0.1.3 • Published 6 months ago

@flandredaisuki/eslint-config v0.1.3

Weekly downloads
-
License
MIT
Repository
-
Last release
6 months ago

@flandredaisuki/eslint-config

Derive from @antfu/eslint-config

  • Single quotes, always semi
  • Auto fix for formatting (aimed to be used standalone without Prettier)
  • Designed to work with TypeScript, JSX, Vue out-of-box
  • Lints also for json, yaml, markdown
  • Sorted imports, dangling commas
  • Reasonable defaults, best practices, only one-line of config
  • Respects .gitignore by default
  • ESLint Flat config, compose easily!
  • Using ESLint Stylistic
  • Style principle: Minimal for reading, stable for diff, consistent

Usage

Install

pnpm i -D eslint @flandredaisuki/eslint-config

Create config file

With "type": "module" in package.json (recommended):

// eslint.config.js
import flandre from '@flandredaisuki/eslint-config';

export default flandre();

With CJS:

// eslint.config.js
const flandre = require('@flandredaisuki/eslint-config').default;

module.exports = flandre();

Combined with legacy config:

// eslint.config.js
const antfu = require('@antfu/eslint-config').default;
const { FlatCompat } = require('@eslint/eslintrc');

const compat = new FlatCompat();

module.exports = antfu(
  {
    ignores: [],
  },

  // Legacy config
  ...compat.config({
    extends: [
      'eslint:recommended',
      // Other extends...
    ],
  })

  // Other flat configs...
);

Note that .eslintignore no longer works in Flat config, see customization for more details.

Add script for package.json

For example:

{
  "scripts": {
    "lint": "eslint .",
    "lint:fix": "eslint . --fix"
  }
}

Migration

We provided an experimental cli tool to help you migrate from the legacy config to the new flat config.

npx @antfu/eslint-config migrate

Before running the migration, make sure to commit your changes first.

VS Code support (auto fix)

Install VS Code ESLint extension

Add the following settings to your .vscode/settings.json:

{
  // Enable the ESlint flat config support
  "eslint.experimental.useFlatConfig": true,

  // Disable the default formatter, use eslint instead
  "prettier.enable": false,
  "editor.formatOnSave": false,

  // Auto fix
  "editor.codeActionsOnSave": {
    "source.fixAll.eslint": "explicit",
    "source.organizeImports": "never"
  },

  // Silent the stylistic rules in you IDE, but still auto fix them
  "eslint.rules.customizations": [
    { "rule": "style/*", "severity": "off" },
    { "rule": "*-indent", "severity": "off" },
    { "rule": "*-spacing", "severity": "off" },
    { "rule": "*-spaces", "severity": "off" },
    { "rule": "*-order", "severity": "off" },
    { "rule": "*-dangle", "severity": "off" },
    { "rule": "*-newline", "severity": "off" },
    { "rule": "*quotes", "severity": "off" },
    { "rule": "*semi", "severity": "off" }
  ],

  // Enable eslint for all supported languages
  "eslint.validate": [
    "javascript",
    "javascriptreact",
    "typescript",
    "typescriptreact",
    "vue",
    "html",
    "markdown",
    "json",
    "jsonc",
    "yaml"
  ]
}

Customization

Since v1.0, we migrated to ESLint Flat config. It provides much better organization and composition.

Normally you only need to import the flandre preset:

// eslint.config.js
import flandre from '@flandredaisuki/eslint-config';

export default flandre();

And that's it! Or you can configure each integration individually, for example:

// eslint.config.js
import flandre from '@flandredaisuki/eslint-config';

export default flandre({
  // Enable stylistic formatting rules
  // stylistic: true,

  // Or customize the stylistic rules
  stylistic: {
    indent: 2, // 4, or 'tab'
    quotes: 'single', // or 'double'
  },

  // TypeScript and Vue are auto-detected, you can also explicitly enable them:
  typescript: true,
  vue: true,

  // Disable jsonc and yaml support
  jsonc: false,
  yaml: false,

  // `.eslintignore` is no longer supported in Flat config, use `ignores` instead
  ignores: [
    './fixtures',
    // ...globs
  ]
});

The flandre factory function also accepts any number of arbitrary custom config overrides:

// eslint.config.js
import flandre from '@flandredaisuki/eslint-config';

export default flandre(
  {
    // Configures for flandre's config
  },

  // From the second arguments they are ESLint Flat Configs
  // you can have multiple configs
  {
    files: ['**/*.ts'],
    rules: {},
  },
  {
    rules: {},
  },
);

Going more advanced, you can also import fine-grained configs and compose them as you wish:

We don't recommend using this style in general usages, as there are shared options between configs and might need extra care to make them consistent.

// eslint.config.js
import {
  comments,
  ignores,
  imports,
  javascript,
  jsdoc,
  jsonc,
  markdown,
  node,
  sortPackageJson,
  sortTsconfig,
  stylistic,
  typescript,
  unicorn,
  vue,
  yaml,
} from '@flandredaisuki/eslint-config';

export default [
  ...ignores(),
  ...javascript(/* Options */),
  ...comments(),
  ...node(),
  ...jsdoc(),
  ...imports(),
  ...unicorn(),
  ...typescript(/* Options */),
  ...stylistic(),
  ...vue(),
  ...jsonc(),
  ...yaml(),
  ...markdown(),
];

Check out the configs and factory for more details.

Thanks to sxzz/eslint-config for the inspiration and reference.

Plugins Renaming

Since flat config requires us to explicitly provide the plugin names (instead of mandatory convention from npm package name), we renamed some plugins to make overall scope more consistent and easier to write.

New PrefixOriginal PrefixSource Plugin
import/*i/*eslint-plugin-i
node/*n/*eslint-plugin-n
yaml/*yml/*eslint-plugin-yml
ts/*@typescript-eslint/*@typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin
style/*@stylistic/*@stylistic/eslint-plugin
test/*vitest/*eslint-plugin-vitest
test/*no-only-tests/*eslint-plugin-no-only-tests

When you want to override rules, or disable them inline, you need to update to the new prefix:

-// eslint-disable-next-line @typescript-eslint/consistent-type-definitions
+// eslint-disable-next-line ts/consistent-type-definitions
type foo = { bar: 2 }

Rules Overrides

Certain rules would only be enabled in specific files, for example, ts/* rules would only be enabled in .ts files and vue/* rules would only be enabled in .vue files. If you want to override the rules, you need to specify the file extension:

// eslint.config.js
import flandre from '@flandredaisuki/eslint-config';

export default flandre(
  { vue: true, typescript: true },
  {
    // Remember to specify the file glob here, otherwise it might cause the vue plugin to handle non-vue files
    files: ['**/*.vue'],
    rules: {
      'vue/operator-linebreak': ['error', 'before'],
    },
  },
  {
    // Without `files`, they are general rules for all files
    rules: {
      'style/semi': ['error', 'never'],
    },
  }
);

We also provided an overrides options to make it easier:

// eslint.config.js
import flandre from '@flandredaisuki/eslint-config';

export default flandre({
  overrides: {
    vue: {
      'vue/operator-linebreak': ['error', 'before'],
    },
    typescript: {
      'ts/consistent-type-definitions': ['error', 'interface'],
    },
    yaml: {},
    // ...
  }
});

Optional Rules

This config also provides some optional plugins/rules for extended usages.

perfectionist (sorting)

This plugin eslint-plugin-perfectionist allows you to sorted object keys, imports, etc, with auto-fix.

The plugin is installed but no rules are enabled by default.

It's recommended to opt-in on each file individually using configuration comments.

/* eslint perfectionist/sort-objects: "error" */
const objectWantedToSort = {
  a: 2,
  b: 1,
  c: 3,
};
/* eslint perfectionist/sort-objects: "off" */

Type Aware Rules

You can optionally enable the type aware rules by passing the options object to the typescript config:

// eslint.config.js
import flandre from '@flandredaisuki/eslint-config';

export default flandre({
  typescript: {
    tsconfigPath: 'tsconfig.json',
  },
});

Versioning Policy

This project follows Semantic Versioning for releases. However, since this is just a config and involved with opinions and many moving parts, we don't treat rules changes as breaking changes.

Changes Considered as Breaking Changes

  • Node.js version requirement changes
  • Huge refactors that might break the config
  • Plugins made major changes that might break the config
  • Changes that might affect most of the codebases

Changes Considered as Non-breaking Changes

  • Enable/disable rules and plugins (that might become stricter)
  • Rules options changes
  • Version bumps of dependencies

FAQ

Prettier?

Why I don't use Prettier

How to lint CSS?

This config does NOT lint CSS. I personally use UnoCSS so I don't write CSS. If you still prefer CSS, you can use stylelint for CSS linting.

I prefer XXX...

Sure, you can config and override rules locally in your project to fit your needs. If that still does not work for you, you can always fork this repo and maintain your own.

License

MIT