❗IMPORTANT: TSLint has been deprecated in favor of ESLint and this plug-in has also been deprecated in favor of eslint.
Please look into migrating your projects to ESLint.
TypeScript language service plugin for TSLint.
To use the plugin:
-
Install TSLint 5+ in your workspace or globally (if you are using a local TSLint, see workspace library execution)
-
Install the plugin with
npm install typescript-tslint-plugin
-
Enable the plugin in your
tsconfig.json
file:{ "compilerOptions": { "plugins": [ { "name": "typescript-tslint-plugin" } ] } }
See editor support for more detailed setup instructions.
By default this plugin will not load TSLint or custom rules from the workspace if you are using a global version of TypeScript. This is done for security reasons. The plugin always allows using the global version of TSLint.
To use enable using a local TSLint install and custom rules from the workspace, you must either:
-
Use a workspace version of TypeScript that is installed alongside TSLint.
-
Enable workspace library execution in your editor of choice. This must be done through an editor and cannot be configured in a
tsconfig
.In VS Code for example, you can run the
TSLint: Manage Workspace Library Execution
command to enable using the TSLint for the current workspace or for all workspaces. -
Set a
TS_TSLINT_ENABLE_WORKSPACE_LIBRARY_EXECUTION=1
environment variable and make sure the TypeScript server is run in an environment where this variable is set to true.
Notice: This configuration settings allow you to configure the behavior of the typescript-tslint-plugin itself. To configure rules and tslint options you should use the tslint.json
file.
configFile
- The configuration file that tslint should use instead of the default tslint.json. A relative file path is resolved relative to the project root.jsEnable
- Enable/disable tslint for.js
files, default isfalse
.ignoreDefinitionFiles
- Control if TypeScript definition files should be ignored. Default istrue
alwaysShowRuleFailuresAsWarnings
- Always show rule failures as warnings, ignoring the severity configuration in the tslint.json configuration. Default istrue
.suppressWhileTypeErrorsPresent
- Suppress tslint errors from being reported while other errors are present.exclude
- List of files to exclude from tslint.packageManager
- Package manager used, either:npm
,yarn
, orpnpm
. This is currently only used for error message instructions about how to install tslint. Default isnpm
.
Here is a configuration sample:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"plugins": [
{
"name": "typescript-tslint-plugin",
"alwaysShowRuleFailuresAsWarnings": false,
"ignoreDefinitionFiles": true,
"configFile": "../tslint.json",
"suppressWhileTypeErrorsPresent": false
}
]
}
}
Notice: due to an issue in the implementation of the no-unused-variable
rule (palantir/tslint#2469), this rule will be disabled by the plugin. You can use the typescript compiler options noUnusedLocals
and noUnusedParameters
instead.
This plugin requires TypeScript 3.0 or later. It can provide intellisense in both JavaScript and TypeScript files within any editors that uses TypeScript to power their language features.
If you also have the vscode-tslint extension in VS Code installed, please disable it to avoid that files are linted twice.
The simplest way to use this plugin is to install the TypeScript TSLint Plugin VS Code extension. This extension enables the plugin when using VS Code's version of TypeScript.
If you are using a workspace version of TypeScript, you must manually install the plugin alongside the version of TypeScript in your workspace:
npm install --save-dev typescript-tslint-plugin typescript
Then add a plugins
section to your tsconfig.json
or jsconfig.json
{
"compilerOptions": {
"plugins": [
{
"name": "typescript-tslint-plugin"
}
]
}
}
Finally, run the Select TypeScript version
command in VS Code to switch to use the workspace version of TypeScript for VS Code's JavaScript and TypeScript language support. You can find more information about managing typescript versions in the VS Code documentation.
The most important differences between the vscode-tslint
extension and typescript-tslint-plugin
are:
- The plugin shares the program representation with TypeScript. This is more efficient than the
vscode-tslint
extension which needs to reanalyze the document. - Since
vscode-tslint
lints one file a time only, it cannot support tslint rules that require the type checker. The plugin doesn't have this limitation. vscode-tslint
provides additional features, please file issue requests for the features you are missing.
This plugin works with the Atom TypeScript plugin.
First install the plugin and a copy of TypeScript in your workspace:
npm install --save-dev typescript-tslint-plugin typescript
Then add a plugins
section to your tsconfig.json
or jsconfig.json
and restart Atom.
{
"compilerOptions": {
"plugins": [
{
"name": "typescript-tslint-plugin"
}
]
}
}
This plugin works with the Sublime TypeScript plugin.
First install the plugin and a copy of TypeScript in your workspace:
npm install --save-dev typescript-tslint-plugin typescript
And configure Sublime to use the workspace version of TypeScript by setting the typescript_tsdk
setting in Sublime:
{
"typescript_tsdk": "/Users/me/my-amazing-project/node_modules/typescript/lib"
}
Finally add a plugins
section to your tsconfig.json
or jsconfig.json
and restart Sublime.
{
"compilerOptions": {
"plugins": [
{
"name": "typescript-tslint-plugin"
}
]
}
}
This plugin works Visual Studio 2017 using the TypeScript 2.5+ SDK.
First install the plugin in your project:
npm install --save-dev typescript-tslint-plugin
Then add a plugins
section to your tsconfig.json
.
{
"compilerOptions": {
"plugins": [
{
"name": "typescript-tslint-plugin"
}
]
}
}
Then reload your project to make sure the plugin has been loaded properly. Note that jsconfig.json
projects are currently not supported in Visual Studio.
Use coc-tslint-plugin as extension of coc.nvim.
Run command in your vim after coc.nvim installed:
:CocInstall coc-tsserver coc-tslint-plugin
Run command :CocConfig
to open configuration file.
To build the typescript-tslint-plugin, you'll need Git and Node.js.
First, fork the typescript-tslint-plugin repo and clone your fork:
git clone https://github.com/YOUR_GITHUB_ACCOUNT_NAME/typescript-tslint-plugin.git
cd typescript-tslint-plugin
Then install dev dependencies:
npm install
The plugin is written in TypeScript. The source code is in the src/
directory with the compiled JavaScript output to the lib/
directory. Kick off a build using the compile
script:
npm run compile
Please also see our Code of Conduct.
To test the newly compiled program, open the test-workspace
folder in VS Code and use the TypeScript version picker to switch to the local version of TypeScript.
To debug you use two versions of VS Code, e.g., the stable and the insider version. The idea is that one of them is configured to support attaching a debugger to the Typescript language server:
- Use the insider version for development and open it on the typescript-tslint-plugin workspace.
- Use the stable version for debugging opened on the
test-workspace
folder of the tslint-language service.
To setup the stable version for debugging, you need to set the environment variable TSS_DEBUG
to port 5859. In a command prompt/shell:
- make sure that the stable version isn't running already
set TSS_DEBUG=5859
- cd to the
dev
folder code .
To debug the plugin press F5
. The dev
workspace has a launch configuration that attaches through port 5859 to the language server.
This project was forked from https://github.com/angelozerr/tslint-language-service which itself is based on https://github.com/Microsoft/vscode-tslint/