This software is maintained under a new repository located at yowainwright/es-check
Check JavaScript files ES version against a specified ES version 🏆
Version 5 release! 🎉 Thanks to @BrandonOCasey.
Removes need for boolean
in argument; post Caporal 1.1.0.
This will require an update for any boolean cli flags, in example --module
, --allow-hash-bang
.
Example of CLI boolean flag in previous versions (Versions 0-4.*)
// the "true" argument was required
es-check --module true es6 ./tests/modules/*.js'
Now, with Version 5
// the "true" argument must be removed if used
es-check --module es6 ./tests/modules/*.js'
ES Check checks JavaScript files against a specified version of ECMAScript (ES) with a shell command. If a specified file's ES version doesn't match the ES version argument passed in the ES Check command, ES Check will throw an error and log the files that didn't match the check.
Ensuring that JavaScript files can pass ES Check is important in a modular and bundled world. Read more about why.
Get Started Why ES Check? Usage Walk Through API Debugging Contributing Issues
Install
npm i es-check --save-dev # locally
npm i es-check -g # or globally
Check if an array or glob of files matches a specified ES version.
- Note: adds quotation around globs. Globs are patterns like so,
<something>/*.js
.
es-check es5 './vendor/js/*.js' './dist/**/*.js'
- The ES Check script (above) checks
/dist/*.js
files to see if they're ES5. It throws an error and logs files are that do not pass the check.
In modern JavaScript builds, files are bundled up so they can be served in an optimized manner in the browsers. It is assumed by developers that future JavaScript—like ES8 will be transpiled (changed from future JavaScript to current JavaScript) appropriately by a tool like Babel. Sometimes there is an issue where files are not transpiled. There was no efficient way to test for files that weren't transpiled—until now. That's what ES Check does.
The images below demonstrate command line scripts and their corresponding logged results.
ES Check is run above with node commands. It can also be run within npm scripts, ci tools, or testing suites.
ES Check provides the necessities. It accepts its place as a JavaScript matcher/tester.
# USAGE
index.js es-check <ecmaVersion> [files...]
<ecmaVersion> 'define the ECMAScript version to check for against a glob of JavaScript files' required
[files...] 'a glob of files to test the ECMAScript version against' required
Modules Flag
--module use ES modules, default false
Allow Hash Bang
--allow-hash-bang supports files that start with hash bang, default false
Not
--not=folderName1,folderName2 An array of file/folder names that you would like to ignore. Defaults to `[]`.
-h, --help Display help
-V, --version Display version
--no-color Disable colors
--quiet Quiet mode - only displays warn and error messages
-v, --verbose Verbose mode - will also output debug messages
ES Check is a shell command CLI. It is run in shell tool like Terminal, ITerm, or Hyper. It takes in two arguments: an ECMAScript version (<ECMAScript version>
) and files ([files]
) in globs.
Here are some example of es check scripts that could be run:
# globs
es-check ./js/*.js
# array of arguments
es-check ./js/*.js ./dist/*.js
If you're using a consistent configuration, you can create a .escheckrc
file in JSON format with the ecmaVersion
and files
arguments so you can conveniently run es-check
standalone from the command line.
Here's an example of what an .escheckrc
file will look like:
{
"ecmaVersion": "es6",
"module": false,
"files": "./dist/**/*.js"
}
.escheckrc
file in the project directory will override the configuration values in .escheckrc
.
As of ES-Check version 2.0.2, a better debugging interface is provided. When a file errors, An error object will be logged with:
- the erroring file
- the error
- the error stack
ES Check is a small utility using powerful tools that Isaac Z. Schlueter, Marijn Haverbeke, and Matthias Etienne built. ES Checker by Ruan YiFeng checks the JavaScript version supported within a browser at run time. ES Check offers similar feedback to ES Checker but at build time and is specific to the product that is using it. ES Check was started after reading this post about [deploying es2015 code to production today] by Philip Walton.
ES Check has 3 main dependencies: acorn, glob, and caporal. To contribute, file an issue or submit a pull request.