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@hint/hint-leading-dot-classlist
Advanced tools
Inform users about classList.add or classList.remove with leading '.' in the argument pitfall
classList.add
or classList.remove
This hint informs users that they should to use
Element.classList
argument without a leading '.' as it
may lead to unintended results.
When writing selectors either in CSS or using DOM methods like
querySelector
, class names are referred to using a leading '.',
e.g. document.querySelector('.foo')
. However when modifying the
classList
of an element the raw class name is expected to be used
instead, e.g. element.classList.add('foo')
.
Unfortunately if a leading '.' is provided to the classList
APIs
it will succeed without an error, treating the '.' as part of the
name itself. This typically causes selectors elsewhere in the code
to fail to match this element. Figuring out why can be tedious and
time-consuming until the typo has been found.
This hint scans JavaScript source code to check if the argument in
element.classList.add
or element.classList.remove
contains a
leading '.'. If so it emits a warning to help save time debugging
this subtle issue.
const element = document.getElementById('foo');
element.classList.add('.foo');
element.classList.remove('.foo');
const element = document.getElementById('foo');
element.classList.add('foo');
element.classList.remove('foo');
This package is installed automatically by webhint:
npm install hint --save-dev
To use it, activate it via the .hintrc
configuration file:
{
"connector": {...},
"formatters": [...],
"parsers": [...],
"hints": {
"leading-dot-classlist": "warning"
},
...
}
Note: The recommended way of running webhint is as a devDependency
of
your project.
FAQs
Inform users about classList.add or classList.remove with leading '.' in the argument pitfall
We found that @hint/hint-leading-dot-classlist demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 5 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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