Linting with Type Information
Some typescript-eslint rules utilize the awesome power of TypeScript's type checking APIs to provide much deeper insights into your code. To tap into TypeScript's additional powers, there are two small changes you need to make to your config file:
module.exports = {
root: true,
parser: '@typescript-eslint/parser',
parserOptions: {
tsconfigRootDir: __dirname,
project: ['./tsconfig.json'],
},
plugins: ['@typescript-eslint'],
extends: [
'eslint:recommended',
'plugin:@typescript-eslint/recommended',
'plugin:@typescript-eslint/recommended-requiring-type-checking',
],
};
In more detail:
parserOptions.tsconfigRootDir
tells our parser the absolute path of your project's root directory.parserOptions.project
tells our parser the relative path where your project'stsconfig.json
is.- If your project is a multi-package monorepo, see our docs on configuring a monorepo.
plugin:@typescript-eslint/recommended-requiring-type-checking
is another recommended configuration we provide. This one contains rules that specifically require type information.
With that done, run the same lint command you ran before. You may see new rules reporting errors based on type information!
FAQs
How is performance?
Typed rules come with a catch.
By including parserOptions.project
in your config, you incur the performance penalty of asking TypeScript to do a build of your project before ESLint can do its linting.
For small projects this takes a negligible amount of time (a few seconds or less); for large projects, it can take longer.
Most of our users do not mind this cost as the power and safety of type-aware static analysis rules is worth the tradeoff. Additionally, most users primarily consume lint errors via IDE plugins which, through caching, do not suffer the same penalties. This means that generally they usually only run a complete lint before a push, or via their CI, where the extra time often doesn't matter.
We strongly recommend you do use type-aware linting, but the above information is included so that you can make your own, informed decision.
I get errors telling me "The file must be included in at least one of the projects provided"
This error means that the file that's being linted is not included in any of the tsconfig files you provided us. A lot of the time this happens when users have test files or similar that are not included in their normal tsconfigs.
Depending on what you want to achieve:
- If you do not want to lint the file:
- Use one of the options ESLint offers to ignore files, like a
.eslintignore
file, orignorePatterns
config.
- Use one of the options ESLint offers to ignore files, like a
- If you do want to lint the file:
- If you do not want to lint the file with type-aware linting:
- Use ESLint's
overrides
configuration to configure the file to not be parsed with type information.- A popular setup is to omit the above additions from top-level configuration and only apply them to TypeScript files via an override.
- Alternatively, you can add
parserOptions: { project: null }
to an override for the files you wish to exclude. Note that{ project: undefined }
will not work.
- Use ESLint's
- If you do want to lint the file with type-aware linting:
- Check the
include
option of each of the tsconfigs that you provide toparserOptions.project
- you must ensure that all files match aninclude
glob, or else our tooling will not be able to find it. - If your file shouldn't be a part of one of your existing tsconfigs (for example, it is a script/tool local to the repo), then consider creating a new tsconfig (we advise calling it
tsconfig.eslint.json
) in your project root which lists this file in itsinclude
. For an example of this, you can check out the configuration we use in this repo:
- Check the
- If you do not want to lint the file with type-aware linting:
Troubleshooting
If you're having problems getting this working, please have a look at our Troubleshooting FAQ.