The Vercel Style Guide
This repository is the home of Vercel's style guide, which includes configs for
popular linting and styling tools.
The following configs are available, and are designed to be used together.
Contributing
Please read our contributing
guide before creating a pull request.
Prettier
Note: Prettier is a peer-dependency of this package, and should be installed
at the root of your project.
See: https://prettier.io/docs/en/install.html
To use the shared Prettier config, set the following in package.json
.
{
"prettier": "@vercel/style-guide/prettier"
}
ESLint
Note: ESLint is a peer-dependency of this package, and should be installed
at the root of your project.
See: https://eslint.org/docs/user-guide/getting-started#installation-and-usage
This ESLint config is designed to be composable. The base configs,
@vercel/style-guide/eslint/node
or @vercel/style-guide/eslint/browser
, set
up a project for JavaScript and should always be first in extends
.
The following optional configs are available:
@vercel/style-guide/eslint/browser
@vercel/style-guide/eslint/jest
@vercel/style-guide/eslint/next
(requires @vercel/style-guide/eslint/react
)@vercel/style-guide/eslint/node
@vercel/style-guide/eslint/playwright-test
@vercel/style-guide/eslint/react
@vercel/style-guide/eslint/typescript
(requires additional configuration)
You'll need to use require.resolve
to provide ESLint with absolute paths,
due to an issue around ESLint config resolution (see
eslint/eslint#9188).
For example, use the shared ESLint config(s) in a Next.js project, set the
following in .eslintrc.js
.
module.exports = {
extends: [
require.resolve('@vercel/style-guide/eslint/browser'),
require.resolve('@vercel/style-guide/eslint/react'),
require.resolve('@vercel/style-guide/eslint/next'),
],
};
Configuring ESLint for TypeScript
Some of the rules enabled in the TypeScript config require additional type
information, you'll need to provide the path to your tsconfig.json
.
For more information, see: https://typescript-eslint.io/docs/linting/type-linting
const { resolve } = require('path');
const project = resolve(__dirname, 'tsconfig.json');
module.exports = {
root: true,
extends: [
require.resolve('@vercel/style-guide/eslint/node'),
require.resolve('@vercel/style-guide/eslint/typescript'),
],
parserOptions: {
project,
},
settings: {
'import/resolver': {
typescript: {
project,
},
},
},
};
Configuring custom components for jsx-a11y
It's common practice for React apps to have shared components like Button
,
which wrap native elements. You can pass this information along to jsx-a11y
via the components
setting.
The below list is not exhaustive.
module.exports = {
root: true,
extends: [require.resolve('@vercel/style-guide/eslint/react')],
settings: {
'jsx-a11y': {
components: {
Article: 'article',
Button: 'button',
Image: 'img',
Input: 'input',
Link: 'a',
Video: 'video',
},
},
},
};
Scoped configuration with overrides
ESLint configs can be scoped to include/exclude specific paths. This ensures
that rules don't "leak" to places where those rules don't apply.
In this example, Jest rules are only being applied to files matching Jest's
default test match pattern.
module.exports = {
extends: [require.resolve('@vercel/style-guide/eslint/node')],
overrides: [
{
files: ['**/__tests__/**/*.[jt]s?(x)', '**/?(*.)+(spec|test).[jt]s?(x)'],
extends: [require.resolve('@vercel/style-guide/eslint/jest')],
},
],
};
A note on file extensions
By default, all TypeScript rules are scoped to files ending with .ts
and
.tsx
.
However, when using overrides, file extensions must be included or ESLint will
only include .js
files.
module.exports = {
overrides: [
{ files: [`directory/**/*.[jt]s?(x)`], rules: { 'my-rule': 'off' } },
],
};
TypeScript
To use the shared TypeScript config, set the following in tsconfig.json
.
{
"extends": "@vercel/style-guide/typescript"
}