This project leverages static analysis to ensure that the codebase meets certain standards that can be verified through automation. Two of these libraries are Detekt and Ktlint.
Detekt is a static analysis tool that checks for code smells. Examples include magic numbers, complicated conditionals, long methods, long parameter lists, and so much more. It is highly configurable, and if you choose to turn off any checks or customize thresholds you can do so in the config file.
To run a detekt validation, use the one of the following Gradle commands:
./gradlew detekt # Runs over each module synchronously
Ktlint is a static analysis tool from Pinterest that prevents bike shedding when it comes to code formatting. It also comes with a Gradle task to automatically format your entire codebase, if it can. The benefit of a tool like this is to ensure everyone on the team will have code formatted the same way, and there's no debating around white spaces, indentation, imports, etc.
We use the Kotlinter Ktlint Gradle plugin in this project.
The following Gradle commands can be helpful:
// Will format the codebase
./gradlew formatKotlin
// Will check if everything is formatted correctly
./gradlew lintKotlin