should not be included.

AllCops:
  TargetRailsVersion: 7.2

If TargetRailsVersion is not set, RuboCop will parse the Gemfile.lock or gems.locked file to find the version of Rails that has been bound to the application. If neither of those files exist, RuboCop will use Rails 5.0 as the default.

Rails configuration tip

In Rails 6.1+, add the following config.generators.after_generate setting to your config/environments/development.rb to apply RuboCop autocorrection to code generated by bin/rails g.

# config/environments/development.rb
Rails.application.configure do
  config.generators.after_generate do |files|
    parsable_files = files.filter { |file| file.end_with?('.rb') }
    unless parsable_files.empty?
      system("bundle exec rubocop -A --fail-level=E #{parsable_files.shelljoin}", exception: true)
    end
  end
end

It uses rubocop -A to apply Style/FrozenStringLiteralComment and other unsafe autocorrection cops. rubocop -A is unsafe autocorrection, but code generated by default is simple and less likely to be incompatible with rubocop -A. If you have problems you can replace it with rubocop -a instead.

In Rails 7.2+, it is recommended to use config.generators.apply_rubocop_autocorrect_after_generate! instead of the above setting:

 # config/environments/development.rb
 Rails.application.configure do
   (snip)
   # Apply autocorrection by RuboCop to files generated by `bin/rails generate`.
-  # config.generators.apply_rubocop_autocorrect_after_generate!
+  config.generators.apply_rubocop_autocorrect_after_generate!
 end

You only need to uncomment.

The Cops

All cops are located under lib/rubocop/cop/rails, and contain examples/documentation.

In your .rubocop.yml, you may treat the Rails cops just like any other cop. For example:

Rails/FindBy:
  Exclude:
    - lib/example.rb

Documentation

You can read a lot more about RuboCop Rails in its official docs.

Compatibility

Rails cops support the following versions:

  • Rails 4.2+

Readme Badge

If you use RuboCop Rails in your project, you can include one of these badges in your readme to let people know that your code is written following the community Rails Style Guide.

Rails Style Guide

Rails Style Guide

Here are the Markdown snippets for the two badges:

[![Rails Style Guide](https://img.shields.io/badge/code_style-rubocop-brightgreen.svg)](https://github.com/rubocop/rubocop-rails)

[![Rails Style Guide](https://img.shields.io/badge/code_style-community-brightgreen.svg)](https://rails.rubystyle.guide)

Contributing

Checkout the contribution guidelines.

License

rubocop-rails is MIT licensed. See the accompanying file for the full text.