This linter plugin for SublimeLinter provides an interface to jshint. It will be used with files that have the “JavaScript” syntax, or within <script>
tags in HTML files.
SublimeLinter 3 must be installed in order to use this plugin. If SublimeLinter 3 is not installed, please follow the instructions here.
Before installing this plugin, you must ensure that jshint
is installed on your system. To install jshint
, do the following:
-
Install
jshint
by typing the following in a terminal:npm install -g jshint
-
If you are using
nvm
andzsh
, ensure that the line to loadnvm
is in.zshenv
and not.zshrc
.
Note: This plugin requires jshint
2.4.0 or later.
In order for jshint
to be executed by SublimeLinter, you must ensure that its path is available to SublimeLinter. Before going any further, please read and follow the steps in “Finding a linter executable” through “Validating your PATH” in the documentation.
Once jshint
is installed and configured, you can proceed to install the SublimeLinter-jshint plugin if it is not yet installed.
Please use Package Control to install the linter plugin. This will ensure that the plugin will be updated when new versions are available. If you want to install from source so you can modify the source code, you probably know what you are doing so we won’t cover that here.
To install via Package Control, do the following:
-
Within Sublime Text, bring up the Command Palette and type
install
. Among the commands you should seePackage Control: Install Package
. If that command is not highlighted, use the keyboard or mouse to select it. There will be a pause of a few seconds while Package Control fetches the list of available plugins. -
When the plugin list appears, type
jshint
. Among the entries you should seeSublimeLinter-jshint
. If that entry is not highlighted, use the keyboard or mouse to select it.
For general information on how SublimeLinter works with settings, please see Settings. For information on generic linter settings, please see Linter Settings.
You can configure jshint
options in the way you would from the command line, with .jshintrc
files. For more information, see the jshint docs. The linter plugin does this by searching for a .jshintrc
file itself, just as jshint
does from the command line. You may provide a custom config file by setting the linter’s "args"
setting to ["--config", "/path/to/file"]
. On Windows, be sure to double the backslashes in the path, for example ["--config", "C:\\Users\\Aparajita\\jshint.conf"]
.
If you would like to contribute enhancements or fixes, please do the following:
- Fork the plugin repository.
- Hack on a separate topic branch created from the latest
master
. - Commit and push the topic branch.
- Make a pull request.
- Be patient. ;-)
Please note that modications should follow these coding guidelines:
- Indent is 4 spaces.
- Code should pass flake8 and pep257 linters.
- Vertical whitespace helps readability, don’t be afraid to use it.
Thank you for helping out!