Limiting the maximum of props on a single line can improve readability.
Fixable: This rule is automatically fixable using the --fix
flag on the command line. However, fix does not include indentation. Please rerun lint to correct those errors.
This rule checks all JSX elements and verifies that the number of props per line do not exceed the maximum allowed. Props are considered to be in a new line if there is a line break between the start of the prop and the end of the previous prop. A spread attribute counts as one prop. This rule is off by default and when on the default maximum of props on one line is 1
.
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
<Hello lastName="Smith" firstName="John" />;
<Hello foo={{
bar
}} baz />;
Examples of correct code for this rule:
<Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
<Hello
{...this.props}
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
...
"react/jsx-max-props-per-line": [<enabled>, { "maximum": <number>, "when": <string> }]
...
Maximum number of props allowed on a single line. Default to 1
.
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
// [1, { "maximum": 2 }]
<Hello firstName="John" lastName="Smith" tel={5555555} />;
Examples of correct code for this rule:
// [1, { "maximum": 2 }]
<Hello
firstName="John" lastName="Smith"
tel={5555555}
/>;
Possible values:
always
(default) - Always check for max props per line.multiline
- Only check for max props per line when jsx tag spans multiple lines.
Examples of incorrect code for this rule:
// [1, { "when": "always" }]
<Hello firstName="John" lastName="Smith" />
Examples of correct code for this rule:
// [1, { "when": "multiline" }]
<Hello firstName="John" lastName="Smith" />
<Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>
If you are not using JSX then you can disable this rule.