Visual Studio Code extension for JavaScript Standard Style with automatic fixing.
Install the 'StandardJS - JavaScript Standard Style' extension
Launch VSCode Quick Open (⌘+P), paste the following command, and press enter.
ext install standard.vscode-standard
For more information, take a look at the documentation.
Install the engine standard
, semistandard
, standardx
or ts-standard
This can be done globally or locally. We recommend that you install them locally (i.e. saved in your project's devDependencies
), to ensure that other developers have it installed when working on the project.
Enable the extension
That's it! The extension will automatically be enabled in projects that has one of the engines installed in devDependencies
in package.json
.
We give you some options to customize vscode-standard
in your VSCode settings.json
.
Option | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
standard.enable |
enable or disable JavaScript Standard Style | true |
standard.enableGlobally |
enable or disable JavaScript Standard Style globally | false |
standard.run |
run linter onSave or onType |
onType |
standard.autoFixOnSave |
enable or disable auto fix on save. It is only available when VSCode's files.autoSave is either off , onFocusChange or onWindowChange . It will not work with afterDelay . |
false |
standard.nodePath |
use this setting if an installed standard package can't be detected. |
null |
standard.validate |
an array of language identifiers specify the files to be validated | ["javascript", "javascriptreact", "typescript", "typescriptreact] |
standard.workingDirectories |
an array for working directories to be used. | [] |
standard.engine |
You can use semistandard , standardx or ts-standard instead of standard . Just make sure you've installed the semistandard , the standardx or the ts-standard package, instead of standard . |
standard |
standard.usePackageJson |
if set to true , JavaScript Standard Style will use project's package.json settings, otherwise globally installed standard module is used |
true |
standard.treatErrorsAsWarnings |
Any linting error reported by Standard will instead be displayed as a warning within VS Code. | false |
You can still configure standard
itself with the standard.options
setting, for example:
"standard.options": {
"globals": ["$", "jQuery", "fetch"],
"ignore": [
"node_modules/**"
],
"plugins": ["html"],
"parser": "babel-eslint",
"envs": ["jest"]
}
It's recommended to change these options in your package.json
file on a per-project basis, rather than setting them globally in settings.json
. For example:
"standard": {
"plugins": ["html"],
"parser": "babel-eslint"
}
If you've got multiple projects within a workspace (e.g. you're inside a monorepo), VSCode prevents extensions from accessing multiple package.json
files.
If you want this functionality, you should add each project folder to your workspace (File -> Add folder to workspace...
). If you can't see this option, download the VSCode Insiders Build to get the latest features.
When you open the Command Palette in VSCode (⇧⌘P or Ctrl+Shift+P), this plugin has the following options:
Fix all auto-fixable problems
- applies JavaScript Standard Style auto-fix resolutions to all fixable problems.Disable JavaScript Standard Style for this Workspace
- disable JavaScript Standard Style extension for this workspace.Enable JavaScript Standard Style for this Workspace
- enable JavaScript Standard Style extension for this workspace.Show output channel
- view the linter output for JavaScript Standard Style.How do I lint script
tags in vue
or html
files?
You can lint them with eslint-plugin-html
. Make sure it's installed, then enable linting for those file types in your settings.json
:
"standard.validate": [
"javascript",
"javascriptreact",
"html"
],
"standard.options": {
"plugins": ["html"]
},
"files.associations": {
"*.vue": "html"
},
If you want to enable autoFix
for the new languages, you should enable it yourself:
"standard.validate": [
"javascript",
"javascriptreact",
{
"language": "html",
"autoFix": true
}
],
"standard.options": {
"plugins": ["html"]
}
npm install
right under project root.watch
build task (⇧⌘B or Ctrl+Shift+B) to compile the client and server.Launch Client
launch configuration (from the VSCode debug panel).Attach to Server
launch configuration.npm install
npm run package
to build a .vsix filecode --install-extension vscode-standard.vsix