/rubocop

A Ruby static code analyzer and formatter, based on the community Ruby style guide.

Primary LanguageRubyMIT LicenseMIT

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Role models are important.
-- Officer Alex J. Murphy / RoboCop

RuboCop is a Ruby static code analyzer (a.k.a. linter) and code formatter. Out of the box it will enforce many of the guidelines outlined in the community Ruby Style Guide. Apart from reporting the problems discovered in your code, RuboCop can also automatically fix many of them you.

RuboCop is extremely flexible and most aspects of its behavior can be tweaked via various configuration options.

Please consider financially supporting its ongoing development.

Installation

RuboCop's installation is pretty standard:

$ gem install rubocop

If you'd rather install RuboCop using bundler, add a line for it in your Gemfile (but set the require option to false, as it is a standalone tool):

gem 'rubocop', require: false

RuboCop's development is moving at a very rapid pace and there are often backward-incompatible changes between minor releases (since we haven't reached version 1.0 yet). To prevent an unwanted RuboCop update you might want to use a conservative version lock in your Gemfile:

gem 'rubocop', '~> 0.85.1', require: false

Quickstart

Just type rubocop in a Ruby project's folder and watch the magic happen.

$ cd my/cool/ruby/project
$ rubocop

Documentation

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

Compatibility

RuboCop supports the following Ruby implementations:

  • MRI 2.4+
  • JRuby 9.2+

RuboCop has customarily provided support for about a year after EOL of MRI Ruby version. This is done by RuboCop core to provide the community with a margin of transition.

Team

Here's a list of RuboCop's core developers:

Logo

RuboCop's logo was created by Dimiter Petrov. You can find the logo in various formats here.

The logo is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

Contributors

Here's a list of all the people who have contributed to the development of RuboCop.

I'm extremely grateful to each and every one of them!

If you'd like to contribute to RuboCop, please take the time to go through our short contribution guidelines.

Converting more of the Ruby Style Guide into RuboCop cops is our top priority right now. Writing a new cop is a great way to dive into RuboCop!

Of course, bug reports and suggestions for improvements are always welcome. GitHub pull requests are even better! :-)

Funding

While RuboCop is free software and will always be, the project would benefit immensely from some funding. Raising a monthly budget of a couple of thousand dollars would make it possible to pay people to work on certain complex features, fund other development related stuff (e.g. hardware, conference trips) and so on. Raising a monthly budget of over $5000 would open the possibility of someone working full-time on the project which would speed up the pace of development significantly.

We welcome both individual and corporate sponsors! We also offer a wide array of funding channels to account for your preferences (although currently Open Collective is our preferred funding platform).

If you're working in a company that's making significant use of RuboCop we'd appreciate it if you suggest to your company to become a RuboCop sponsor.

You can support the development of RuboCop via GitHub Sponsors, Patreon, PayPal and Open Collective.

Open Collective Backers

Support us with a monthly donation and help us continue our activities. [Become a backer]

Open Collective Sponsors

Become a sponsor and get your logo on our README on GitHub with a link to your site. [Become a sponsor]

Changelog

RuboCop's changelog is available here.

Copyright

Copyright (c) 2012-2020 Bozhidar Batsov. See LICENSE.txt for further details.