Test tech job specs for issues with sexism, culture, expectations, and recruiter fails.
Writing a job spec? Use Joblint to make your job attractive to a much broader range of candidates.
Getting swamped in job specs? Use Joblint to filter out the bad ones.
Current Version: 1.3.2
Build Status:
Node Support: 0.10
$ joblint path/to/spec.txt
Joblint runs on Node.js, and is installed with npm:
$ npm install joblint -g
Joblint can be used on the command line with the joblint
command:
$ joblint --help
Usage: joblint [options] <file>
Options:
-h, --help output usage information
-V, --version output the version number
-r, --reporter [type] Use the specified reporter [cli]
-v, --verbose Output verbose rule descriptions (if the reporter supports them)
Joblint supports either specifying a file name:
$ joblint path/to/spec.txt
Or piping the job spec into the command:
$ echo "This is a job spec" | joblint
You can use this to pipe the contents of the clipboard into the command, which is really useful if you're copying specs from emails:
# On Mac:
$ pbpaste | joblint
# On Linux (with xclip installed):
$ xclip -o | joblint
You can also use Joblint directly from a Node.js script:
var joblint = require('joblint');
var result = joblint("This is a job spec");
console.log(result);
I'm intending on writing some documentation for this, but for now you're best-placed reading through some of the code in lib/rule
.
If you wish to contribute to Joblint, clone this repository locally and install dependencies with npm install
. Now you can run the following commands to lint and test the code.
$ make lint # Run JSHint on the code
$ make test # Run unit tests
Please ensure there are no lint errors or failing tests before opening a pull request.
The following excellent people helped massively with defining the original lint rules:
Also, there are plenty of great contributors to the library.
Joblint is licensed under the MIT license.