Start with JS Standard Style but push towards better readability, git-awareness, vim-usability, and React and ES6 best practices.
NOTE: If you're migrating from eslint-config-tribou and want to maintain
compatibility, see the Legacy
Configuration.
npm install --save-dev \
eslint-plugin-tribou \
babel-eslint \
eslintThen add the following to your .eslintrc:
{
"extends": [
"plugin:tribou/recommended"
],
"plugins": [
"tribou"
]
}Or add an .eslintrc.yml:
extends:
- plugin:tribou/recommended
plugins:
- tribou
# Wow, that was easier... 😉By default, Flow typing is required for an entire project since
eslint-plugin-flowtype will require the \\ @flow annotation to be set at
the top of every file and subsequently check for all other flow annotation
requirements in that file. This allows new projects to enforce Flow typing on
every file from the start.
If you do not wish to use Flow typing on every file (or at all) in a project,
this config can still enforce all of its other standards (including Flow
linting on files that do have the // @flow annotation). To disable this
"universal" Flow typing requirement in your .eslintrc:
{
...
"settings": {
"flowtype": {
"onlyFilesWithFlowAnnotation": true
}
}
}Or in your .eslintrc.yml:
...
settings:
flowtype:
onlyFilesWithFlowAnnotation: trueLike using prettier? You can ignore rules that affect
prettier styles with
eslint-config-prettier
Install:
npm install --save-dev eslint-config-prettier
And add the configs to your .eslintrc.yml:
extends:
- plugin:tribou/recommended
- prettier
- prettier/flowtype
- prettier/react
plugins:
- tribouIn order to apply the rules equivalent to eslint-config-tribou@^3.0.0,
install v0.3.0 instead:
npm install --save-dev \
eslint-plugin-tribou@^0.3.0 \
babel-eslint@^8.0.0 \
eslint@^4.0.0