Eslint
Find and fix problems in your JavaScript code.
Install / Use
/learn @eslint/EslintREADME
ESLint
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ESLint is a tool for identifying and reporting on patterns found in ECMAScript/JavaScript code. In many ways, it is similar to JSLint and JSHint with a few exceptions:
- ESLint uses Espree for JavaScript parsing.
- ESLint uses an AST to evaluate patterns in code.
- ESLint is completely pluggable, every single rule is a plugin and you can add more at runtime.
Table of Contents
- Installation and Usage
- Configuration
- Version Support
- Code of Conduct
- Filing Issues
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Releases
- Security Policy
- Semantic Versioning Policy
- ESM Dependencies
- License
- Team
- Sponsors
- Technology Sponsors <!-- markdownlint-disable-line MD051 -->
Installation and Usage
Prerequisites
To use ESLint, you must have Node.js (^20.19.0, ^22.13.0, or >=24) installed and built with SSL support. (If you are using an official Node.js distribution, SSL is always built in.)
If you use ESLint's TypeScript type definitions, TypeScript 5.3 or later is required.
npm Installation
You can install and configure ESLint using this command:
npm init @eslint/config@latest
After that, you can run ESLint on any file or directory like this:
npx eslint yourfile.js
pnpm Installation
To use ESLint with pnpm, we recommend setting up a .npmrc file with at least the following settings:
auto-install-peers=true
node-linker=hoisted
This ensures that pnpm installs dependencies in a way that is more compatible with npm and is less likely to produce errors.
Configuration
You can configure rules in your eslint.config.js files as in this example:
import { defineConfig } from "eslint/config";
export default defineConfig([
{
files: ["**/*.js", "**/*.cjs", "**/*.mjs"],
rules: {
"prefer-const": "warn",
"no-constant-binary-expression": "error",
},
},
]);
The names "prefer-const" and "no-constant-binary-expression" are the names of rules in ESLint. The first value is the error level of the rule and can be one of these values:
"off"or0- turn the rule off"warn"or1- turn the rule on as a warning (doesn't affect exit code)"error"or2- turn the rule on as an error (exit code will be 1)
The three error levels allow you fine-grained control over how ESLint applies rules (for more configuration options and details, see the configuration docs).
Version Support
The ESLint team provides ongoing support for the current version and six months of limited support for the previous version. Limited support includes critical bug fixes, security issues, and compatibility issues only.
ESLint offers commercial support for both current and previous versions through our partners, [Tidelift][tidelift] and [HeroDevs][herodevs].
See Version Support for more details.
Code of Conduct
ESLint adheres to the OpenJS Foundation Code of Conduct.
Filing Issues
Before filing an issue, please be sure to read the guidelines for what you're reporting:
Frequently Asked Questions
Does ESLint support JSX?
Yes, ESLint natively supports parsing JSX syntax (this must be enabled in configuration). Please note that supporting JSX syntax is not the same as supporting React. React applies specific semantics to JSX syntax that ESLint doesn't recognize. We recommend using eslint-plugin-react if you are using React and want React semantics.
Does Prettier replace ESLint?
No, ESLint and Prettier have different jobs: ESLint is a linter (looking for problematic patterns) and Prettier is a code formatter. Using both tools is common, refer to Prettier's documentation to learn how to configure them to work well with each other.
What ECMAScript versions does ESLint support?
ESLint has full support for ECMAScript 3, 5, and every year from 2015 up until the most recent stage 4 specification (the default). You can set your desired ECMAScript syntax and other settings (like global variables) through configuration.
What about experimental features?
ESLint's parser only officially supports the latest final ECMAScript standard. We will make changes to core rules in order to avoid crashes on stage 3 ECMAScript syntax proposals (as long as they are implemented using the correct experimental ESTree syntax). We may make changes to core rules to better work with language extensions (such as JSX, Flow, and TypeScript) on a case-by-case basis.
In other cases (including if rules need to warn on more or fewer cases due to new syntax, rather than just not crashing), we recommend you use other parsers and/or rule plugins. If you are using Babel, you can use @babel/eslint-parser and @babel/eslint-plugin to use any option available in Babel.
Once a language feature has been adopted into the ECMAScript standard (stage 4 according to the TC39 process), we will accept issues and pull requests related to the new feature, subject to our contributing guidelines. Until then, please use the appropriate parser and plugin(s) for your experimental feature.
Which Node.js versions does ESLint support?
ESLint updates the supported Node.js versions with each major release of ESLint. At that time, ESLint's supported Node.js versions are updated to be:
- The most recent maintenance release of Node.js
- The lowest minor version of the Node.js LTS release that includes the features the ESLint team wants to use.
- The Node.js Current release
ESLint is also expected to work with Node.js versions released after the Node.js Current release.
Refer to the Quick Start Guide for the officially supported Node.js versions for a given ESLint release.
Where to ask for help?
Open a discussion or stop by our Discord server.
Why doesn't ESLint lock dependency versions?
Lock files like package-lock.json are helpful for deployed applications. They ensure that dependencies are consistent between environments and across deployments.
Packages like eslint that get published to the npm registry do not include lock files. npm install eslint as a user will respect version constraints in ESLint's package.json. ESLint and its dependencies will be included in the user's lock file if one exists, but ESLint's own lock file would not be used.
We intentionally don't lock dependency versions so that we have the latest compatible dependency versions in development and CI that our users get when installing ESLint in a project.
The Twilio blog has a deeper dive to learn more.
Releases
We have scheduled releases every two weeks on Friday or Saturday. You can follow a release issue for updates about the scheduling of any particular release.
Security Policy
ESLint takes security seriously. We work hard to ensure that ESLint is safe for everyone and that security issues are addressed quickly and responsibly. Read the full security policy.
Semantic Versioning Policy
ESLint follows semantic versioning. However, due to the nature of ESLint as a code quality tool, it's not always clear when a minor or major version bump occurs. To help clarify this for everyone, we've defined the following semantic versioning policy for ESLint:
- Patch release (intended to not break your lint build)
- A bug fix in a rule that results in ESLint reporting fewer linting errors.
- A bug fix to the CLI or core (including formatters).
- Im
