Do you want to use tslint and prettier without conflicts? tslint-config-prettier disables all conflicting rules that may cause such problems. Prettier takes care of the formatting whereas tslint takes care of all the other things.
Check how it works in this tutorial.
npm install -D tslint-config-prettier
Make sure you've already set up tslint and prettier.
Then, extend your tslint.json
, and make sure tslint-config-prettier
is at the end:
{
"extends": [
"tslint:latest",
"tslint-config-prettier"
]
}
tslint-config-prettier
also turns off formatting rules from the following rulesets, so you can use them safely.
- codelyzer
- tslint
- tslint-consistent-codestyle
- tslint-divid
- tslint-eslint-rules
- tslint-immutable
- tslint-microsoft-contrib
- tslint-misc-rules
- tslint-plugin-ikatyang
- tslint-react
- vrsource-tslint-rules
{
"extends": [
"tslint:latest",
"tslint-react",
"tslint-eslint-rules",
"tslint-config-prettier"
]
}
tslint-config-prettier
is shipped with a little CLI tool to help you check if your configuration contains any rules that are in conflict with Prettier. (require tslint
installed)
In order to execute the CLI tool, first add a script for it to package.json
:
{
"scripts": {
"tslint-check": "tslint-config-prettier-check ./tslint.json"
}
}
Then run npm run tslint-check
.
Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us.
- tslint-plugin-prettier - Runs Prettier as a TSLint rule and reports differences as individual TSLint issues.
Made with ❤️ by @alexjoverm and all its contributors