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eslint-plugin-chai-friendly
Advanced tools
This plugin makes 'no-unused-expressions' rule friendly towards chai expect statements.
eslint-plugin-chai-friendly is an ESLint plugin designed to work with the Chai assertion library. It helps developers write cleaner and more maintainable test code by preventing false positives when using Chai's assertion syntax.
No-unused-expressions
This feature allows the use of Chai's 'expect' and 'should' assertions without triggering ESLint's 'no-unused-expressions' rule. It ensures that expressions like 'expect(foo).to.be.true;' are not flagged as errors.
/* eslint chai-friendly/no-unused-expressions: 2 */
expect(foo).to.be.true;
eslint-plugin-mocha is an ESLint plugin that provides linting rules specific to Mocha test framework. It helps enforce best practices and coding standards in Mocha tests. Unlike eslint-plugin-chai-friendly, which focuses on Chai assertions, eslint-plugin-mocha covers a broader range of Mocha-specific rules.
eslint-plugin-jest is an ESLint plugin for Jest testing framework. It includes rules for ensuring best practices and avoiding common pitfalls in Jest tests. While eslint-plugin-chai-friendly is tailored for Chai assertions, eslint-plugin-jest is designed specifically for Jest, providing a different set of rules and utilities.
This plugin overrides no-unused-expressions
to make it friendly towards chai expect
and should
statements.
// this
expect(foo).to.be.true;
foo.should.be.true;
// instead of this
expect(foo).to.be.true; // eslint-disable-line no-unused-expressions
foo.should.be.true; // eslint-disable-line no-unused-expressions
You'll first need to install ESLint:
npm i eslint --save-dev
Next, install eslint-plugin-chai-friendly
:
npm install eslint-plugin-chai-friendly --save-dev
Note: If you installed ESLint globally (using the -g
flag) then you must also install eslint-plugin-chai-friendly
globally.
Add chai-friendly
to the plugins section of your .eslintrc.*
configuration file. You can omit the eslint-plugin-
prefix:
{
"plugins": [
"chai-friendly"
]
}
Then disable original no-unused-expressions
rule and configure chai-friendly replacement under the rules section.
{
"rules": {
"no-unused-expressions": 0,
"chai-friendly/no-unused-expressions": 2
}
}
If you don't need to tweak the above rule settings, you can instead
just add the following to your config file's extends
and the above
will be applied automatically:
{
"extends": ["plugin:chai-friendly/recommended"]
}
This rule, in its default state, does not require any arguments. If you would like to enable one or more of the following you may pass an object with the options set as follows:
allowShortCircuit
set to true
will allow you to use short circuit evaluations in your expressions (Default: false
).allowTernary
set to true
will enable you to use ternary operators in your expressions similarly to short circuit evaluations (Default: false
).allowTaggedTemplates
set to true
will enable you to use tagged template literals in your expressions (Default: false
).These options allow unused expressions only if all of the code paths either directly change the state (for example, assignment statement) or could have side effects (for example, function call).
More info in the original rule's docs.
chai-friendly/no-unused-expressions
FAQs
This plugin makes 'no-unused-expressions' rule friendly towards chai expect statements.
The npm package eslint-plugin-chai-friendly receives a total of 192,857 weekly downloads. As such, eslint-plugin-chai-friendly popularity was classified as popular.
We found that eslint-plugin-chai-friendly demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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