eslint-config-meaningsciences
v1.0.1
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Meaning Sciences eslint configuration, based on AirBnB public domain configuration
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eslint-config-airbnb
This package provides Airbnb's .eslintrc as an extensible shared config.
Usage
We export three ESLint configurations for your usage.
eslint-config-airbnb
Our default export contains all of our ESLint rules, including ECMAScript 6+ and React. It requires eslint
, eslint-plugin-import
, eslint-plugin-react
, and eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y
. If you don't need React, see eslint-config-airbnb-base.
If you use yarn, run npm info "eslint-config-airbnb@latest" peerDependencies
to list the peer dependencies and versions, then run yarn add --dev <dependency>@<version>
for each listed peer dependency. See below for npm instructions.
- Install the correct versions of each package, which are listed by the command:
npm info "eslint-config-airbnb@latest" peerDependencies
Linux/OSX users can run
(
export PKG=eslint-config-airbnb;
npm info "$PKG@latest" peerDependencies --json | command sed 's/[\{\},]//g ; s/: /@/g' | xargs npm install --save-dev "$PKG@latest"
)
Which produces and runs a command like:
npm install --save-dev eslint-config-airbnb eslint@^#.#.# eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y@^#.#.# eslint-plugin-import@^#.#.# eslint-plugin-react@^#.#.#
Windows users can either install all the peer dependencies manually, or use the install-peerdeps cli tool.
npm install -g install-peerdeps
install-peerdeps --dev eslint-config-airbnb
The cli will produce and run a command like:
npm install --save-dev eslint-config-airbnb eslint@^#.#.# eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y@^#.#.# eslint-plugin-import@^#.#.# eslint-plugin-react@^#.#.#
- Add
"extends": "airbnb"
to your .eslintrc
eslint-config-airbnb/base
This entry point is deprecated. See eslint-config-airbnb-base.
eslint-config-airbnb/legacy
This entry point is deprecated. See eslint-config-airbnb-base.
See Airbnb's Javascript styleguide and the ESlint config docs for more information.
Improving this config
Consider adding test cases if you're making complicated rules changes, like anything involving regexes. Perhaps in a distant future, we could use literate programming to structure our README as test cases for our .eslintrc?
You can run tests with npm test
.
You can make sure this module lints with itself using npm run lint
.