Jest was in the plugin array of the ESLint configuration, but no rules
were enabled. So ESLint hasn't checked any Jest rules yet.
So I activated the recommended Jest rules and added a few more. Then I
fixed the issues (mostly automatically). I have deactivated the rules
"jest/expect-expect" and "jest/no-done-callback" for the time being, as
they would have entailed major changes. I didn't want to make the PR too
big.
I'm not a Jest expert, but the changes so far look good to me. What do
you think of that @khassel? 🙂
- Remove "prettier" from plugin array, because it's already enabled by
"plugin:prettier/recommended"
- Remove "jsdoc" from plugin array, because it's already enabled by
"plugin:jsdoc/recommended"
- Enable recommended import rules
- Add two additional import rules
Note: To avoid overloading this PR I'll tackle the jest part with
another PR after this one has been dealt with.
While waiting for the easterbunny I cleaned up some bad coding practice
:-)
Very open for comments especially regarding the places I commented
myself...
---------
Co-authored-by: veeck <michael@veeck.de>
- order (external first)
- remove superfluous file extensions
- new line after imports
- deconstruct (only one time (in `check_config.js`))
- fix path (only one time (in `global-setup.js`))
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.