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babel-eslint-fork
Advanced tools
babel-eslint allows you to lint ALL valid Babel code with the fantastic ESLint.
As of the v11.x.x release, babel-eslint now requires Babel as a peer dependency and expects a valid Babel configuration file to exist. This ensures that the same Babel configuration is used during both linting and compilation.
ESLint's default parser and core rules only support the latest final ECMAScript standard and do not support experimental (such as new features) and non-standard (such as Flow or TypeScript types) syntax provided by Babel. babel-eslint is a parser that allows ESLint to run on source code that is transformed by Babel.
Note: You only need to use babel-eslint if you are using Babel to transform your code. If this is not the case, please use the relevant parser for your chosen flavor of ECMAScript (note that the default parser supports all non-experimental syntax as well as JSX).
ESLint allows for the use of custom parsers. When using this plugin, your code is parsed by Babel's parser (using the configuration specified in your Babel configuration file) and the resulting AST is transformed into an ESTree-compliant structure that ESLint can understand. All location info such as line numbers, columns is also retained so you can track down errors with ease.
Note: ESLint's core rules do not support experimental syntax and may therefore not work as expected when using babel-eslint. Please use the companion eslint-plugin-babel
plugin for core rules that you have issues with.
$ npm install eslint babel-eslint --save-dev
# or
$ yarn add eslint babel-eslint -D
Note: babel-eslint requires babel/core@>=7.2.0
and a valid Babel configuration file to run. If you do not have this already set up, please see the Babel Usage Guide.
To use babel-eslint, "babel-eslint"
must be specified as the parser
in your ESLint configuration file (see here for more detailed information).
.eslintrc.js
module.exports = {
parser: "babel-eslint",
};
With the parser set, your configuration can be configured as described in the Configuring ESLint documentation.
Note: The parserOptions
described in the official documentation are for the default parser and are not necessarily supported by babel-eslint. Please see the section directly below for supported parserOptions
.
Additional configuration options can be set in your ESLint configuration under the parserOptions
key. Please note that the ecmaFeatures
config property may still be required for ESLint to work properly with features not in ECMAScript 5 by default.
requireConfigFile
(default true
) can be set to false
to allow babel-eslint to run on files that do not have a Babel configuration associated with them. This can be useful for linting files that are not transformed by Babel (such as tooling configuration files), though we recommend using the default parser via glob-based configuration. Note: babel-eslint will not parse any experimental syntax when no configuration file is found.sourceType
can be set to "module"
(default) or "script"
if your code isn't using ECMAScript modules.allowImportExportEverywhere
(default false
) can be set to true
to allow import and export declarations to appear anywhere a statement is allowed if your build environment supports that. Otherwise import and export declarations can only appear at a program's top level.ecmaFeatures.globalReturn
(default false
) allow return statements in the global scope when used with sourceType: "script"
.babelOptions
passes through Babel's configuration loading and merging options (for instance, in case of a monorepo). When not defined, babel-eslint will use Babel's default configuration file resolution logic..eslintrc.js
module.exports = {
parser: "babel-eslint",
parserOptions: {
sourceType: "module",
allowImportExportEverywhere: false,
ecmaFeatures: {
globalReturn: false,
},
babelOptions: {
configFile: "path/to/config.js",
},
},
};
.eslintrc.js using glob-based configuration
This configuration would use the default parser for all files except for those found by the "files/transformed/by/babel/*.js"
glob.
module.exports = {
rules: {
indent: "error"
},
overrides: [
{
files: ["files/transformed/by/babel/*.js"],
parser: "babel-eslint",
}
]
};
$ ./node_modules/.bin/eslint yourfile.js
Flow:
Check out eslint-plugin-flowtype: An
eslint
plugin that makes flow type annotations global variables and marks declarations as used. Solves the problem of false positives withno-undef
andno-unused-vars
.
no-undef
for global flow types: ReactElement
, ReactClass
#130
.eslintrc
or define types and import them import type ReactElement from './types'
no-unused-vars/no-undef
with Flow declarations (declare module A {}
) #132Modules/strict mode
no-unused-vars: ["error", { vars: local }]
#136Please check out eslint-plugin-react for React/JSX issues.
no-unused-vars
with jsxPlease check out eslint-plugin-babel for other issues.
If you have an issue, please first check if it can be reproduced with the default parser and with the latest versions of eslint
and babel-eslint
. If it is not reproducible with the default parser, it is most likely an issue with babel-eslint.
For questions and support please visit the #discussion
Babel Slack channel (sign up here) or the ESLint Gitter.
FAQs
Custom parser for ESLint
The npm package babel-eslint-fork receives a total of 1 weekly downloads. As such, babel-eslint-fork popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that babel-eslint-fork demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer 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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