I've been working on lots of old npm packages that have their dependencies all out of order. They're shrinkwrapped packages, so updating dependencies is a bit of work (testing and verifying that the dependency changes didn't break anything), but I'm manually moving some dependencies from the devDependencies
key to the dependencies
key, and I don't want to do anything except alphabetize them before I commit. Rather than doing it manually, is there an easy way to programmatically alphabetize them with npm?
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4Could you just use your text editor to sort the dependency lines? Sublime Text has built-in support (Edit -> Sort Lines) and IntelliJ has a plugin: plugins.jetbrains.com/plugin/5919– erwamanDec 7, 2016 at 3:53
10 Answers
The sort-package-json
package sorts not only dependencies
and devDependencies
, but other keys as well. I know the original questions didn't ask about the other keys, but I think it's cool to have all keys sorted.
You can simply run:
npx sort-package-json
Example from the package page:
$ cd my-project
$ cat package.json
{
"dependencies": {
"sort-package-json": "1.0.0",
"sort-object-keys": "1.0.0"
},
"version": "1.0.0",
"name": "my-awesome-project"
}
$ npx sort-package-json
package.json is sorted!
$ cat package.json
{
"name": "my-awesome-project",
"version": "1.0.0",
"dependencies": {
"sort-object-keys": "1.0.0",
"sort-package-json": "1.0.0"
}
}
This does not remove the trailing newline like the npm-sort
package mentioned by Wolfgang.
Multiple files
$ sort-package-json "my-package/package.json" "other-package/package.json"
$ sort-package-json "package.json" "packages/*/package.json"
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35you can simply run
npx sort-package-json
if you are usingnpm>=5.2.0
Nov 6, 2018 at 3:45 -
1
Just run npm remove --save anything
or npm remove --save-dev whatever
and npm will sort that section, without actually touching any of the content. Of course you should make sure that the package name you pass it (which can be anything, spam your keyboard) isn't in your package.json.
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7
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20
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7I love this developer way of doing things without having to rely on some external tools ))– haynarOct 31, 2018 at 8:36
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6Even shorter:
npm r -S example; npm r -D example
(r
,rm
andun
are the shortest default aliases ofnpm uninstall
) Apr 22, 2020 at 18:09 -
4
In addition to martias answer, you can just run:
npx sort-package-json
This won't install it permanently. You need npm >5.2.
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3
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15This package will also sort the
"scripts"
section of the package.json. Which may not be desirable for some. Apr 2, 2020 at 5:41
If you're using WebStorm, just select the lines you want to sort and click Edit > Sort Lines
.
And for VSCode, highlight the lines, Open the command panel (cmd+shift+p or ctrl+p) and search for "Sort Lines Ascending"
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1This will probably malform the JSON, since the last key does not have the trailing comma, and you will have to manually add it.– DanonAug 18, 2023 at 8:10
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WebStorm Edit > Sort Lines doesn't work for me, it broke completely the json file Nov 15, 2023 at 15:44
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For json files the thing would be not to sort the whole file and just select the lines with keys, but ofc this isn't a bulletproof solution it's just a quick built-in suggestion that helps most of the times Nov 15, 2023 at 18:53
I have found the npm-sort
package, which seems to work quite well, with the minor niggle that it removes the trailing newline from the package.json
file.
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I think this should be upvoted. sort-package-json sort everything in package.json but npm-sort only sort dependencies and devDependencies. This maybe most of users need Jun 16, 2021 at 1:15
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Shouldn't be upvoted as the question was about sort without additional package.– MrHIDEnMar 29, 2023 at 13:09
You might also want to take a look at fixpack, a CLI to update your package.json following their (slightly) opinionated order. You can however add a .fixpackrc
to define your own rules, the defaults are:
- name first
- description second
- version third
- author fourth
- all other keys in alphabetical order
- dependencies and devDependencies sorted alphabetically
- newline at the end of the file
you can simply remove or uninstall a non-existing package from your dependencies
npm remove kjkjhkjhkjhkj -f --save
or shorter
npm r -S
other solutions are good but have some drawbacks:
1- sorts other keys which may be unwanted behavior
2- installs external packages such as sort-package-json, even by using npx sort-package-json
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-
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But you miss the package name in shorter version:
npm r kjkjhkjhkjhkj -S
(note that-S
is true by default, so it's not required in most cases).– greuzeJan 11 at 12:21
"npx sort-package-json" works fine, but if you are using Prettier the best option imho is https://github.com/cameronhunter/prettier-package-json. This is great for formatting your entire package.json files and is easy to use with lint-staged.
in my package.json file I have this script:
"scripts": {
"format:packagejson": "npx prettier-package-json --write ./package.json"
}
If you are using VSCode you could also try this plugin:
Sort package.json https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=unional.vscode-sort-package-json
It will sort your package.json files on save. Just add the vscode setting:
"editor.codeActionsOnSave": [
// Sort package.json keys with https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=unional.vscode-sort-package-json
"source.sortPackageJson"
],
Make sure to add the plugin to your workspace recommendations so everyone in your team will also use the plugin.
There is also this tool if you are using Prettier https://github.com/cameronhunter/prettier-package-json
Bonus: Use add https://npmpackagejsonlint.org to lint your package.json files. I haven't tried this package so I can't recommend it. It sounds like it might work better than the options above, but the setup is more difficult.
With newers versions of npm, it's even easier (tested with 7.10.0
, 8.19.4
, 9.7.2
and 10.2.4
):
npm remove unexisting
or shorter:
npm r unexisting
This will short both, dependencies
and devDepencencies
, using any package name that is not in the package.json
(it's recommended to use a package that doesn't exist, but works with any), as the package will be removed from package.json
if it is present.
Note that flag ‐‐save
(or ‐S
) is not required, as it is true by default (but you may need to use it if you have for instance save=false
in your npmrc
file).
in VS-code there's a good packagesorter ofr the whole json file..
there's also something out there called "sortier" which sorts more, and is awesome.