1.0.0 • Published 5 years ago
eslint-plugin-align-import v1.0.0
What is this?
This plugin / rule will align all your import statements:
from
import defaultExport from "module-name";
import * as name from "module-name";
import { export1 } from "module-name";
import { export2 as alias1 } from "module-name";
import { export3 , export4 } from "module-name";
import { foo , bar } from "module-name/path/to/specific/un-exported/file";
import { export5 , export6 as alias7 } from "module-name";
import defaultExport2, { export8 } from "module-name";
import defaultExport3, * as name2 from "module-name";to
import defaultExport from "module-name";
import * as name from "module-name";
import { export1 } from "module-name";
import { export2 as alias1 } from "module-name";
import { export3 , export4 } from "module-name";
import { foo , bar } from "module-name/path/to/specific/un-exported/file";
import { export5 , export6 as alias7 } from "module-name";
import defaultExport2, { export8 } from "module-name";
import defaultExport3, * as name2 from "module-name";Installation
You'll first need to install ESLint:
$ npm install eslint --save-devNext, install eslint-plugin-align-import:
$ npm install eslint-plugin-align-import --save-devNote: If you installed ESLint globally (using the -g flag) then you must also install eslint-plugin-align-import globally.
Usage
Add babel-align-import to the plugins section of your .eslintrc configuration file. You can omit the eslint-plugin- prefix:
{
"plugins": [
"babel-align-import"
]
}You might have to update the no-multi-spaces rule to allow multiple spaces in front of import:
{
"rules": {
"no-multi-spaces": ["error", {"exceptions": {"ImportDeclaration": true}}]
}
}There are two rules available:
| rule | description |
|---|---|
| align-import/align-import | Aligns your import statements, this is probably the rule you're looking for. |
| align-import/trim-import | This rule will remove any extra space around your import keyword. |
1.0.0
5 years ago