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Anthony's ESLint config presets. Auto fix for formatting (aimed to be used standalone without Prettier). Designed to work with TypeScript, Vue out-of-box. Lint also for json, yaml, markdown. Sorted imports, dangling commas for cleaner commit diff. Reasonable defaults, best practices, only one-line of config.
The static code analysis tool you need for your HTML
Static code analysis tool you need for your HTML. By default, htmlhint looks for a .htmlhintrc file in the current directory and all parent directories and applies its rules when parsing a file.
Tiny 500b fetch "barely-polyfill". With a module bundler like rollup or webpack, you can import unfetch to use in your code without modifying any globals. While one of Unfetch's goals is to provide a familiar interface, its API may differ from other fetch polyfills/ponyfills. One of the key differences is that Unfetch focuses on implementing the fetch() API, while offering minimal (yet functional) support to the other sections of the Fetch spec, like the Headers class or the Response class....
...You can turn off every rule and run only with basic syntax validation or mix and match the bundled rules and your custom rules to fit the needs of your project. There are two primary ways to configure ESLint. Use JavaScript comments to embed configuration information directly into a file. Use a JavaScript, JSON, or YAML file to specify configuration information for an entire directory and all of its subdirectories. This can be in the form of a .eslintrc.* file or an eslintConfig field in a package.json file, both of which ESLint will look for and read automatically, or you can specify a configuration file on the command line.