Coffee->JSHint
Runs your CoffeeScript source through JSHint to check for errors.
Installation
npm install coffee-script -g // See package.json for supported versions (most)
npm install coffee-jshint -g
Usage
To check some files:
coffee-jshint file1.coffee file2.coffee ...
Options
JSHint takes a bunch of options that tell it various rules to enforce or relax. Some of these don't make much sense to check for JS generated by the CoffeeScript compiler, so by default these options are turned on:
- undef: warns about use of undeclared variables
- eqnull: suppresses warnings about
== null
, which CoffeeScript uses in its generated JS - expr: suppresses warnings about expressions in unexpected positions, which can only occur in generated JS when the CoffeeScript compiler does it on purpose
- shadow: suppresses warnings about variable shadowing, which is fine since CoffeeScript has sane scoping rules and generates safely scoped JS that uses shadowed variables
- sub: suppresses warnings about using bracket object lookup notation (
obj['field']
) when you could use dot notation (obj.field
) since we're grown ups and can make our own decisions about what lookup syntax is best - multistr: suppresses warnings about multiline strings, since CoffeeScript takes care of them
To turn on more options, you can use the --options
or -o
flag:
coffee-jshint -o trailing,browser,sub file1.coffee file2.coffee ...
If you really must turn off some of the default options, use the --default-options-off
flag (you can always use --options
to turn some back on):
coffee-jshint --default-options-off --options undef,eqnull ...
Globals
You'll probably get a lot of complaints from Coffee->JSHint about undefined global variables like console
, $
, or require
. Depending on where you're running your code, you might want to allow a few global variables. One easy way to handle this is to use JSHint's built in environment options.
For instance, if you're running your code using Node.js, then you'll want to turn on the node
option. It works like any other option:
coffee-jshint -o node ...
If you have some globals that aren't covered by any of environments, well then you should probably check yo'self before you wreck yo'self. But if you really want to turn off warnings for some global variables, Coffee->JSHint supports it using the --globals
or -g
option. One use case is when using Mocha, a testing library:
coffee-jshint -o node --globals describe,it ...
Shell scripting
Coffee->JSHint plays nicely with your favorite Unix utilities. If you want to recursively search all the files in a directory, try piping in the results of a find
. Here's an example that also uses grep
to filter out files in node_modules/
:
find . -type f -path "*.coffee" | grep -v "node_modules/" | xargs coffee-jshint
Git hook
To use Coffee->JSHint as a git pre-commit hook to check changed files before you commit, put something like this in .git/hooks/pre-commit
:
git diff --staged --name-only | xargs coffee-jshint
if [[ $? -ne 0 ]]; then
echo 'WARNING: You are about to commit files with coffee-jshint warnings'
exit 1
fi
This will take all the files you plan to commit changes to, run them through coffee-jshint
, and exit with status code 1
if there are any warnings (which it will also print out). If there are warnings, the commit will be aborted, but you can always do git commit --no-verify
to bypass the hook.
Contributing
Prerequisites
Setup
Clone this repository somewhere, switch to it, then:
$ git config commit.template ./.gitmessage
$ npm install
This will:
- Set up a helpful reminder of how to make a good commit message. If you adhere to this, then a
detailed, meaningful CHANGELOG can be constructed automatically;
- Install all required dependencies;
- The latter command will also invoke
make
(no args) for you, creating a build.
Build
make
Commit
Commit Message Format Discipline
This project uses conventional-changelog/standard-version
for automatic versioning and
CHANGELOG management.
To make this work, please ensure that your commit messages adhere to the
Commit Message Format. Setting your git config
to
have the commit.template
as referenced below will help you with a detailed reminder of how to do this on every git commit
.
$ git config commit.template ./.gitmessage
Release
-
Determine what your next semver <version>
should be:
$ version="<version>"
-
Bump the package's .version
, update the CHANGELOG, commit these, and tag the commit as v<version>
:
$ npm run release
-
If all is well this new version
should be identical to your intended <version>
:
$ jq ".version == \"${version}\"" package.json
If this is not the case, then either your assumptions about what changed are wrong, or (at least) one of your commits did not adhere to the
Commit Message Format Discipline; Abort the release, and sort it out first.
-
Wrap up:
$ git push --all --follow-tags
Publish
```bash
$ npm publish
```