linter 0.1.4 → 0.1.5
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- checksums.yaml +4 -4
- data/Gemfile.lock +1 -1
- data/data/misused_wordlist.yml +112 -0
- data/lib/linter.rb +1 -0
- data/lib/linter/misused_words.rb +23 -0
- data/lib/linter/version.rb +1 -1
- metadata +3 -1
checksums.yaml
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---
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SHA256:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz:
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metadata.gz: ceb622ab960b3b1acc543c89e7547c308a279a26dbe4093c305184932559e801
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data.tar.gz: a000bbffd2abb54812bd1762bca8985121f5d0b7c9736ff07b4d7184ce58ebf3
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SHA512:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz:
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metadata.gz: 89b07c343065872b75590dfc757718550c8114522229f9aa9ad21f3ff0d1b48a68de49f2903da78e5d6a72d832ad4af139c089e58d53719cbdbc8f9c32b68255
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data.tar.gz: 9db243a571e737dd07b08939360807f7172eb9e050cd2f05f196cd21961e4af7587728fde8a3917a6f2f416eaceb7334e32b427db9b5e145dbb9bec73fa2ecf7
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data/Gemfile.lock
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problematic:
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- word: spirit animal
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reason: |
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The problem is that spirit animals are an important part of the belief
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system of some cultures and refer to a spirit that “helps guide or protect
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a person on a journey and whose characteristics that person shares or
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embodies.” Referring to something as your spirit animal is cultural
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appropriation. Avoid using it.
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replace_with:
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- kindred spirit
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- raison d'etre
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- word: sherpa
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reason: |
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Unless you mean someone who hails from Tibetan stock and lives in the
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Nepalese Himalayas serving as a porter on mountain-climbing expeditions,
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it is not a Sherpa.
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replace_with:
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- guide
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- coach
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- word: guru
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reason: |
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The word guru comes from Buddhist and Hindu religions and refers to a
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spiritual guide or leader who is held in high esteem. Using the term
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casually in referring to yourself or someone is disrespectful because it
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diminishes the importance of the title and its origins.
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replace_with:
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- doyen
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- virtuoso
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- authority
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- maestro
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- word: ninja
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reason: |
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The term’s origins refer to “a member of a feudal Japanese society of
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mercenary agents, highly trained in martial arts and stealth (ninjutsu),
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who were hired for covert purposes ranging from espionage to sabotage and
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assassination.” People misuse the term to claim expertise in an area.
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replace_with:
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- expert
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- whiz
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- ace
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- word: nazi
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reason: |
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It describes people who were members of the National Socialist German
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Workers’ Party, which controlled Germany from 1933–1945 under Adolf Hitler.
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Using the term casually, as in grammar Nazi or fun Nazi, makes light of
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the horrible atrocities they committed.
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replace_with:
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- boss
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- absolutist
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- word: binge
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reason: |
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We throw around terms like binge-watch and cleaning binge all the time
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when, in fact, the word binge originates from serious eating disorders,
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including Binge Eating Disorder and bulimia, and should be reserved for
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discussions about them. Choosing to watch every episode of The Office in a
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weekend is a choice, whereas bingeing disorders are not a choice and their
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severity shouldn’t be diminished.
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replace_with:
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- indulged
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- spree
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- wallowed
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- satiated
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- word: scalp
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reason: |
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Used as a noun to refer to the top of your head, scalp is fine. It’s when
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it’s used as a verb that we get into dangerous territory.
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Using it to say someone ripped you off or to infer that you got robbed is
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making light of what was a very gruesome act involving “a part of [the]
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integument [of the upper part of the head] with the accompanying hair,
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severed from the head of an enemy as a sign of victory, as by some North
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American Indians and others during the colonial and frontier periods in
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the US.”
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replace_with:
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- fleeced
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- robbed
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- hustled
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- pulled a fast one
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- word: gyp
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reason: |
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It comes from the word Gypsy, who are Romani people. There are already
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plenty of negative associations with the term gypsy, and using gypped to
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say you got ripped off only perpetuates the negative stereotypes.
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replace_with:
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- ripoff
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- bamboozled
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- shortchanged
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- fraud
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- word: hysterical
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reason: |
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If you find something or someone to be hysterical, meaning funny, that’s
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OK. If you’re calling someone’s actions hysterical because they’re being
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emotional, then you may want to reconsider.
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Far too often women are dubbed hysterical for being outspoken or showing
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their feelings, and that wades into problematic, sexist territory due to
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the history of the term.
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Hysterical’s earliest meaning was “of, relating to, or characterized by
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hysteria,” and while we now think of hysteria as irrational panic, it was,
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for centuries, a medical diagnosis. Hysteria comes from the Greek
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hysterikós, which means “suffering in the womb.”
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So, yeah, the ancient Greeks believed that when a woman was behaving
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irrationally—or in a way that they considered to be irrational—it was
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because her uterus was literally wandering around her body causing trouble
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(Kory Stamper, “What It Really Means To Call A Woman Hysterical“).
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replace_with:
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- intense
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- impassioned
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- piercing
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- vehement
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data/lib/linter.rb
CHANGED
@@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
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module Linter
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class MisusedWords
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def self.analyze(text)
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result = OpenStruct.new(
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misused_words: [],
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trend: ''
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)
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wordlists.dig('problematic').each do |problematic_word|
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word = problematic_word['word']
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regex = /\b#{word}\b/i
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result.misused_words << problematic_word if text.scan(regex).any?
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end
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result
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end
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private
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def self.wordlists
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file_path = File.join(__dir__,'../../data/misused_wordlist.yml')
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@wordlists ||= YAML.load_file(file_path)
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end
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end
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end
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data/lib/linter/version.rb
CHANGED
metadata
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
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2
2
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name: linter
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version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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version: 0.1.
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version: 0.1.5
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platform: ruby
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authors:
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- lien van den steen
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@@ -102,11 +102,13 @@ files:
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- bin/linter
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- bin/setup
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- data/gender_association_wordlist.yml
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- data/misused_wordlist.yml
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- data/pronoun_association_wordlist.yml
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- lib/linter.rb
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- lib/linter/base_association.rb
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- lib/linter/cli.rb
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- lib/linter/gender_association.rb
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- lib/linter/misused_words.rb
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- lib/linter/pronoun_association.rb
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- lib/linter/version.rb
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- linter.gemspec
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