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eslint-plugin-more-naming-conventions-leading-underscore

v1.0.1

Published

A plugin for the ESLint linter that adds more naming conventions for variables and functions. All credit goes to CodingKoopa for the original plugin. This forked repo simply accepts leading underscores as valid snake case (e.g. let _var;).

Downloads

15

Readme

eslint-plugin-more-naming-conventions

eslint-plugin-more-naming-conventions is a plugin for the ESLint JavaScript linting utility. It introduces rules that add more naming conventions for variables, functions, classes, and methods.

Setup

  1. Open up a terminal or command prompt in the project to lint.
  2. Follow the instructions to install ESLint here.
  3. Install eslint-plugin-more-naming-conventions with the NPM package manager:
npm install eslint-plugin-more-naming-conventions
  1. Follow the instructions to add the plugin to your configuration file here.
  2. Follow the instructions to add the plugin rules to your configuration file here.

Then configure the rules you want to use under the rules section.

Rules

All rules support fixing errors automatically.

snake-case-variables

snake-case-variables ensures that all variables defined are in snake case, consisting of all lower case letters, with words separated by underscores (_s).

Good:

  • variable_name
  • _variable
  • variable
  • CONSTANT_NAME
  • ClassName (For when the old class syntax is used for defining a class.)

Bad:

  • variableName

upper-camel-case-functions

upper-camel-case-functions ensures that all functions, classes, and methods defined are in upper camel case, consisting of lower and upper case letters, with words separated by the letter changing to upper case.

Good:

  • VariableName
  • Variable

Bad:

  • variableName
  • variable
  • variable_name

Automatic Fixing

The way fixing function calls work, in relation to module exports, is that the plugin scans variable definitions initialized to the value of require(), with arguments including the character /, and adds it to a whitelist. This whitelist now has variables included from other packages filtered out, so it won't try to correct case errors in other packages, or builtin objects. However, if you have a local (A JS file in your project included via a path.) that is an extention of an object exposing camel case functions, and those functions are called, the plugin will try to correct them.