This is a fork of Anthony Fu's ESLint Config maintained by Nir Tamir.
We provided a CLI tool to help you set up your project, or migrate from the legacy config to the new flat config with one command.
npx @nirtamir2/eslint-config@latest
If you prefer to set up manually:
pnpm i -D eslint @nirtamir2/eslint-config
And create eslint.config.ts
in your project root:
// eslint.config.ts
import nirtamir2 from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
export default nirtamir2();
Combined with legacy config:
If you still use some configs from the legacy eslintrc format, you can use the @eslint/eslintrc
package to convert them to the flat config.
// eslint.config.ts
import { FlatCompat } from "@eslint/eslintrc";
import nirtamir2 from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
const compat = new FlatCompat();
export default nirtamir2(
{
ignores: [],
},
// Legacy config
...compat.config({
extends: [
"eslint:recommended",
// Other extends...
],
}),
// Other flat configs...
);
Note that
.eslintignore
no longer works in Flat config, see customization for more details.
For example:
{
"scripts": {
"lint": "eslint .",
"lint:fix": "eslint . --fix"
}
}
It uses ESLint Flat config. It provides much better organization and composition.
Normally you only need to import the nirtamir2
preset:
// eslint.config.ts
import nirtamir2 from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
export default nirtamir2();
And that's it! Or you can configure each integration individually, for example:
// eslint.config.ts
import nirtamir2 from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
export default nirtamir2({
// TypeScript and Vue are auto-detected, you can also explicitly enable them:
typescript: true,
vue: true,
// Disable jsonc and yaml support
jsonc: false,
yaml: false,
// `.eslintignore` is no longer supported in Flat config, use `ignores` instead
ignores: [
"**/fixtures",
// ...globs
],
});
The nirtamir2
factory function also accepts any number of arbitrary custom config overrides:
// eslint.config.ts
import nirtamir2 from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
export default nirtamir2(
{
// Configures for nirtamir2's config
},
// From the second arguments they are ESLint Flat Configs
// you can have multiple configs
{
files: ["**/*.ts"],
rules: {},
},
{
rules: {},
},
);
Going more advanced, you can also import fine-grained configs and compose them as you wish:
Advanced Example
We wouldn't recommend using this style in general unless you know exactly what they are doing, as there are shared options between configs and might need extra care to make them consistent.
// eslint.config.ts
import {
combine,
comments,
ignores,
imports,
javascript,
jsdoc,
jsonc,
markdown,
node,
sortPackageJson,
sortTsconfig,
stylistic,
toml,
typescript,
unicorn,
vue,
yaml,
} from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
export default combine(
ignores(),
javascript(/* Options */),
comments(),
node(),
jsdoc(),
imports(),
unicorn(),
sortPackageJson(),
sortTsconfig(),
typescript(/* Options */),
stylistic(),
vue(),
jsonc(),
yaml(),
toml(),
markdown(),
);
Check out the configs and factory for more details.
Thanks to sxzz/eslint-config for the inspiration and reference.
Certain rules would only be enabled in specific files, for example, ts/*
rules would only be enabled in .ts
files and vue/*
rules would only be enabled in .vue
files. If you want to override the rules, you need to specify the file extension:
// eslint.config.ts
import nirtamir2 from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
export default nirtamir2(
{
vue: true,
typescript: true,
},
{
// Remember to specify the file glob here, otherwise it might cause the vue plugin to handle non-vue files
files: ["**/*.vue"],
rules: {
"vue/operator-linebreak": ["error", "before"],
},
},
{
// Without `files`, they are general rules for all files
rules: {
"@stylistic/semi": ["error", "never"],
},
},
);
We also provided the overrides
options in each integration to make it easier:
// eslint.config.ts
import nirtamir2 from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
export default nirtamir2({
vue: {
overrides: {
"vue/operator-linebreak": ["error", "before"],
},
},
typescript: {
overrides: {
"@typescript-eslint/consistent-type-definitions": ["error", "interface"],
},
},
yaml: {
overrides: {
// ...
},
},
});
The factory function nirtamir2()
returns a FlatConfigComposer
object from eslint-flat-config-utils
where you can chain the methods to compose the config even more flexibly.
// eslint.config.ts
import nirtamir2 from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
export default nirtamir2()
.prepend
// some configs before the main config
()
// overrides any named configs
.override("antfu/imports/rules", {
rules: {
"import-x/order": ["error", { "newlines-between": "always" }],
},
})
// rename plugin prefixes
.renamePlugins({
"old-prefix": "new-prefix",
// ...
});
// ...
This config also provides some optional plugins/rules for extended usage.
Powered by eslint-plugin-command
. It is not a typical rule for linting, but an on-demand micro-codemod tool that triggers by specific comments.
For a few triggers, for example:
/// to-function
- converts an arrow function to a normal function/// to-arrow
- converts a normal function to an arrow function/// to-for-each
- converts a for-in/for-of loop to.forEach()
/// to-for-of
- converts a.forEach()
to a for-of loop/// keep-sorted
- sorts an object/array/interface- ... etc. - refer to the documentation
You can add the trigger comment one line above the code you want to transform, for example (note the triple slash):
/// to-function
const foo = async (msg: string): void => {
console.log(msg);
};
Will be transformed to this when you hit save with your editor or run eslint . --fix
:
async function foo(msg: string): void {
console.log(msg);
}
The command comments are usually one-off and will be removed along with the transformation.
You can optionally enable the type aware rules by passing the options object to the typescript
config:
// eslint.config.ts
import nirtamir2 from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
export default nirtamir2({
typescript: {
tsconfigPath: "tsconfig.json",
},
});
Some rules are disabled when inside ESLint IDE integrations, namely unused-imports/no-unused-imports
test/no-only-tests
This is to prevent unused imports from getting removed by the IDE during refactoring to get a better developer experience. Those rules will be applied when you run ESLint in the terminal or Lint Staged. If you don't want this behavior, you can disable them:
// eslint.config.ts
import nirtamir2 from "@nirtamir2/eslint-config";
export default nirtamir2({
isInEditor: false,
});
If you want to apply lint and auto-fix before every commit, you can add the following to your package.json
:
{
"simple-git-hooks": {
"pre-commit": "pnpm lint-staged"
},
"lint-staged": {
"*": "eslint --fix"
}
}
and then
npm i -D lint-staged simple-git-hooks
// to active the hooks
npx simple-git-hooks
I built a visual tool to help you view what rules are enabled in your project and apply them to what files, @eslint/config-inspector
Go to your project root that contains eslint.config.ts
and run:
npx @eslint/config-inspector
MIT License © 2019-PRESENT Anthony Fu.
Nir Tamir fork his excellent work and adapt it to his own needs.