A command line interface and npm package for jshint.
To use jshint from any location (for npm v1.x) you need to install using the global (-g) flag.
npm install -g jshint
The command line interface looks like this.
jshint path path2 [options]
You can also require JSHint itself as a module.
var jshint = require('jshint');
Note: If you are using npm v1.x be sure to install jshint locally (without the -g flag) or link it globally.
- gedit-node-jshint - Simply use CTRL+J in gedit to run JSHint using
node-jshint. - vim syntastic - Run node-jshint at each file save.
- sublime-jshint -
F7orcommand-Bon any .js file.F4next error line,column.shift-F4previous error line,column.
Specify a custom reporter module (see example/reporter.js).
--reporter path/to/reporter.js
Use a jslint compatible xml reporter.
--jslint-reporter
Show additional non-error data generated by jshint (unused globals etc).
--show-non-errors
Specify custom lint options (see example/config.json).
--config path/to/config.json
Note: This bypasses any .jshintrc files.
Default extension for files is ".js". If you want to use JSHint with other file extensions (.json), you need to pass this extra extension as an option
--extra-ext .json
The CLI uses the default options that come with JSHint. However, if it locates a .jshintrc file in your home directory (~/) it will use those options first.
If there is a .jshintrc file in the current working directory, any of those options will take precedence over (or be merged with) any options found in the ~/.jshintrc file (if it exists).
If there is a .jshintignore file in the current working directory, then any directories or files will be skipped over.
Note: Pattern matching uses minimatch, with the nocase option. When there is no match, it performs a left side match (when no forward slashes present and path is a directory).
./configure
jake -T