svelte-eslint-parser
Svelte parser for ESLint.
You can check it on Online DEMO.
❓ Why?
Svelte has the official ESLint plugin the eslint-plugin-svelte3. The eslint-plugin-svelte3 works well enough to check scripts. However, it does not handle the AST of the template, which makes it very difficult for third parties to create their own the ESLint rules for the Svelte.
The svelte-eslint-parser aims to make it easy to create your own rules for the Svelte by allowing the template AST to be used in the rules.
The eslint-plugin-svelte
is an ESLint plugin that uses the svelte-eslint-parser. I have already implemented some rules.
Benefits of Using AST
- We can create rules using the information contained in the AST.
e.g.
- Rules that use text work well.
e.g.
ESLint Plugins Using svelte-eslint-parser
ESLint plugin for Svelte.
It provides many unique check rules by using the template AST.
ESLint plugin for internationalization (i18n) with Svelte.
It provides rules to help internationalization your application created with Svelte.
❗ Attention
The svelte-eslint-parser can not be used with the eslint-plugin-svelte3.
💿 Installation
npm install --save-dev eslint svelte-eslint-parser
📖 Usage
- Write
overrides.parser
option into your .eslintrc.*
file. - Use glob patterns or
--ext .svelte
CLI option.
{
"extends": "eslint:recommended",
"overrides": [
{
"files": ["*.svelte"],
"parser": "svelte-eslint-parser"
}
]
}
$ eslint "src/**/*.{js,svelte}"
# or
$ eslint src --ext .svelte
🔧 Options
parserOptions
has the same properties as what espree, the default parser of ESLint, is supporting.
For example:
{
"parser": "svelte-eslint-parser",
"parserOptions": {
"sourceType": "module",
"ecmaVersion": 2021,
"ecmaFeatures": {
"globalReturn": false,
"impliedStrict": false,
"jsx": false
}
}
}
parserOptions.parser
You can use parserOptions.parser
property to specify a custom parser to parse <script>
tags.
Other properties than parser would be given to the specified parser.
For example:
{
"parser": "svelte-eslint-parser",
"parserOptions": {
"parser": "@typescript-eslint/parser"
}
}
For example, if you are using the "@typescript-eslint/parser"
, and if you want to use TypeScript in <script>
of .svelte
, you need to add more parserOptions
configuration.
module.exports = {
parser: "@typescript-eslint/parser",
parserOptions: {
project: "path/to/your/tsconfig.json",
extraFileExtensions: [".svelte"],
},
overrides: [
{
files: ["*.svelte"],
parser: "svelte-eslint-parser",
parserOptions: {
parser: "@typescript-eslint/parser",
},
},
],
}
Multiple parsers
If you want to switch the parser for each lang, specify the object.
{
"parser": "svelte-eslint-parser",
"parserOptions": {
"parser": {
"ts": "@typescript-eslint/parser",
"js": "espree",
"typescript": "@typescript-eslint/parser"
}
}
}
Parser Object
When using JavaScript configuration (.eslintrc.js
), you can also give the parser object directly.
const tsParser = require("@typescript-eslint/parser")
const espree = require("espree")
module.exports = {
parser: "svelte-eslint-parser",
parserOptions: {
parser: tsParser,
parser: {
js: espree,
ts: tsParser,
}
},
}
:computer: Editor Integrations
Visual Studio Code
Use the dbaeumer.vscode-eslint extension that Microsoft provides officially.
You have to configure the eslint.validate
option of the extension to check .svelte
files, because the extension targets only *.js
or *.jsx
files by default.
Example .vscode/settings.json:
{
"eslint.validate": [
"javascript",
"javascriptreact",
"svelte"
]
}
Usage for Custom Rules / Plugins
:beers: Contributing
Welcome contributing!
Please use GitHub's Issues/PRs.
See also the documentation for the internal mechanism.
:lock: License
See the LICENSE file for license rights and limitations (MIT).