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eslint-plugin-json
Advanced tools
Eslint plugin for JSON files
:warning: If you are using eslint v9 or newer, use eslint-plugin-json v4 or newer.
Install eslint-plugin-json along eslint:
$ npm install --save-dev eslint eslint-plugin-json
# or
$ yarn add --dev eslint eslint-plugin-json
Note: If you installed ESLint globally (using the -g flag) then you must also install eslint-plugin-json globally.
The json plugin ship with two recommended config you can use to easily activate it via the extends key.
It comes in two flavor: one strict (recommended) and one allowing comments recommended-with-comments.
import json from 'eslint-plugin-json';
export default [
{
files: ["**/*.json"],
...json.configs["recommended"]
}
];
The json plugin ship with two recommended config you can use to easily activate it via the extends key.
It comes in two flavor: one strict (recommended-legacy) and one allowing comments recommended-with-comments-legacy.
{
"extends": ["plugin:json/recommended-legacy"]
}
You can run ESLint on individual JSON files or you can use the --ext flag to add JSON files to the list.
eslint . --ext .json,.js
eslint example.json
If you want more granular control over which rules, and which severity you want.
If you want them all, add the json/json rule (or its alias json/*). (this is what the recommended config does)
The global rules (json/json or its alias json/*) activate all the rules.
Note it can be configured to ignore errors cause by comments.
To do so, add option 'allowComments' or {allowComments: true}
For instance:
import json from "eslint-plugin-json";
export default [
{
files: ["**/*.json"],
plugins: { json },
processor: "json/json"
"rules": {
"json/*": ["error", "allowComments"],
// or the equivalent:
"json/*": ["error", {"allowComments": true}]
}
},
];
If you want more granular control over which rules, and which severity you want.
Add json to the list of plugins (You can omit the eslint-plugin- prefix)
Then pick your rules.
If you want them all, add the json/json rule (or its alias json/*). (this is what the recommended-legacy config does)
The global rules (json/json or its alias json/*) activate all the rules.
Note it can be configured to ignore errors cause by comments.
To do so, add option 'allowComments' or {allowComments: true}
For instance:
{
"plugins": [
"json"
],
"rules": {
"json/*": ["error", "allowComments"],
// or the equivalent:
"json/*": ["error", {"allowComments": true}]
}
}
Here is the list of individual rules (with name in kebab-case)in case you want granular error/warning level:
json/undefinedjson/enum-value-mismatchjson/unexpected-end-of-commentjson/unexpected-end-of-stringjson/unexpected-end-of-numberjson/invalid-unicodejson/invalid-escape-characterjson/invalid-characterjson/property-expectedjson/comma-expectedjson/colon-expectedjson/value-expectedjson/comma-or-close-backet-expectedjson/comma-or-close-brace-expectedjson/trailing-commajson/duplicate-keyjson/comment-not-permittedjson/schema-resolve-errorjson/unknown (error that does not match previous ones)Starting from version 1.3, this plugin relies on what VSCode uses for its implementation of JSON validation.
Originaly this plugin used to use JSHint, however due to heavy dependencies, it was replaced.
eslint itself or just JSON.parse?eslint's parser is a JavaScript parser. JSON is a stricter subset and things
that are valid JavaScript are not valid JSON. This is why something more specific
is more appropriate.
While JSON.parse seems ideal, it is not designed to continue after the first error.
So if you have a missing trailing comma in the start of the file, the rest of the file
will go unlinted. A smarter parser that can self-correct after seeing errors is needed
which the VSCode implementation provides by leveraging the
jsonc-parser module.
It is now possible as you can see in the Configuration section.
Additionally, support for autofixing common errors could be added in the feature.
eslint really the best tool to lint my JSON?Not really. eslint plugin interface wasn't designed to lint a completely different language but
its interface is flexible enough to allow it. So this plugin is certainly unusual.
Ideally, your editor would natively supports linting JSON. If it doesn't though, then might as well use this plugin. Hacky linting is better than no linting :).
FAQs
eslint plugin for JSON files
The npm package eslint-plugin-json receives a total of 538,641 weekly downloads. As such, eslint-plugin-json popularity was classified as popular.
We found that eslint-plugin-json 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.
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