1
0
Fork 0
arangodb/js/node/node_modules/eslint-plugin-promise
Alan Plum cf302adf26
Always use --global-style when installing npm deps
This partially reverts commit 8a286a30d9.
2016-07-14 16:29:20 +02:00
..
rules
test
.npmignore
.travis.yml
CHANGELOG.md
README.md
index.js
package.json

README.md

eslint-plugin-promise

Enforce best practices for JavaScript promises.

js-standard-style travis-ci npm version

Rule

catch-or-return

Ensure that each time a then() is applied to a promise, a catch() is applied as well. Exceptions are made if you are returning that promise.

Formerly called always-catch.

Valid

myPromise.then(doSomething).catch(errors);
myPromise.then(doSomething).then(doSomethingElse).catch(errors);
function doSomethingElse() { return myPromise.then(doSomething) }

Invalid

myPromise.then(doSomething);
myPromise.then(doSomething, catchErrors); // catch() may be a little better
function doSomethingElse() { myPromise.then(doSomething) }

Options

allowThen

You can pass an { allowThen: true } as an option to this rule to allow for .then(null, fn) to be used instead of catch() at the end of the promise chain.

terminationMethod

You can pass a { terminationMethod: 'done' } as an option to this rule to require done() instead of catch() at the end of the promise chain. This is useful for many non-standard Promise implementations.

always-return

Ensure that inside a then() you make sure to return a new promise or value. See http://pouchdb.com/2015/05/18/we-have-a-problem-with-promises.html (rule #5) for more info on why that's a good idea.

We also allow someone to throw inside a then() which is essentially the same as return Promise.reject().

Valid

myPromise.then((val) => val * 2));
myPromise.then(function(val) { return val * 2; });
myPromise.then(doSomething); // could be either

Invalid

myPromise.then(function(val) {});
myPromise.then(() => { doSomething(); });

param-names

Enforce standard parameter names for Promise constructors

Valid

new Promise(function (resolve) { ... })
new Promise(function (resolve, reject) { ... })

Invalid

new Promise(function (reject, resolve) { ... }) // incorrect order
new Promise(function (ok, fail) { ... }) // non-standard parameter names

Ensures that new Promise() is instantiated with the parameter names resolve, reject to avoid confusion with order such as reject, resolve. The Promise constructor uses the RevealingConstructor pattern. Using the same parameter names as the language specification makes code more uniform and easier to understand.

no-native

Ensure that Promise is included fresh in each file instead of relying on the existence of a native promise implementation. Helpful if you want to use bluebird or if you don't intend to use an ES6 Promise shim.

Valid

var Promise = require("blubird");
var x = Promise.resolve("good");

Invalid

var x = Promise.resolve("bad");

Installation

You'll first need to install ESLint:

$ npm i eslint --save-dev

Next, install eslint-plugin-promise:

$ npm install eslint-plugin-promise --save-dev

Note: If you installed ESLint globally (using the -g flag) then you must also install eslint-plugin-promise globally.

Usage

Add promise to the plugins section of your .eslintrc configuration file. You can omit the eslint-plugin- prefix:

{
    "plugins": [
        "promise"
    ]
}

Then configure the rules you want to use under the rules section.

{
    "rules": {
        "promise/param-names": 2,
        "promise/always-return": 2,
        "promise/always-catch": 2, // deprecated
        "promise/catch-or-return": 2,
        "promise/no-native": 0,
    }
}

Etc