# Gotchas The purpose of this guide is to document potential "gotchas" that contributors might encounter or should avoid during development of GitLab CE and EE. ## Don't `describe` symbols Consider the following model spec: ```ruby require 'rails_helper' describe User do describe :to_param do it 'converts the username to a param' do user = described_class.new(username: 'John Smith') expect(user.to_param).to eq 'john-smith' end end end ``` When run, this spec doesn't do what we might expect: ```sh spec/models/user_spec.rb|6 error| Failure/Error: u = described_class.new NoMethodError: undefined method `new' for :to_param:Symbol ``` ### Solution Except for the top-level `describe` block, always provide a String argument to `describe`. ## Don't `rescue Exception` See ["Why is it bad style to `rescue Exception => e` in Ruby?"][Exception]. _**Note:** This rule is [enforced automatically by Rubocop](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/8-4-stable/.rubocop.yml#L911-914)._ [Exception]: http://stackoverflow.com/q/10048173/223897 ## Don't use inline CoffeeScript in views Using the inline `:coffee` or `:coffeescript` Haml filters comes with a performance overhead. _**Note:** We've [removed these two filters](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/blob/master/config/initializers/hamlit.rb) in an initializer._ ### Further reading - Pull Request: [Replace CoffeeScript block into JavaScript in Views](https://git.io/vztMu) - Stack Overflow: [Performance implications of using :coffescript filter inside HAML templates?](http://stackoverflow.com/a/17571242/223897) ## ID-based CSS selectors need to be a bit more specific Normally, because HTML `id` attributes need to be unique to the page, it's perfectly fine to write some JavaScript like the following: ```javascript $('#js-my-selector').hide(); ``` However, there's a feature of GitLab's Markdown processing that [automatically adds anchors to header elements][ToC Processing], with the `id` attribute being automatically generated based on the content of the header. Unfortunately, this feature makes it possible for user-generated content to create a header element with the same `id` attribute we're using in our selector, potentially breaking the JavaScript behavior. A user could break the above example with the following Markdown: ```markdown ## JS My Selector ``` Which gets converted to the following HTML: ```html