81

As we all know, the linebreaks (new line) used in Windows are usually carriage returns (CR) followed by a line feed (LF) i.e. (CRLF) whereas, Linux and Unix use a simple line feed (LF)

Now, in my case, my build server uses supports Linux and Unix format so, below rule is working perfectly on build server:

linebreak-style: ["error", "unix"]

But I am doing development on Windows and I need to update rule on each git pull/git push as below,

linebreak-style: ["error", "windows"]

So, is there any way to write a generic linebreak-style rule to support both environments, Linux/Unix and Windows?

Note: I am using ECMAScript6[js], WebStorm[ide] for development

Any solutions/suggestions would be highly appreciated. Thanks!

4
  • Why not use LF all the time (for JS files)? Browsers as well as IDE supports them just fine.
    – LazyOne
    Aug 24, 2016 at 8:16
  • 2
    ESLint tests will fails for LF if, environment is windows. Aug 24, 2016 at 10:35
  • I see -- thanks for clarifying this (not a JS person myself)
    – LazyOne
    Aug 24, 2016 at 10:58
  • What happen if I added both ["error", "unix", "windows"], It helps to resolve the warning in my text editor, but I am not sure about the build ability on the server Apr 13, 2020 at 11:02

10 Answers 10

82

I spent time trying to find how to shut off the linkbreak-style and lost it due to reverting some of my code I thought others my like to have this as well.

In the .eslintrc file you can also set linebreak-style to 0 which shuts off the linebreak feature:

module.exports = {
  extends: 'google',
  quotes: [2, 'single'],
  globals: {
    SwaggerEditor: false
  },
  env: {
    browser: true
  },
  rules:{
    "linebreak-style": 0   // <----------
  }
};
4
  • 14
    Something you should never do, especially when you're not the only developer around ;) May 20, 2019 at 16:28
  • 6
    Not a solution, just hiding the pain.
    – user959690
    Feb 18, 2021 at 0:03
  • i had to type the "linebreak-style", is there any extension or something for intllegience for all the available options?
    – Sunil Garg
    Apr 19, 2021 at 8:21
  • 1
    I might be missing something here, but doesn't git typically convert line endings in any case? Would that fail to catch/resolve issues that eslint would? (Assuming the team is using git).
    – Mark
    Feb 14, 2022 at 21:16
47

The eslint configuration file can be a regular .js file (ie, not JSON, but full JS with logic) that exports the configuration object.

That means you could change the configuration of the linebreak-style rule depending on your current environment (or any other JS logic you can think of).

For example, to use a different linebreak-style configuration when your node environment is 'prod':

module.exports = {
    "root": true,
    "parserOptions": {
        "sourceType": "module",
        "ecmaVersion": 6
    },
    "rules": {
        // windows linebreaks when not in production environment
        "linebreak-style": ["error", process.env.NODE_ENV === 'prod' ? "unix" : "windows"]
    }
};

Example usage:

$ NODE_ENV=prod node_modules/.bin/eslint src/test.js

src/test.js
  1:25  error  Expected linebreaks to be 'CRLF' but found 'LF'  linebreak-style
  2:30  error  Expected linebreaks to be 'CRLF' but found 'LF'  linebreak-style
  3:36  error  Expected linebreaks to be 'CRLF' but found 'LF'  linebreak-style
  4:26  error  Expected linebreaks to be 'CRLF' but found 'LF'  linebreak-style
  5:17  error  Expected linebreaks to be 'CRLF' but found 'LF'  linebreak-style
  6:50  error  Expected linebreaks to be 'CRLF' but found 'LF'  linebreak-style
  7:62  error  Expected linebreaks to be 'CRLF' but found 'LF'  linebreak-style
  8:21  error  Expected linebreaks to be 'CRLF' but found 'LF'  linebreak-style

✖ 8 problems (8 errors, 0 warnings)

$ NODE_ENV=dev node_modules/.bin/eslint src/test.js
$ # no errors
2
  • 28
    Building on this answer I switched to detecting the normal line ending for the platform instead of having to specify the environment, so: "linebreak-style": ["error", (require("os").EOL === "\r\n" ? "windows" : "unix")] May 18, 2017 at 20:45
  • 1
    Uh, you can't set the variables that way on the dev environment if the dev environment is Windows, so the example of setting NODE_ENV=dev that way is invalid. Can you correct it?
    – Poikilos
    Nov 28, 2020 at 5:47
20

In your .eslintrc.js:

"rules": {
  "linebreak-style": ["error", (process.platform === "win32" ? "windows" : "unix")], // https://stackoverflow.com/q/39114446/2771889
}

See also: How do I determine the current operating system with Node.js

1
  • 1
    Does not work for me on Windows. Error: 'value expected'
    – Afshar
    Jul 23, 2023 at 11:33
11

A better option

.editorconfig end_of_line

Add the end_of_line rule in .editorconfig file:

[*]
end_of_line= lf

EditorConfig is an extension for most code editors nowadays that changes the contents of the file you just saved. This rule enforces that all line endings are always unix consistent (\n) each time a developer saves a file (note: MacOs no longer uses \r => cr). For enforcing windows line endings (\r\n) use crlf.

This option is preferable since it avoids all line ending changes to be recorded in the project's repository (version control).

Not so optimal options...

As an EditorConfig note mentions:

if you want to use native line endings between different OSes, it is better not to set this option and leave that task to the VCS! In the future we might add a value like native for this scenario (cf #226).

This would be a replacement for the accepted answer's solution:

"linebreak-style": process.env.NODE_ENV === 'prod' ? "unix" : "windows"

Which is still better than completely disabling the rule ("linebreak-style": 0): developers/contributors inconsistently may use their preferred line endings in the same file...

1
  • 1
    the solution with .editorconfig still works in 2023. 👍
    – milpataki
    Jun 3, 2023 at 19:22
6

.eslintc for Windows visualstudio code

{
  "env": {
    "node": true
  },
  "rules":{
    "linebreak-style": 0
  }
}

1
  • That doesn't answer the question, it just turns the valuable feature off. Now you're going to end up with a code base in disarray.
    – user959690
    Feb 18, 2021 at 0:03
5

If you're using Vs Code on Windows, go to your ".eslintrc.json" file (or '.js' depending on which option you chose when setting up your ESLint); this file will usually be found in the root folder of your project; and under rules add the linebreak option to use Windows CRLF as follows:

"rules": {
    "linebreak-style": ["error", "windows"]
}

Save the file and when you go back to your JavaScript file, all those pesky red lines will disappear.

5

There are a few answers playing around with.eslintrc and one even suggest switching off the rule altogether.

However, what I prefer is to change VCS settings to checkout LF instead of CRLF. Assuming even in windows env, modern IDE should handle LF just fine. The drawback is some windows software like notepad aren't going to like it. But this way you will be warned if you have incorrect linebreak style. And it is less likely for people to commit incorrect linebreak style even if their VCS is misconfigured. Simply run git config --global core.autocrlf false or follow instructions on How do I force git to use LF instead of CR+LF under windows?

Anyway, turning off the rule is discouraged in general as this will impact other team members, unless you have all of team's consent.

3

In my case, VS code had default settings of line break CRLF, because it was freshly installed. I had to go to change that by: Ctrl + Shift + P to open the command palette and search for:

Change End of Line Sequence

There you can switch it to LF.

0

The location of the config file required to alter ESLint rules for linebreak-style may change depending on whether you want to alter local, project or global settings, it searches for local first which overrides those further up the tree, so alter at the top of the tree to propagate down for global

I used airbnb style and my global settings were located here: node_modules/eslint-config-airbnb-base/rules/style.js:

If you are unsure on the location of the file you can always search for a list of files that contain text relating to the settings, on Linux to find all files with linebreak settings navigate to the folder where ESLint was installed and use:

grep -r linebreak
-2

If you want to set it up for all linux/unix, mac and windows, just replace the linebreak-style in eslintrc.json to "linebreak-style": ["error","unix | windows"]

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