Package Exports
- eslint-config-bevry
- eslint-config-bevry/index.js
This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (eslint-config-bevry) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.
Readme
eslint-config-bevry
Bevry's ESLint configuration is an adaptive configuration that automatically configures ESLint based on the following:
- If you are using Editions, then make use of the information it provides
- If you are using Modules (import/export), then configure ESLint for it
- If you are using a ES5 or below, then configure ESLint for it
- Disables incompatible rules that require ES6+
- If you are using JSX, then configure ESLint for it
- If you are using React, then configure ESLint for it
- Enables the plugin
eslint-plugin-react
and configures it with its recommended rules and the react version you are using - Enables the plugin
eslint-plugin-react-hooks
and configures it with its recommended rules
- Enables the plugin
- If you are using TypeScript, then configure ESLint for it
- Enables the plugin
eslint-plugin-typescript
- Configures the parser as
typescript-eslint-parser
- Disables incompatible rules that require JavaScript
- Enables the plugin
- If you are using
eslint-plugin-babel
, then configure ESLint for it- Enables the plugin, and automatically configures the rule replacements
- If you are using
babel-eslint
, then configure ESLint for it - If you are using Prettier, the configure ESLint for it
- Enables the configuration
eslint-config-prettier
- Enables the plugin
eslint-plugin-prettier
and configures it with its recommended rules - Enables the other prettier configurations automatically based on feature/language usage
- Enables the configuration
To make use of it, you must first install it as a development dependency:
npm install --save-dev eslint-config-bevry
Then for full automatic usage, the only ESLint configuration you will need is to add the following to your package.json
file:
{
"eslintConfig": {
"extends": ["bevry"]
}
}
If you would like more control, rather than extending bevry
directly, you can extend the individual parts instead:
bevry/rules
contains the rules for our coding standard, you can use or not use this to your likingbevry/adapt
contains the adaptive configuration, this should be the last extension you apply
To ensure it is working, compare the results of the following command with what you would expect:
npx eslint --print-config .
History
Discover the release history by heading on over to the HISTORY.md
file.
Backers
Code
Discover how to contribute via the CONTRIBUTING.md
file.
Authors
- Benjamin Lupton — Accelerating collaborative wisdom.
Maintainers
- Benjamin Lupton — Accelerating collaborative wisdom.
Contributors
- Benjamin Lupton — view contributions
- Michael Duane Mooring — view contributions
- Rob Loach — view contributions
Finances
Sponsors
- Andrew Nesbitt — Software engineer and researcher
- Balsa — We're Balsa, and we're building tools for builders.
- Codecov — Empower developers with tools to improve code quality and testing.
- Poonacha Medappa
- Rob Morris
- Sentry — Real-time crash reporting for your web apps, mobile apps, and games.
- Syntax — Syntax Podcast
Donors
- Andrew Nesbitt
- Armen Mkrtchian
- Balsa
- Chad
- Codecov
- dr.dimitru
- Elliott Ditman
- entroniq
- GitHub
- Hunter Beast
- Jean-Luc Geering
- Michael Duane Mooring
- Michael Harry Scepaniak
- Mohammed Shah
- Mr. Henry
- Nermal
- Pleo
- Poonacha Medappa
- Rob Morris
- Robert de Forest
- Sentry
- ServieJS
- Skunk Team
- Syntax
- WriterJohnBuck
License
Unless stated otherwise all works are:
- Copyright © Benjamin Lupton
and licensed under: