=== on 18 Nov 2015, 17:47:57 Elena Vilchik wrote: \[~ann.campbell.2] I'm stuck with this rule. Could you help me with a draft? Initially idea was to check that binary operations are called with operands of same type. But further investigations shown that it's common practice to use what ever types you want :) So I found out cases when expected result might differ from actual (see SONARJS-450), and I think that this rule should check only these particular cases. Now I don't know what should be the description and especially the title of this rule. === on 18 Nov 2015, 19:51:22 Ann Campbell wrote: Okay [~elena.vilchik], let's narrow this down. We want to raise an issue when: * String is compared (<, >, +<=+, >=, ==(?), ===(?)) with ... anything? Linked ticket shows ``++str1 < str2++`` but it seems that it would be equally faulty with ``++str1 < obj++`` and ``++str1 >= 4++`` ...? * Strings are concatenated with non-strings * dis-similar types are checked for (in)equality. Is this only ``++===++`` or ``++==++`` as well? === on 19 Nov 2015, 11:34:42 Elena Vilchik wrote: \[~ann.campbell.2] Not exactly. It should be this way: * string compared with string only (<, >, +<=+, >=) ---- "123" < "14" // true, lexical comparison <--- Noncompliant "123" < 14 // false, both casted to numbers ---- Comparison of string with other types is not so dangerous (because actual behaviour is quite expected). * string concatenated with numbers (because some could expect addition) ---- "123" + 45 // "12345" <--- Noncompliant ---- * check only "===" for any non identical types ---- "1" == 1 // true "1" === 1 // false, whatever values, if types are different <--- Noncompliant ---- === on 19 Nov 2015, 19:53:49 Ann Campbell wrote: What do you think of splitting this into two rules: * Faulty string operations should not be made * "===" should not be used with dissimilar types ? Otherwise, the best I've got is: Faulty operations should not be made === on 20 Nov 2015, 09:46:42 Elena Vilchik wrote: \[~ann.campbell.2] We decided to split it to 3 rules :) * String comparisons should not be made (major with suspicious tag) * Numbers should be added to strings (major with suspicious tag) * "===" should not be used with dissimilar types (critical with bug tag) (welcome to change these titles) Could you create RSPECs? === on 20 Nov 2015, 16:38:40 Elena Vilchik wrote: \[~ann.campbell.2] Looks like i explained rule badly. I changed description so that now IMO it reflect the rule idea. Could you check it? === on 20 Nov 2015, 16:48:39 Ann Campbell wrote: Looks good [~elena.vilchik]