eslint-plugin-css v0.11.0
Introduction
eslint-plugin-css is an ESLint plugin that provides rules to verify CSS definition objects.
::: WORKING IN PROGRESS :::
:name_badge: Features
This ESLint plugin provides linting rules to verify CSS definition objects.
- Find the wrong usage of CSS definition objects, and their hints.
- Support for Vue and JSX (React).
- Partial support for styled-components style objects.
You can check on the Online DEMO.
:question: Why is it ESLint plugin?
Stylelint partially supports CSS in JS, but some issues haven't been resolved for a long time.
Also, CSS definitions using template literals are similar to CSS syntax, but CSS definitions using JavaScript objects are not. ESLint may work better for linting JavaScript objects.
:book: Documentation
See documents.
:cd: Installation
npm install --save-dev eslint eslint-plugin-css
Requirements
- ESLint v7.0.0 and above
- Node.js v12.22.x, v14.17.x, v16.x and above
:book: Usage
Add css
to the plugins section of your .eslintrc
configuration file (you can omit the eslint-plugin-
prefix)
and either use one of the two configurations available (recommended
or all
) or configure the rules you want:
The recommended configuration (eslint.config.js
)
The plugin.configs["flat/recommended"]
config enables a subset of the rules that should be most useful to most users.
See lib/configs/flat/recommended.ts for more details.
// eslint.config.js
import * as cssPlugin from "eslint-plugin-css"
export default [
cssPlugin.configs["flat/recommended"],
];
The recommended configuration (.eslintrc.*
)
The plugin:css/recommended
config enables a subset of the rules that should be most useful to most users.
See lib/configs/recommended.ts for more details.
// .eslintrc.js
module.exports = {
"plugins": [
"css"
],
"extends": [
// add more generic rulesets here, such as:
// 'eslint:recommended',
"plugin:css/recommended"
]
}
The standard configuration (eslint.config.js
)
The plugin.configs["flat/standard"]
config enables a subset of the rules and superset of plugin.configs["flat/recommended"]
config that apply a subjective style.
See lib/configs/flat/standard.ts for more details.
// eslint.config.js
import * as cssPlugin from "eslint-plugin-css"
export default [
cssPlugin.configs["flat/standard"],
];
The standard configuration (.eslintrc.*
)
The plugin:css/standard
config enables a subset of the rules and superset of plugin:css/recommended
config that apply a subjective style.
See lib/configs/standard.ts for more details.
// .eslintrc.js
module.exports = {
"plugins": [
"css"
],
"extends": [
"plugin:css/standard"
]
}
Advanced Configuration
Override/add specific rules configurations. See also: http://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/configuring.
// eslint.config.js
import * as cssPlugin from "eslint-plugin-css"
export default [
{
plugins: { css: cssPlugin },
rules: {
// Override/add rules settings here, such as:
"css/rule-name": "error"
}
}
];
// .eslintrc.js
module.exports = {
"plugins": [
"css"
],
"rules": {
// Override/add rules settings here, such as:
"css/rule-name": "error"
}
}
Using "plugin:css/all"
The plugin.configs["flat/all"]
/ plugin:css/all
config enables all rules. It's meant for testing, not for production use because it changes with every minor and major version of the plugin. Use it at your own risk.
How does ESLint detect CSS objects?
All CSS-related rules are applied to code that passes any of the following checks:
style={ {} }
JSX attribute expressionconst jsx = <div style={ {/* JSX attribute expression */} } />
v-bind:style="{}"
Vue directive<template> <div v-bind:style="{/* Vue directive */}" /> </template>
CSS definition function call for styled-components
e.g.
import styled, { css, createGlobalStyle } from 'styled-components' styled.input({/* CSS */}) styled.input.attrs({})({/* CSS */}) css({/* CSS */}) createGlobalStyle({/* CSS */})
According to
settings.css.target
settings.
However, if you want to take advantage of the rules in any of your custom objects that are CSS objects, you might need to use the special comment // @css
that marks an object in the next line as a CSS object in any file, e.g.:
// @css
const myStyle = {
height: '100px'
}
:white_check_mark: Rules
The --fix
option on the command line automatically fixes problems reported by rules which have a wrench :wrench: below.
The rules with the following star :star: are included in the plugin:css/recommended
config and the plugin:css/standard
config.
The rules with the following lipstick :lipstick: are included in the plugin:css/standard
config.
Possible Errors
Rule ID | Description | |
---|---|---|
css/no-dupe-properties | disallow duplicate properties | :star: |
css/no-invalid-color-hex | disallow invalid hex colors | :star: |
css/no-shorthand-property-overrides | disallow shorthand properties that override related longhand properties | :star: |
css/no-unknown-property | disallow unknown properties | :star: |
css/no-unknown-unit | disallow unknown units | :star: |
Best Practices
Rule ID | Description | |
---|---|---|
css/named-color | enforce named colors | :wrench: |
css/no-length-zero-unit | disallow units for zero lengths | :lipstick::wrench: |
css/no-useless-color-alpha | disallow unnecessary alpha-channel transparency value | :star::wrench: |
css/prefer-reduce-shorthand-property-box-values | require reduction in box values of shorthand property | :lipstick::wrench: |
Stylistic Issues
Rule ID | Description | |
---|---|---|
css/color-hex-style | enforce hex color style | :lipstick::wrench: |
css/no-number-trailing-zeros | disallow trailing zeros in numbers. | :lipstick::wrench: |
css/number-leading-zero | require or disallow a leading zero for fractional numbers less than 1 | :lipstick::wrench: |
css/property-casing | enforce specific casing for CSS properties | :lipstick::wrench: |
:gear: Settings
See Settings.
:beers: Contributing
Welcome contributing!
Please use GitHub's Issues/PRs.
See CONTRIBUTING.md.
Development Tools
npm test
runs tests and measures coverage.npm run update
runs in order to update readme and configurations.npm run new [new rule name]
runs to create the files needed for the new rule.npm run docs:watch
starts the website locally.
:lock: License
See the LICENSE file for license rights and limitations (MIT).