diff --git a/.travis.yml b/.travis.yml deleted file mode 100644 index f80dcfd..0000000 --- a/.travis.yml +++ /dev/null @@ -1,13 +0,0 @@ -language: node_js -node_js: -- 18 -- 20 -sudo: false -dist: focal -addons: - apt: - packages: - - graphviz -script: -- npm test -- npm run debug diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 30b8f88..9f75989 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -1,24 +1,19 @@

- madge + madge

- Last version - - Build Status - - - - - - Donate - + Last version + + + + + Donate +

- **Madge** is a developer tool for generating a visual graph of your module dependencies, finding circular dependencies, and giving you other useful info. Joel Kemp's awesome [dependency-tree](https://github.com/mrjoelkemp/node-dependency-tree) is used for extracting the dependency tree. - * Works for JavaScript (AMD, CommonJS, and ES6 modules) * Also works for CSS preprocessors (Sass, Stylus, and Less) * NPM installed dependencies are excluded by default (can be enabled) @@ -36,19 +31,19 @@ Read the [changelog](CHANGELOG.md) for latest changes. > Graph generated from madge's own code and dependencies. - + graph > A graph with circular dependencies. Blue has dependencies, green has no dependencies, and red has circular dependencies. - + graph-circular ## See it in action - + in-action # Installation @@ -244,29 +239,30 @@ You can use configuration file either in `.madgerc` in your project or home fold ```json { - "fontSize": "10px", - "graphVizOptions": { - "G": { - "rankdir": "LR" - } - } + "fontSize": "10px", + "graphVizOptions": { + "G": { + "rankdir": "LR" + } + } } ``` > package.json + ```json { - "name": "foo", - "version": "0.0.1", - ... - "madge": { - "fontSize": "10px", - "graphVizOptions": { - "G": { - "rankdir": "LR" - } - } - } + "name": "foo", + "version": "0.0.1", + ... + "madge": { + "fontSize": "10px", + "graphVizOptions": { + "G": { + "rankdir": "LR" + } + } + } } ``` @@ -298,7 +294,7 @@ madge path/src madge path/src/foo path/src/bar ``` -> List dependencies from all *.js and *.jsx files found in a directory +> List dependencies from all \*.js and \*.jsx files found in a directory ```sh madge --extensions js,jsx path/src @@ -394,24 +390,26 @@ Madge uses [dependency-tree](https://www.npmjs.com/package/dependency-tree) whic Only one syntax is used by default. You can use both though if you're willing to take the degraded performance. Put this in your madge config to enable mixed imports. For ES6 + CommonJS: + ```json { - "detectiveOptions": { - "es6": { - "mixedImports": true - } - } + "detectiveOptions": { + "es6": { + "mixedImports": true + } + } } ``` For TypeScript + CommonJS: + ```json { - "detectiveOptions": { - "ts": { - "mixedImports": true - } - } + "detectiveOptions": { + "ts": { + "mixedImports": true + } + } } ``` @@ -421,11 +419,11 @@ Put this in your madge config. ```json { - "detectiveOptions": { - "es6": { - "skipTypeImports": true - } - } + "detectiveOptions": { + "es6": { + "skipTypeImports": true + } + } } ``` @@ -435,11 +433,11 @@ Put this in your madge config. ```json { - "detectiveOptions": { - "ts": { - "skipTypeImports": true - } - } + "detectiveOptions": { + "ts": { + "skipTypeImports": true + } + } } ``` @@ -449,14 +447,14 @@ Put this in your madge config. ```json { - "detectiveOptions": { - "ts": { - "skipAsyncImports": true - }, - "tsx": { - "skipAsyncImports": true - } - } + "detectiveOptions": { + "ts": { + "skipAsyncImports": true + }, + "tsx": { + "skipAsyncImports": true + } + } } ``` @@ -468,10 +466,10 @@ Ensure you have this in your `.tsconfig` file. ```json { - "compilerOptions": { - "module": "commonjs", - "allowJs": true - } + "compilerOptions": { + "module": "commonjs", + "allowJs": true + } } ``` @@ -493,12 +491,12 @@ brew install graphviz Try running madge with a different layout, here's a list of the ones you can try: -* **dot** "hierarchical" or layered drawings of directed graphs. This is the default tool to use if edges have directionality. +* **dot** "hierarchical" or layered drawings of directed graphs. This is the default tool to use if edges have directionality. * **neato** "spring model'' layouts. This is the default tool to use if the graph is not too large (about 100 nodes) and you don't know anything else about it. Neato attempts to minimize a global energy function, which is equivalent to statistical multi-dimensional scaling. -* **fdp** "spring model'' layouts similar to those of neato, but does this by reducing forces rather than working with energy. +* **fdp** "spring model'' layouts similar to those of neato, but does this by reducing forces rather than working with energy. * **sfdp** multiscale version of fdp for the layout of large graphs. @@ -511,7 +509,9 @@ minimize a global energy function, which is equivalent to statistical multi-dime ## Contributors This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute. -Contributors + + Contributors + ## Donations ❤️ @@ -520,35 +520,35 @@ Thanks to the awesome people below for making donations! 🙏[Donate](https://pa

Bernard Stojanović (24 Mars, 2021)
- + BeroBurny

Ole Jørgen Brønner (Oct 8, 2020)
- + olejorgenb

RxDB (Apr 1, 2020)
- + RxDB

Peter Verswyvelen (Feb 24, 2020)
- + Ziriax

Landon Alder (Mar 19, 2019)
- + landonalder