eslint-plugin-budapestian
This plugin supports a bastard variant of
Hungarian notation where we
write elements in PascalCase and prefix them with a scope:
p
for parametersl
for local variables and constantsg
for global variables- For global constants we use the C convention of ALL_CAPS_SNAKE_CASE.
This plugin not only supports these rules, it can automatically fix them.
Why budapestian notation?
It removes mental stress
You no longer have to think how to name a local variable with the same
meaning as a parameter in the function it occurs in:
const SOME_GLOBAL_CONST = 3;
function doThingsWithThing(pThing, pCount = SOME_GLOBAL_CONST) {
let lThing = pThing || "";
return lThing.repeat(pCount);
}
If you need to pass something that's also a keyword, you don't have to
fret. Pascal case it and slap a prefix in front of it.
function calculateYield(pLet) {
}
let gYield = calculateYield(pLet);
It enhances visual grepping.
In the next snippet you don't have to scroll up to see that BUFFER_LIMIT is
some global constant defined up there. You also see that pString must be
a parameter of the current function, and lResult is a local variable.
{
if (pString.length <= BUFFER_LIMIT) {
lResult = pString;
} else {
lResult = "you so big";
}
}
It makes some bugs easier to spot
Budapestian notation avoids variable shadowing. E.g. compare these two snippets,
the first one without budapestian notation:
let index = 3;
const hipster_array = ["beard", "grammophone", "transistor"];
function doThing(index) {
for (let index of hipster_array) {
}
}
and this with budapestian notation:
let gIndex = 3;
const HIPSTER_ARRAY = ["beard", "grammophone", "transistor"];
function doThing(pIndex) {
for (let lIndex of HIPSTER_ARRAY) {
}
}
So, should I use this?
I use this convention on all my open source projects. This plugin exists primarily
to support that. It keeps the code consistent, and it makes it easy for contributors
(including myself) to use the convention.
Installation
You'll first need to install ESLint:
$ npm i eslint --save-dev
Next, install eslint-plugin-budapestian
:
$ npm install eslint-plugin-budapestian --save-dev
Note: If you installed ESLint globally (using the -g
flag) then you must also install eslint-plugin-budapestian
globally.
Usage
With the 'recommended' preset
To use the plugin and the recommended rules for budapestian notation, add
plugins:budapestian/recommended
to the extends section of your .eslintrc
:
{
"extends": ["plugin:budapestian/recommended"]
}
Manually
Add budapestian
to the plugins section of your .eslintrc
configuration file. You can omit the eslint-plugin-
prefix:
{
"plugins": ["budapestian"]
}
Then configure the rules you want to use under the rules section.
{
"rules": {
"budapestian/parameter-pattern": "error",
"budapestian/global-variable-pattern": "error",
"budapestian/local-variable-pattern": [
"error",
{ "exceptions": ["i", "j", "k", "x", "y", "z"] }
],
"budapestian/global-constant-pattern": "error"
}
}
Supported Rules
Flare'n status section