Add more triggers for workflow automation#2301
Add more triggers for workflow automation#2301api-clients-generation-pipeline[bot] merged 1 commit intomasterfrom
Conversation
| end | ||
|
|
||
| if attributes.key?(:'start_step_names') | ||
| if (value = attributes[:'start_step_names']).is_a?(Array) |
There was a problem hiding this comment.
⚪ Code Quality Violation
Consider using Array() to ensure the type is that of an array (...read more)
The rule "Use Array() to ensure your variable is an array" is important for ensuring your code behaves as expected, regardless of the type of data it receives. It is common in Ruby to need to iterate through an array of items. However, if the variable is not an array, this can lead to unexpected behavior or errors.
The Array() method in Ruby is a Kernel method that converts its argument to an Array. If the argument is already an Array, it returns the argument. If the argument is nil, it returns an empty Array. This can be used to ensure that a variable is an array before trying to iterate over it, preventing potential errors or unexpected behavior.
By using Array(foos), you can ensure that foos is an array before you try to iterate over it with each. This prevents the need to check if foos is an array with foos.is_a?(Array) and makes your code cleaner and easier to understand.
| end | ||
|
|
||
| if attributes.key?(:'start_step_names') | ||
| if (value = attributes[:'start_step_names']).is_a?(Array) |
There was a problem hiding this comment.
⚪ Code Quality Violation
Consider using Array() to ensure the type is that of an array (...read more)
The rule "Use Array() to ensure your variable is an array" is important for ensuring your code behaves as expected, regardless of the type of data it receives. It is common in Ruby to need to iterate through an array of items. However, if the variable is not an array, this can lead to unexpected behavior or errors.
The Array() method in Ruby is a Kernel method that converts its argument to an Array. If the argument is already an Array, it returns the argument. If the argument is nil, it returns an empty Array. This can be used to ensure that a variable is an array before trying to iterate over it, preventing potential errors or unexpected behavior.
By using Array(foos), you can ensure that foos is an array before you try to iterate over it with each. This prevents the need to check if foos is an array with foos.is_a?(Array) and makes your code cleaner and easier to understand.
| end | ||
|
|
||
| if attributes.key?(:'start_step_names') | ||
| if (value = attributes[:'start_step_names']).is_a?(Array) |
There was a problem hiding this comment.
⚪ Code Quality Violation
Consider using Array() to ensure the type is that of an array (...read more)
The rule "Use Array() to ensure your variable is an array" is important for ensuring your code behaves as expected, regardless of the type of data it receives. It is common in Ruby to need to iterate through an array of items. However, if the variable is not an array, this can lead to unexpected behavior or errors.
The Array() method in Ruby is a Kernel method that converts its argument to an Array. If the argument is already an Array, it returns the argument. If the argument is nil, it returns an empty Array. This can be used to ensure that a variable is an array before trying to iterate over it, preventing potential errors or unexpected behavior.
By using Array(foos), you can ensure that foos is an array before you try to iterate over it with each. This prevents the need to check if foos is an array with foos.is_a?(Array) and makes your code cleaner and easier to understand.
| end | ||
|
|
||
| if attributes.key?(:'start_step_names') | ||
| if (value = attributes[:'start_step_names']).is_a?(Array) |
There was a problem hiding this comment.
⚪ Code Quality Violation
Consider using Array() to ensure the type is that of an array (...read more)
The rule "Use Array() to ensure your variable is an array" is important for ensuring your code behaves as expected, regardless of the type of data it receives. It is common in Ruby to need to iterate through an array of items. However, if the variable is not an array, this can lead to unexpected behavior or errors.
The Array() method in Ruby is a Kernel method that converts its argument to an Array. If the argument is already an Array, it returns the argument. If the argument is nil, it returns an empty Array. This can be used to ensure that a variable is an array before trying to iterate over it, preventing potential errors or unexpected behavior.
By using Array(foos), you can ensure that foos is an array before you try to iterate over it with each. This prevents the need to check if foos is an array with foos.is_a?(Array) and makes your code cleaner and easier to understand.
dd9b80b to
546a0b3
Compare
Datadog ReportBranch report: ✅ 0 Failed, 1361 Passed, 1738 Skipped, 2m 24.06s Total Time |
546a0b3 to
0e3aee1
Compare
Co-authored-by: ci.datadog-api-spec <packages@datadoghq.com> 898b06a
See DataDog/datadog-api-spec#3687
Test branch datadog-api-spec/test/gabriel.margolis/add_new_triggers