Understanding ESLint Rules

Aug 3, 2020

Rules are the fundamental building block for ESLint. Every ESLint configuration is a collection of rules and how strictly those rules are enforced. Even Standard is implemented as a collection of ESLint rules.

For example, below is a minimal ESLint config .eslintrc.json file that makes ESLint error out if there are unused variables. Every ESLint rule has a name: this rule is called no-unused-vars. Here's the documentation for no-unused-vars.

{
  "parserOptions": {
    "ecmaVersion": 2020
  },
  "rules": {
    "no-unused-vars": "error"
  }
}

Suppose you have the below one-line script test.js in the same folder as .eslintrc.json. The message variable is never used.

const message = 'Hello, World!';

You can then run ESLint using ./node_modules/.bin/eslint ./test.js, and get the below output.

$ ./node_modules/.bin/eslint ./test.js 

/scratch/test.js
  1:7  error  'message' is assigned a value but never used  no-unused-vars

✖ 1 problem (1 error, 0 warnings)

$ 

Error vs Warning

The "no-unused-vars": "error" line tells ESLint that unused variables should cause the linter to fail. ESLint also supports making a rule a warning as opposed to an error. ESLint will still succeed if the only rule violations are warnings.

For example, below is how you make the no-unused-vars rule a warning rather than an error.

{
  "parserOptions": {
    "ecmaVersion": 2020
  },
  "rules": {
    "no-unused-vars": "warn"
  }
}

Run ESLint with the above configuration on test.js, and you'll get a warning rather than an error.

$ ./node_modules/.bin/eslint ./test.js 

/scratch/test.js
  1:7  warning  'message' is assigned a value but never used  no-unused-vars

✖ 1 problem (0 errors, 1 warning)

$ echo $?
0
$ 

The echo $? command is how you get the exit code of the last command in Linux. Exit code 0 means that the command succeeded, so eslint succeeded even though there were warnings.

More Complex Rules

The no-unused-vars rule doesn't leave much room for configuration: either a variable is unused, or it isn't. A more interesting rule is the max-len rule, which enforces the maximum length of a line.

By default, setting "max-len": "error" will cause ESLint to error out if there's a line with more than 80 characters. However, you can configure this by setting max-len to an array, where the 2nd element in the array is an options object that configures max-len. Below is a .eslintrc.json that tells ESLint to error out if a line is longer than 66 characters.

{
  "parserOptions": {
    "ecmaVersion": 2020
  },
  "rules": {
    "max-len": ["error", { "code": 66 }]
  }
}

Suppose test.js contains one line that's 77 characters long:

const message = 'This long string makes this line longer than 66 characters';

Running ESLint on the above file will report an error:

$ ./node_modules/.bin/eslint ./test.js 

/scratch/test.js
  1:1  error  This line has a length of 77. Maximum allowed is 66  max-len

✖ 1 problem (1 error, 0 warnings)

$ 

Custom Rules from npm

ESLint has a wide variety of built-in rules, but you can also find new rules on npm. Many ESLint plugins provide additional rules for working with specific libraries and frameworks.

For example, eslint-plugin-vue provides extra Vue-specific rules. Run npm install eslint-plugin-vue and add a plugins list to your .eslintrc.json. Once you do that, you get access to Vue-specific rules like no-async-in-computed-properties.

{
  "parserOptions": {
    "ecmaVersion": 2020
  },
  "plugins": ["eslint-plugin-vue"],
  "rules": {
    "vue/no-async-in-computed-properties": "error"
  }
}

If you run ESLint on the below test.js file, the vue/no-async-in-computed-properties rule will error out because badProperty is set to an async function:

const Vue = require('vue');

module.exports = Vue.component('bad-component', {
  template: '<h1>Hello</h1>',
  computed: {
    badProperty: async function() { return 42; }
  }
});
$ ./node_modules/.bin/eslint ./test.js 

/scratch/test.js
  6:18  error  Unexpected async function declaration in "badProperty" computed property  vue/no-async-in-computed-properties

✖ 1 problem (1 error, 0 warnings)

$ 

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