This is a fork of prettier/prettier, with a goal of supporting additional options not picked up by official Prettier.
If you want to add an option to Prettier Miscellaneous, please send a PR! 😃
Prettier is an opinionated JavaScript formatter inspired by refmt with advanced support for language features from ES2017, JSX, and Flow. It removes all original styling* and ensures that all outputted JavaScript conforms to a consistent style. (See this blog post)
If you are interested in the details, you can watch those two conference talks:
This goes way beyond ESLint and other projects built on it. Unlike ESLint, there aren't a million configuration options and rules. But more importantly: everything is fixable. This works because Prettier never "checks" anything; it takes JavaScript as input and delivers the formatted JavaScript as output.
In technical terms: Prettier parses your JavaScript into an AST (Abstract Syntax Tree) and pretty-prints the AST, completely ignoring any of the original formatting*. Say hello to completely consistent syntax!
There's an extremely important piece missing from existing styling tools: the maximum line length. Sure, you can tell ESLint to warn you when you have a line that's too long, but that's an after-thought (ESLint never knows how to fix it). The maximum line length is a critical piece the formatter needs for laying out and wrapping code.
For example, take the following code:
foo(arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4);
That looks like the right way to format it. However, we've all run into this situation:
foo(reallyLongArg(), omgSoManyParameters(), IShouldRefactorThis(), isThereSeriouslyAnotherOne());
Suddenly our previous format for calling function breaks down because this is too long. What you would probably do is this instead:
foo(
reallyLongArg(),
omgSoManyParameters(),
IShouldRefactorThis(),
isThereSeriouslyAnotherOne()
);
This clearly shows that the maximum line length has a direct impact on the style of code we desire. The fact that current style tools ignore this means they can't really help with the situations that are actually the most troublesome. Individuals on teams will all format these differently according to their own rules and we lose the consistency we sought after.
Even if we disregard line widths, it's too easy to sneak in various styles of code in all other linters. The most strict linter I know happily lets all these styles happen:
foo({ num: 3 },
1, 2)
foo(
{ num: 3 },
1, 2)
foo(
{ num: 3 },
1,
2
)
Prettier bans all custom styling* by parsing it away and re-printing the parsed AST with its own rules that take the maximum line width into account, wrapping code when necessary.
*Well actually, some original styling is preserved when practical—see empty lines and multi-line objects.
Install:
yarn add prettier-with-tabs --dev
=======
yarn add prettier --dev
You can install it globally if you like:
yarn global add prettier-with-tabs
We're defaulting to yarn
but you can use npm
if you like:
npm install [-g] prettier-with-tabs
Run Prettier through the CLI with this script. Run it without any arguments to see the options.
To format a file in-place, use --write
. You may want to consider
committing your code before doing that, just in case.
prettier [opts] [filename ...]
In practice, this may look something like:
prettier --single-quote --trailing-comma es5 --write "{app,__{tests,mocks}__}/**/*.js"
(Don't forget the quotes around the globs! The quotes make sure that Prettier expands the globs rather than your shell, for cross-platform usage.)
In the future we will have better support for formatting whole projects.
If you're worried that Prettier will change the correctness of your code, add --debug-check
to the command.
This will cause Prettier to print an error message if it detects that code correctness might have changed.
Note that --write
cannot be used with --debug-check
.
You can use this with a pre-commit tool. This can re-format your files that are marked as "staged" via git add
before you commit.
1. lint-staged
Install it along with husky:
yarn add lint-staged husky --dev
and add this config to your package.json
:
{
"scripts": {
"precommit": "lint-staged"
},
"lint-staged": {
"*.js": [
"prettier --write",
"git add"
]
}
}
See https://github.com/okonet/lint-staged#configuration for more details about how you can configure lint-staged.
2. pre-commit
Just copy the following config in your pre-commit config yaml file
- repo: https://github.com/awebdeveloper/pre-commit-prettier
sha: '' # Use the sha or tag you want to point at
hooks:
- id: prettier
additional_dependencies: ['prettier@1.1.0']
Find more info from here
Alternately you can just save this script as .git/hooks/pre-commit
and give it execute permission:
#!/bin/sh
jsfiles=$(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=ACM | grep '\.jsx\?$' | tr '\n' ' ')
[ -z "$jsfiles" ] && exit 0
diffs=$(node_modules/.bin/prettier -l $jsfiles)
[ -z "$diffs" ] && exit 0
echo "here"
echo >&2 "Javascript files must be formatted with prettier. Please run:"
echo >&2 "node_modules/.bin/prettier --write "$diffs""
exit 1
The API has two functions, exported as format
and check
. format
usage is as follows:
const prettier = require("prettier-with-tabs");
const options = {} // optional
prettier.format(source, options);
check
checks to see if the file has been formatted with Prettier given those options and returns a Boolean.
This is similar to the --list-different
parameter in the CLI and is useful for running Prettier in CI scenarios.
Prettier ships with a handful of customizable format options, usable in both the CLI and API.
Option | Default | CLI override | API override |
---|---|---|---|
Tabs - Indent lines with tabs instead of spaces. | false |
--use-tabs |
useTabs: <bool> |
Print Width - Specify the length of line that the printer will wrap on. | 80 |
--print-width <int> |
printWidth: <int> |
Tab Width - Specify the number of spaces per indentation-level. | 2 |
--tab-width <int> |
tabWidth: <int> |
Quotes - Use single quotes instead of double quotes. | false |
--single-quote |
singleQuote: <bool> |
Trailing Commas - Print trailing commas wherever possible. Valid options: - "none" - no trailing commas - "es5" - trailing commas where valid in ES5 (objects, arrays, etc) - "all" - trailing commas wherever possible (function arguments) |
"none" |
--trailing-comma <none|es5|all> |
trailingComma: "<none|es5|all>" |
Trailing Commas (extended) - You can also customize each place to use trailing commas: Valid options: - "array" - "object" - "import" - "export" - "arguments" |
"none" |
You can use a comma separated string list:--trailing-comma "array,object,import,export,arguments" |
You can use a string list or an object:trailingComma: { array: true, object: true, import: true, export: true, arguments: false } |
Bracket Spacing - Print spaces between brackets in array literals. Valid options: - true - Example: [ foo: bar ] - false - Example: [foo: bar] |
true |
--no-bracket-spacing |
bracketSpacing: <bool> |
Braces Spacing - Print spaces between brackets in object literals. Valid options: - true - Example: { foo: bar } - false - Example: {foo: bar} |
true |
--no-braces-spacing |
bracesSpacing: <bool> |
Break in Object Properties - Allow object properties to break lines between the property name and its value. Valid options: - true - false |
false |
--break-property |
breakProperty: <bool> |
Arrow Function Parentheses - Always put parentheses on arrow function arguments. Valid options: - true - false |
false |
--arrow-parens |
arrowParens: <bool> |
Array Expand - Expand arrays into one item per line. Valid options: - true - false |
false |
--array-expand |
arrayExpand: <bool> |
Flatten Ternaries - Format ternaries in a flat style. Valid options: - true - false |
false |
--flatten-ternaries |
flattenTernaries: <bool> |
Break Before Else - Put else clause in a new line.Valid options: - true - false |
false |
--break-before-else |
breakBeforeElse: <bool> |
JSX Brackets on Same Line - Put the > of a multi-line JSX element at the end of the last line instead of being alone on the next line |
false |
--jsx-bracket-same-line |
jsxBracketSameLine: <bool> |
Align Object Properties - Align colons in multiline object literals. Does nothing if object has computed property names. | false |
--align-object-properties | alignObjectProperties: <bool> |
No Space in Empty Function - Omit space before empty anonymous function body. Valid options: - true - false |
false |
--no-space-empty-fn |
noSpaceEmptyFn: <bool> |
Parser - Specify which parser to use. | babylon |
--parser <flow|babylon> |
parser: "<flow|babylon>" |
Semicolons - Print semicolons at the ends of statements. Valid options: - true - add a semicolon at the end of every statement - false - only add semicolons at the beginning of lines that may introduce ASI failures |
true |
--no-semi |
semi: <bool> |
A JavaScript comment of // prettier-ignore
will exclude the next node in the abstract syntax tree from formatting.
For example:
matrix(
1, 0, 0,
0, 1, 0,
0, 0, 1
)
// prettier-ignore
matrix(
1, 0, 0,
0, 1, 0,
0, 0, 1
)
will be transformed to:
matrix(1, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 1);
// prettier-ignore
matrix(
1, 0, 0,
0, 1, 0,
0, 0, 1
)
Atom users can simply install the prettier-atom-with-tabs
package and use
Ctrl+Alt+F
to format a file (or format on save if enabled).
Emacs users should see this directory for on-demand formatting.
Add sbdchd/neoformat to your list based on the tool you use:
Plug 'sbdchd/neoformat'
Then make Neoformat run on save:
autocmd BufWritePre *.js Neoformat
You can also make Vim format your code more frequently, by setting an autocmd
for other events. Here are a couple of useful ones:
TextChanged
: after a change was made to the text in Normal modeInsertLeave
: when leaving Insert mode
For example, you can format on both of the above events together with BufWritePre
like this:
autocmd BufWritePre,TextChanged,InsertLeave *.js Neoformat
See :help autocmd-events
in Vim for details.
If your project requires settings other than the default Prettier settings, you can pass arguments to do so in your .vimrc
or vim project, you can do so:
autocmd FileType javascript setlocal formatprg=prettier\ --stdin\ --parser\ flow\ --single-quote\ --trailing-comma\ es5
" Use formatprg when available
let g:neoformat_try_formatprg = 1
Each option needs to be escaped with \
.
Can be installed using the extension sidebar. Search for Prettier - JavaScript formatter
.
Can also be installed using ext install prettier-vscode-with-tabs
Check its repository for configuration and shortcuts
Install the JavaScript Prettier extension.
Sublime Text support is available through Package Control and the JsPrettier plug-in.
JetBrains users can configure prettier
as an External Tool.
See this blog post or this
directory with examples.
More editors are coming soon.
Prettier attempts to support all JavaScript language features,
including non-standardized ones. By default it uses the
Babylon parser with all language
features enabled, but you can also use the
Flow parser with the
parser
API or --parser
CLI option.
All of JSX and Flow syntax is supported. In fact, the test suite in
tests
is the entire Flow test suite and they all pass.
eslint-plugin-prettier
plugs Prettier into your ESLint workfloweslint-config-prettier
turns off all ESLint rules that are unnecessary or might conflict with Prettierprettier-eslint
passesprettier
output toeslint --fix
prettier-standard
usesprettier
andprettier-eslint
to format code with standard rulesprettier-standard-formatter
passesprettier
output tostandard --fix
prettier-miscellaneous
prettier
with a few minor extra optionsneutrino-preset-prettier
allows you to use Prettier as a Neutrino presetprettier_d
runs Prettier as a server to avoid Node.js startup delay
This printer is a fork of recast's printer with its algorithm replaced by the one described by Wadler in "A prettier printer". There still may be leftover code from recast that needs to be cleaned up.
The basic idea is that the printer takes an AST and returns an intermediate representation of the output, and the printer uses that to generate a string. The advantage is that the printer can "measure" the IR and see if the output is going to fit on a line, and break if not.
This means that most of the logic of printing an AST involves
generating an abstract representation of the output involving certain
commands. For example, concat(["(", line, arg, line ")"])
would
represent a concatentation of opening parens, an argument, and closing
parens. But if that doesn't fit on one line, the printer can break
where line
is specified.
More (rough) details can be found in commands.md. Better docs will come soon.
Show the world you're using Prettier →
[![styled with prettier](https://img.shields.io/badge/styled_with-prettier-ff69b4.svg)](https://github.com/prettier/prettier)
To get up and running, install the dependencies and run the tests:
yarn
yarn test
Here's what you need to know about the tests:
- The tests uses Jest snapshots.
- You can make changes and run
jest -u
(oryarn test -- -u
) to update the snapshots. Then rungit diff
to take a look at what changed. Always update the snapshots when opening a PR. - You can run
AST_COMPARE=1 jest
for a more robust test run. That formats each file, re-parses it, and compares the new AST with the original one and makes sure they are semantically equivalent. - Each test folder has a
jsfmt.spec.js
that runs the tests. Normally you can just putrun_spec(__dirname);
there. You can also pass options and additional parsers, like this:run_spec(__dirname, { trailingComma: "es5" }, ["babylon"]);
tests/flow/
contains the Flow test suite, and is not supposed to be edited by hand. To update it, clone the Flow repo next to the Prettier repo and run:node scripts/sync-flow-tests.js ../flow/tests/
.- If you would like to debug prettier locally, you can either debug it in node
or the browser. The easiest way to debug it in the browser is to run the
interactive
docs
REPL locally. The easiest way to debug it in node, is to create a local test file and run it in an editor like VS Code.
If you can, take look at commands.md and check out Wadler's paper to understand how Prettier works.