These are rules covering Groovy idiomatic usage, and Groovy-specific bad practices.
Since CodeNarc 0.15
The Collections.sort() method mutates the list and returns the list as a value. If you are assigning the result of sort() to a variable, then you probably don’t realize that you’re also modifying the original list as well. This is frequently the cause of subtle bugs. This violation is triggered when a sort() method call appears as the right hand side of an assignment, or when it appears as the first method call in a series of chained method calls.
Example of violations:
def a = myList.sort()
def b = myList.sort() { it }
def c = myList.sort().findAll { x * 1 }
Since CodeNarc 0.15
The Collections.unique() method mutates the list and returns the list as a value. If you are assigning the result of unique() to a variable, then you probably don’t realize that you’re also modifying the original list as well. This is frequently the cause of subtle bugs.
This violation is triggered when a unique()
method call that mutates the target collection appears as the right hand side of an assignment,
or when it appears as the first method call in a series of chained method calls.
Example of violations:
def a = myList.unique() // No-argument
def x = myList.unique() { it } // Single-argument: Closure
def y = myList.unique { it % 2 }
def c = myList.unique().findAll { x * 1 } // Chained method call
def comparator = { o1, o2 -* o1 *=* o2 }
def x = myList.unique(comparator) // Single-argument: Comparator
def x = myList.unique(true) // Single-argument: boolean true
def x = myList.unique(true, comparator) // Two arguments: boolean true and Comparator
def y = myList.unique(true) { it } // Two arguments: boolean true and Closure
Since CodeNarc 0.14
If the last parameter of a method call is an inline closure then it can be declared outside the method call parentheses.
Property | Description | Default Value |
---|---|---|
ignoreCallsToMethodNames | Specifies one or more (comma-separated) method names; method calls on the named methods are ignored (i.e., do not cause a rule violation). The names may optionally contain wildcards (*,?). | null |
Example of violations:
// creates violation: poor Groovy style
[1,2,3].each({ println it })
// no violation
[1,2,3].each { println it }
Since CodeNarc 0.16
The collectAll
method is deprecated since Groovy 1.8.1. Use collectNested
instead.
Example of violations:
def list = [1, 2, [3, 4, [5, 6]], 7]
list.collectAll { it * 2 } // deprecated
list.collectNested { it * 2 } // replacement
Since CodeNarc 0.16
Multiple return values can be used to set several variables at once. To use multiple return values, the left hand side of the assignment must be enclosed in parenthesis. If not, then you are not using multiple return values, you’re only assigning the last element.
Example of violations:
def a, b = [1, 2] // bad, b is null
def c, d, e = [1, 2, 3] // bad, c and d are null
class MyClass {
def a, b, c = [1, 2, 3] // bad, a and b are null
}
def x = 1 // ok
def (f, g) = [1, 2] // ok
(a, b, c) = [1, 2, 3] // ok
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule checks for explicit calls to the no-argument constructor of ArrayList
. In Groovy, it is best to write
new ArrayList() as []
, which creates the same object.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the and(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the &
operator. A groovier way to express this: a.and(b)
is this: a & b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.and(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to true, so
even and(x)
will not trigger a violation. The default is true because and
appears commonly in Grails
criteria.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.and(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the compareTo(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
*=*, *, *=, *, and *= operators. A groovier way to express this: a.compareTo(b)
is this:
a \*\=\* b
, or using the other operators. Here are some other ways to write groovier code:
a.compareTo(b) == 0 // can be replaced by: a == b
a.compareTo(b) // can be replaced by: a *=* b
a.compareTo(b) * 0 // can be replaced by: a * b
a.compareTo(b) *= 0 // can be replaced by: a *= b
a.compareTo(b) * 0 // can be replaced by: a * b
a.compareTo(b) *= 0 // can be replaced by: a *= b
This rule can be configured to ignore this.compareTo(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference
property. It defaults to false
, so even compareTo(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.compareTo(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the div(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
/
operator. A groovier way to express this: a.div(b)
is this: a / b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore div.xor(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to false,
so even div(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.div(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the equals(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
==
or !=
operator. A groovier way to express this: a.equals(b)
is this: a == b
and a groovier way to express : !a.equals(b)
is: a != b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.equals(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to
false, so even equals(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.equals(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the getAt(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
[]
index operator. A groovier way to express this: a.getAt(b)
is this: a[b]
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.getAt(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to false,
so even getAt(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.getAt(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the leftShift(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
** operator. A groovier way to express this: a.leftShift(b)
is this: a \*\* b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.leftShift(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to
false, so even leftShift(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.leftShift(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the minus(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
-
operator. A groovier way to express this: a.minus(b)
is this: a - b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore minus.xor(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to
false, so even minus(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.minus(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the multiply(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
*
operator. A groovier way to express this: a.multiply(b)
is this: a * b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.multiply(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to
false, so even multiply(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.multiply(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the mod(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
%
operator. A groovier way to express this: a.mod(b)
is this: a % b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.mod(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to false, so
even mod(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.mod(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the or(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the |
operator. A groovier way to express this: a.or(b)
is this: a | b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.or(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to true, so
even or(x)
will not trigger a violation. This is the default because it is commonly used in Grails criteria.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.or(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the plus(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
+
operator. A groovier way to express this: a.plus(b)
is this: a + b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.plus(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to false, so
even plus(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.plus(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the power(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
**
operator. A groovier way to express this: a.power(b)
is this: a ** b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.power(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to false, so
even power(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.power(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 1.3
Detects when the map.putAt(k, v)
method is called directly rather than using map[k] = v
.
This rule can be configured to ignore this.putAt(k, v)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults
to false, so even putAt(k, v)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.putAt(k, v)
.
Example of violations:
map.putAt(k, v) // violation
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the rightShift(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
** operator. A groovier way to express this: a.rightShift(b)
is this: a \*\* b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.rightShift(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to
false, so even rightShift(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.rightShift(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule detects when the xor(Object)
method is called directly in code instead of using the
^
operator. A groovier way to express this: a.xor(b)
is this: a ^ b
. This rule can be
configured to ignore this.xor(Object)
using the ignoreThisReference property. It defaults to false, so
even xor(x)
will trigger a violation.
This rule also ignores all calls to super.xor(Object)
.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule checks for explicit calls to the no-argument constructor of HashMap
. In Groovy, it is best to replace
new HashMap()
with [:]
, which creates (mostly) the same object. [:]
is technically a LinkedHashMap but it
is very rare that someone absolutely needs an instance of HashMap
and not a subclass.
Since in CodeNarc 0.14
This rule checks for the explicit instantiation of a LinkedHashMap
using the no-arg constructor. In Groovy, it
is best to replace new LinkedHashMap()
with [:]
, which creates the same object.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule checks for explicit calls to the no-argument constructor of HashSet
. In Groovy, it is best to replace
new HashSet()
with [] as Set
, which creates the same object.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule checks for explicit calls to the no-argument constructor of LinkedList
. In Groovy, it is best to replace
new LinkedList()
with [] as Queue
, which creates the same object.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule checks for explicit calls to the no-argument constructor of Stack
. In Groovy, it is best to replace
new Stack()
with [] as Stack
, which creates the same object.
Since CodeNarc 0.11
This rule checks for explicit calls to the no-argument constructor of TreeSet
. In Groovy, it is best to replace
new TreeSet()
with [] as SortedSet
, which creates the same object.
Since CodeNarc 0.16
If a class defines a public
method that follows the Java getter notation and that returns a constant, literal
or static final field value, then it is cleaner to provide a Groovy property for the value rather than a Groovy method.
Property | Description | Default Value |
---|---|---|
ignoreMethodsWithOverrideAnnotation | If true , then do not check methods annotated with @Override. |
false |
Example of violations:
interface Parent {
String getSomething()
String getSomethingElse()
}
class Child extends Parent {
static final VALUE = 'value'
String getSomething() { // violation
'something'
}
@Override
String getSomethingElse() { // violation
VALUE
}
int getOtherValue() { // violation
123
}
Class getTheClass() { // violation
return Integer
}
static String getName() { // violation
'MyName'
}
}
class Child2 extends Parent {
static final VALUE = 'value'
final String something = 'something' // this is cleaner
final String somethingElse = VALUE // this is cleaner
final int otherValue = 123 // this is cleaner
static final String name = 'MyName' // this is cleaner
}
Since CodeNarc 0.13
The groovy.lang.Immutable
annotation has been deprecated and replaced by groovy.transform.Immutable
. Do
not use the Immutable
in groovy.lang
.
Example of violations:
@Immutable // Violation (no import means groovy.lang.Immutable)
class Person { }
@groovy.lang.Immutable // Violation
class Person { }
import groovy.lang.Immutable as Imtl
@Imtl // Violation
class Person { }
Example of valid use of @Immutable:
@groovy.transform.Immutable // OK
class Person { }
import groovy.transform.Immutable // OK
@Immutable
class Person { }
import groovy.transform.*
@Immutable // OK
class Person { }
import groovy.transform.Immutable as Imtl
@Imtl // OK
class Person { }
@javax.annotation.concurrent.Immutable // OK
class MyClass { }
Since CodeNarc 0.11
A GString should not be used as a map key since its hashcode is not guaranteed to be stable.
Consider calling key.toString()
.
Here is an example of code that produces a violation:
Map map = ["${someRef}" : 'invalid' ] // violation
Since CodeNarc 0.19
Check for regular (single quote) strings containing a GString-type expression (${..}).
Example of violations:
def str1 = 'total: ${count}' // violation
def str2 = 'average: ${total / count}' // violation
def str3 = "abc ${count}" // ok; GString
def str4 = '$123' // ok
def str5 = 'abc {123}' // ok
Since CodeNarc 0.16
In many case collectMany()
yields the same result as collect{}.flatten()
.
It is easier to understand and more clearly conveys the intent.
Limitations:
collectMany()
method does not recursively flatten nested collections, unlike collect().flatten()
.
e.g.
def l = [1, [2, 22], 3]
println l.collect{ [it, it*2] }.flatten() // [1, 2, 2, 22, 2, 22, 2, 22, 3, 6]
println l.collectMany{ [it, it*2] } // [1, 2, [2, 22], [2, 22, 2, 22], 3, 6]
Example of violations:
def l = [1, 2, 3, 4]
l.collect{ [it, it*2] }.flatten() // suboptimal
l.collectMany{ [it, it*2] } // same functionality, better readability
Since CodeNarc 0.16
Instead of nested collect{}
calls use collectNested{}
.
Example of violations:
def list = [1, 2, [3, 4, 5, 6], [7]]
println list.collect { elem -*
if (elem instanceof List)
elem.collect {it *2} // violation
else elem * 2
}
println list.collect([8]) {
if (it instanceof List)
it.collect {it *2} // violation
else it * 2
}
println list.collectNested { it * 2 } // same functionality, better readability