JSHint is a community-driven tool to detect errors and potential problems in JavaScript code and to enforce your team's coding conventions. We made JSHint very flexible so you can easily adjust it to your particular coding guidelines and the environment you expect your code to execute in.
Our goal is to help JavaScript developers write complex programs without worrying about typos and language gotchas.
We believe that static code analysis programs—as well as other code quality tools—are important and beneficial to the JavaScript community and, thus, should not alienate their users.
For general usage and hacking information, visit our website: http://jshint.com/.
We're running a fundraiser for JSHint! If JSHint helps you in your day-to-day development, please consider donating. All money raised on this page will be used as monetary rewards for fixing JSHint bugs and implementing new features. Our hope is to introduce more developers to JSHint hacking and boost its development.
Rules:
- All funds (aside from fees) will be used only to fund bounties.
- If core team ends up fixing bounty bugs, the reward will be donated to the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
- Before marking bugs as fixed, all patches must be reviewed by a core team member.
Thanks!
To report a bug simply create a new GitHub Issue and describe your problem or suggestion. We welcome all kind of feedback regarding JSHint including but not limited to:
- When JSHint doesn't work as expected
- When JSHint complains about valid JavaScript code that works in all browsers
- When you simply want a new option or feature
Before reporting a bug look around to see if there are any open or closed tickets that cover your issue. And remember the wisdom: pull request > bug report > tweet.
If you're using so-called smart tabs
then we have an option smarttabs
for you. Otherwise, your solution is to
run JSHint with a custom reporter that discards any warnings you don't like.
For example, this example reporter
discards all warnings about mixed tabs and spaces.
Look for a file named CONTRIBUTING.md
in this repository. It contains our
contributing guidelines. We also have
a mailing list.
JSHint is distributed under the MIT License. One file and one file only (src/stable/jshint.js) is distributed under the slightly modified MIT License.
Core Team members:
- Anton Kovalyov (@valueof)
- Wolfgang Kluge (blog)
- Josh Perez (@goatslacker)
- Brent Lintner (@brentlintner)
Maintainer: Anton Kovalyov
We really appreciate all kind of feedback and contributions. Thanks for using and supporting JSHint!