Formats with prettier (actually prettierx) and lints with eslint preconfigured with standard rules (✿◠‿◠)
You don't have to fix any whitespace errors and waste time configuring eslint presets 😌
yarn add --dev prettier-standard
If you're using the
npm
:npm install --save-dev prettier-standard
.
You can also install globally with
npm install -g prettier-standard
Usage
$ prettier-standard [<glob>]
Options
--lint Additionally lint code after formatting
--check Do not format, just check formatting
--staged Run only on staged files
--changed Run only on changed files
--since Run only on changed files since given revision
--lines Run only on changed lines (warning: experimental!)
--stdin Force reading input from stdin
--parser Force parser to use for stdin (default: babel)
--help Tells how to use prettier-standard
Examples
$ prettier-standard --changed --lint
$ prettier-standard --lint '**/*.{js,css}'
$ prettier-standard --since master
$ "precommit": "prettier-standard --lint --staged" # in package.json
$ echo 'const {foo} = "bar";' | prettier-standard --stdin
$ echo '.foo { color: "red"; }' | prettier-standard --parser css
Warning: --lines
flag should be considered experimental as prettier has issues with range formatting:
Typically you'll use this in your npm scripts (or package scripts):
{
"scripts": {
"format": "prettier-standard --format"
}
}
We also encourage to use modern-node and lint-staged. You can configure it as follows:
{
"scripts": {
"precommit": "lint-staged"
},
"lint-staged": {
"linters": {
"**/*": ["prettier-standard --lint", "git add"]
}
}
}
NOTE: Unlike prettier this package simplifies your workflow by making --write
flag a default, and allowing for passing code to stdin without additional --stdin
flag.
It's probably best to use ale plugin. It supports multiple fixers, including prettier-standard:
Plug 'w0rp/ale'
let g:ale_fixers = {'javascript': ['prettier_standard']}
let g:ale_linters = {'javascript': ['']}
let g:ale_fix_on_save = 1
It's possible to use 'prettier-standard' with Sublime Text 3.
- Install 'prettier-standard' globally according to the installation instructions above.
- Find the location of your installed executable file. On a unix based system (like MacOS):
$ which prettier-standard
- Copy the location. (e.g.
/usr/local/bin/prettier-standard
) - Install SublimeJsPrettier according to their installation instructions.
- Open SublimeJsPrettier's default settings in Sublime and copy the line:
"prettier_cli_path": ""
- Open SublimeJsPrettier's user settings in Sublime and add the line with the correct location of the 'prettier-standard' executable.
{
"prettier_cli_path": "/usr/local/bin/prettier-standard"
}
You can now use 'prettier-standard' in Sublime Text 3 by opening the Command Palette (super + shift + p) and typing JsPrettier: Format Code
.
You can use .prettierrc for overriding some options, e.g to use semistandard:
{
"semi": true
}
You can also configure linting by creating appropriate .eslintrc file that will override defaults:
{
"rules": {
"eqeqeq": "off"
}
}
You can use .prettierignore
file for ignoring any files to format, e.g:
dist
.next
**/*.ts
This package currently doesn't recognize .eslintignore
file for linting and just uses .prettierignore
.
prettier-standard exposes the same API as prettier: https://prettier.io/docs/en/api.html
It also exposes one additional method that works similarly to its CLI:
run(cwd, config)
- cwd - path where to execute prettier-standard
- config - object configuring execution
- patterns - patterns to use for formatting files (array of strings)
- check - whether to check instead of format files (boolean, default: false)
- lint - whether to perform linting (boolean, default: false)
- changed - whether to format only changed lines (boolean, experimental, default: false)
- since - format changes that happened since given branch (string, optional, example: "master")
- onProcess - callback that is called for each processed file matching pattern: { file, formatted, check, runtime }
MIT