1.2.6 • Published 4 years ago

fox-plugin-html-validate v1.2.6

Weekly downloads
2
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
4 years ago

fox-suite

A sly suite of tools for web development

Do you ever...

  • Get tired of setting up common tools and files (EditorConfig, Prettier, ESLint, Stylelint, lint-staged, husky, markdownlint, conventional-commit etc.) over and over for each project?
  • Want sane defaults for all of these tools without having to think?
  • Want to change increase or decrease general strictness of linting without having to change many settings?

If you feel similar, this tool is for you!

Fox suite provides a unified interface for formatting and linting. It ensures these independent tools just work. It's meant to be used on tiny to medium sided-projects.

Who is this for?

  • the modern web developer
    • stylelint color-function-notation and value-no-vendor-prefix are set to modern values
    • target the highest possible ECMAScript when parsing with eslint - ensure PostCSS and Sass syntax is parsable by stylelint (TODO)

Configuration

// fox.config.js
export default {
	all: 'off | cozy (default) | strict | excessive',
	monorepo: true,
	env: [],
	plugin: {
		eslint: 'cozy',
		stylelint: 'excessive',
		[pluginName]: '$tier',
	},
}

Some other config files are automatically generated, like .editorconfig (TODO)

with each project, you may want to slightly change the configuration, geared towards developer satisfaction. for example, the above config lints javascript such that only the most aggregous errors are caught and that most autofixable rules are enabled. if your project suddenly becomes a bit more serious / big, you can always increase the parameter to 'strict', or 'excessive', to give more guarentees

Usage

Right now it's beta-ish quality

npm i fox-suite fox-preset-recommended

fox
# or
fox --help

Listed plugins styleling and eslint are separately codependent on fox-plugin-prettier

When using with preexisting tools that depend on path to config file (ex. if you're using eslint-webpack-plugin), you may need to use fox > lint (TODO: create command for this) manually to regenerate json config

Options

With most config key, you can set it to either off, cozy, strict, or excessive

Behavior

  • Exceptions include obviously temporary errors (ex. no-lone-blocks ({})) (which may be off or warning when NODE_ENV === development)
    • prevents premature distracting red error lines in code editors

off

Turns of all functionality

cozy

Catches code that has / is

  • aggregous errors
  • non-aggregous auto-fixable errors
  • hard to debug / easy to be buggy
  • isn't obviously buggy (but is buggy)
  • not unobviously buggy (and isn't)
  • deprecated syntax

strict

Catches code that has / is

  • not up to best practices
  • unecessarily verbose / unecessarily misleading
    • ex. needlessly using .bind()
  • ambiguous
  • essentially similar to what you would expect from eslint-config-airbnr, stylelint-config-standard, etc.

excessive

Essentially the same as strict, but includes options that are more annoying than helpfull when coding a project

  • ex. forcing default to exist at end of switch

Support

Not everything has been tested generally and with regards to interop

  • html-validate
  • markdownlint
  • ESlint
  • Stylelint
  • HTMLHint
  • htmllint
  • html-verify
  • prettier
  • sort-package-json
  • package-json-lint

stuff like commit-convention might be added later

  • boilerplating babel, typescript etc configs are out of the scope of this project

Building your own modules

How to make a preset

TODO: make a template repo so it's actualy clear

it's similar to other tools. feel free to use esmodules and export default, since everything (including non-plugin code) is loaded with the esm package. within your plugin, you must dynamically import with the import() any syntax (or require()) any modules that require on FOX_SUITE environment variables

Treatment of template files

Files are copied over from your plugin's template directly to the project's root directory - templated with handlebars (see variables below) - json files are merged with existing json files

  • opt to use (await getProjectData()).location over path.dirname((await import('read-pkg-up')()).path)-ish over process.cwd() where applicable
these are the variables and options passd to handlebars
{
	noEscape: true,
	data: {
		projectLocation: projectData.location,
		projectFoxConfigPath: projectData.foxConfigPath,
		projectPackageJsonPath: projectData.packageJsonPath,
		pluginRoot: pluginData.pluginRoot,
		pluginTemplateDir: pluginData.templateDir
	}
}

FAQ

What about Rome?

Rome solves a lot of problems related to tooling interoperability. However, there are some features that Rome will likely not have (such as markdown file linting or easy package release flow). Those seem out of the scope of the project (at least for now). fox-suite uses the apis of these somewhat niche tools to help improve your code. Eventually, fox-suite will hopefully include a module for easy integration with Rome.

What about Rush?

Ruch Stack is a great and usefull tool, but I wanted something a but more customizable and lighterweight - something that was able to integrate with existing tooling a bit easier

I don't like rule X

When you use prettier, stylelint, eslint, etc., there are bound to be rules you don't like. with some rules you can edit what's outputed in .config

1.2.6

4 years ago

1.2.5

4 years ago

1.2.4

4 years ago

1.2.3

4 years ago

1.2.2

4 years ago

1.2.1

4 years ago

1.2.0

4 years ago

1.1.4

4 years ago

1.1.3

4 years ago

1.1.2

4 years ago

1.1.1

4 years ago

1.1.0

4 years ago

1.0.6

4 years ago

1.0.5

4 years ago

1.0.2

4 years ago

1.0.1

4 years ago

1.0.4

4 years ago

1.0.3

4 years ago

1.0.0

4 years ago

0.3.4

4 years ago

0.3.3

4 years ago

0.3.2

4 years ago

0.3.1

4 years ago

0.3.0

4 years ago

0.2.3

4 years ago

0.2.2

4 years ago

0.2.1

4 years ago

0.2.0

4 years ago