As mentioned in commits like a586ba806, a7664ad81, 006128da5, b41fbfa52
and c480cdd91, accessing the database after starting the browser with
the `visit` method sometimes results in database corruption and failing
tests on our CI due to the process running the test accessing the
database after the process running the browser has started.
In this case, we were hiding a proposal after starting the process
running the browser to check what happens when accessing a notification
for a hidden proposal. We can avoid database access in the middle of the
test by hidding a proposal before starting the browser. The process to
create a notification using the browser is already tested in other
specs, so we don't need to do it here as well.
Note that, to simplify the test, we're extracting the `notify_users`
method. I wonder whether this method should be called in an
`after_create` callback instead... That's a topic for another time,
though.
When customizing CONSUL, one of the most common actions is adding a new
field to a form.
This requires modifying the permitted/allowed parameters. However, in
most cases, the method returning these parameters returned an instance
of `ActionController::Parameters`, so adding more parameters to it
wasn't easy.
So customizing the code required copying the method returning those
parameters and adding the new ones. For example:
```
def something_params
params.require(:something).permit(
:one_consul_attribute,
:another_consul_attribute,
:my_custom_attribute
)
end
```
This meant that, if the `something_params` method changed in CONSUL, the
customization of this method had to be updated as well.
So we're extracting the logic returning the parameters to a method which
returns an array. Now this code can be customized without copying the
original method:
```
alias_method :consul_allowed_params, :allowed_params
def allowed_params
consul_allowed_params + [:my_custom_attribute]
end
```
We were very inconsistent regarding these rules.
Personally I prefer no empty lines around blocks, clases, etc... as
recommended by the Ruby style guide [1], and they're the default values
in rubocop, so those are the settings I'm applying.
The exception is the `private` access modifier, since we were leaving
empty lines around it most of the time. That's the default rubocop rule
as well. Personally I don't have a strong preference about this one.
[1] https://rubystyle.guide/#empty-lines-around-bodies
Keep a blank line before and after private
Keep a blank line before and after protected
Remove extra empty line at class body end
Remove extra blank line
Add final newline
Use 2 (not 3) spaces for indentation
Use 2 (not 4) spaces for indentation
Remove space before comma
Add space after comma
Remove trailing whitespaces
Remove unnecessary spacing
Use snake_case for variable names
Do not use then for multi-line if
Remove unused block argument - i
Use the new Ruby 1.9 hash syntax
Remove unused assignment to variable
Indent when as deep as case
Align attributes
Align end with def