In the latest versions of ESLint, more and more formatting rules were
removed or declared deprecated. These rules have been integrated into
the new Stylistic package (https://eslint.style/guide/why) and expanded.
Stylistic acts as a better formatter for JavaScript as Prettier.
With this PR there are many changes that make the code more uniform, but
it may be difficult to review due to the large amount. Even if I have no
worries about the changes, perhaps this would be something for the
release after next.
Let me know what you think.
We have used it inconsistently till now. Template literals are more
modern and easier to maintain in my opinion.
Because that's a large amount of changes, here's a way to reproduce it:
I added the rule `"prefer-template": "error"` to the `.eslintrc.json`
and did an autofix. Since this caused a new problem in line 409 of
`newsfeed.js`, I reversed it in that line and also removed the rule from
the eslint config file.
The rule is described here:
https://eslint.org/docs/latest/rules/prefer-template
Note: I've played around with some other linter rules as well, and some
seem to point to some specific, non-cosmetic, issues. But before I dive
even deeper and then introduce even bigger and hardly understandable
changes at once, I thought I'd start with this simple cosmetic rule.
Lots of small fixes and cleanups:
- only render something when there is a compliment
- cleanup naming
- use es6 notations
- use fetch instead of XMLHttpRequest in compliments
Co-authored-by: veeck <michael@veeck.de>
Co-authored-by: Karsten Hassel <hassel@gmx.de>
first PR for #2942
- added new electron tests for calendar which test new css classes from
https://github.com/MichMich/MagicMirror/pull/2939
- moved some compliments tests from `e2e` to `electron` because of date
mocking
- removed mock stuff from compliments module