379

I'm using eslint with Sublime Text 3 and I am writing gulpfile.js.

/*eslint-env node*/
var gulp = require('gulp');

gulp.task('default', function(){
    console.log('default task');
});

But eslint keeps showing error : "Error: Unexpected console statement. (no-console)" eslint error

I found official document here, but I still don't know how to disable it.

/*eslint-env node*/
var gulp = require('gulp');

/*eslint no-console: 2*/
gulp.task('default', function(){
    console.log('default task');
});

doesn't work, either.

My Sublime Text 3 plugins: SublimeLinter and SublimeLinter-contrib-eslint.

Here's my .eslintrc.js file:

module.exports = {
    "rules": {
        "no-console":0,
        "indent": [
            2,
            "tab"
        ],
        "quotes": [
            2,
            "single"
        ],
        "linebreak-style": [
            2,
            "unix"
        ],
        "semi": [
            2,
            "always"
        ]
    },
    "env": {
        "browser": true,
        "node": true
    },
    "extends": "eslint:recommended"
};
0

21 Answers 21

594

Create a .eslintrc.js in the directory of your file, and put the following contents in it:

module.exports = {
    rules: {
        'no-console': 'off',
    },
};
15
  • 2
    Well, according to the official github page for the eslint plugin (github.com/roadhump/…), putting a .eslintrc file into your project folder should do the trick...to continue debugging it, I'd recommend trying to run eslint from the command line. Simply install node.js if you don't have it installed, then run npm install eslint from a console/command prompt, then navigate to your project folder in a console/command prompt, and run eslint . Dec 11, 2015 at 3:38
  • 12
    it works (for me) when the file is called .eslintrc.json
    – AlexWien
    Nov 16, 2016 at 20:26
  • 18
    Alternatively, you can write "rules": {"no-console": "off"} to be less cryptic. "warn" and "error" being the other 2 options. Feb 5, 2017 at 19:27
  • 1
    The ESLint configuration file used to be simply .eslintrc but now that is deprecated and should be named according to the format used, e.g. .eslintrc.js, .eslintrc.yaml, etc. Jun 28, 2017 at 15:55
  • 4
    Does not work in vue-cli 3: see answer stackoverflow.com/a/53333105/150370 Jul 11, 2019 at 11:38
218

You should update eslint config file to fix this permanently. Else you can temporarily enable or disable eslint check for console like below

/* eslint-disable no-console */
console.log(someThing);
/* eslint-enable no-console */
3
  • 2
    How to config my .eslintrc, please tell me? Dec 11, 2015 at 3:56
  • 20
    Not is necessary to add both lines. With only put previous of your console.log the following exception is enough: eslint-disable-next-line no-console. Nov 24, 2018 at 23:56
  • Thanks @JonathanBrizio that's exactly what I wanted. A quick and dirty solution to debug something. When I'm done, I will remove the console.log line. I don't want to permanently modify the eslint rules.
    – Gael
    Sep 29, 2021 at 8:37
151

For vue-cli 3 open package.json and under section eslintConfig put no-console under rules and restart dev server (npm run serve or yarn serve)

...
"eslintConfig": {
    ...
    "rules": {
      "no-console": "off"
    },
    ...
5
60

The following works with ESLint in VSCode if you want to disable the rule for just one line.

To disable the next line:

// eslint-disable-next-line no-console
console.log('hello world');

To disable the current line:

console.log('hello world'); // eslint-disable-line no-console
42

A nicer option is to make the display of console.log and debugger statements conditional based on the node environment.

  rules: {
    // allow console and debugger in development
    'no-console': process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production' ? 2 : 0,
    'no-debugger': process.env.NODE_ENV === 'production' ? 2 : 0,
  },
2
  • 1
    console msgs still print in production environment May 27, 2020 at 10:00
  • 1
    how would this work if .eslintrc is in JSON not regular js file?
    – user4609276
    Jul 26, 2020 at 20:11
18

Alternatively instead of turning 'no-console' off, you can allow. In the .eslintrc.js file put

  rules: {
    "no-console": [
     "warn",
     { "allow": ["clear", "info", "error", "dir", "trace", "log"] }
    ]
  }

This will allow you to do console.log and console.clear etc without throwing errors.

2
  • Needs to be JSON, not a JavaScript Object Jul 8, 2020 at 21:46
  • 1
    .eslintrc.js is a JS file, so it does not need to be JSON.
    – bfontaine
    Dec 21, 2021 at 17:07
16

If you install eslint under your local project, you should have a directory /node_modules/eslint/conf/ and under that directory a file eslint.json. You could edit the file and modify "no-console" entry with the value "off" (although 0 value is supported too):

"rules": {
    "no-alert": "off",
    "no-array-constructor": "off",
    "no-bitwise": "off",
    "no-caller": "off",
    "no-case-declarations": "error",
    "no-catch-shadow": "off",
    "no-class-assign": "error",
    "no-cond-assign": "error",
    "no-confusing-arrow": "off",
    "no-console": "off",
    ....

I hope this "configuration" could help you.

2
13

If you just want to disable the rule once, you want to look at Exception's answer.

You can improve this by only disabling the rule for one line only:

... on the current line:

console.log(someThing); /* eslint-disable-line no-console */

... or on the next line:

/* eslint-disable-next-line no-console */
console.log(someThing);
11

I'm using Ember.js which generates a file named .eslintrc.js. Adding "no-console": 0 to the rules object did the job for me. The updated file looks like this:

module.exports = {
  root: true,
  parserOptions: {
    ecmaVersion: 6,
    sourceType: 'module'
  },
  extends: 'eslint:recommended',
  env: {
    browser: true
  },
  rules: {
    "no-console": 0
  }
};
10

in my vue project i fixed this problem like this :

vim package.json
...
"rules": {
    "no-console": "off"
},
...

ps : package.json is a configfile in the vue project dir, finally the content shown like this:

{
  "name": "metadata-front",
  "version": "0.1.0",
  "private": true,
  "scripts": {
    "serve": "vue-cli-service serve",
    "build": "vue-cli-service build",
    "lint": "vue-cli-service lint"
  },
  "dependencies": {
    "axios": "^0.18.0",
    "vue": "^2.5.17",
    "vue-router": "^3.0.2"
  },
  "devDependencies": {
    "@vue/cli-plugin-babel": "^3.0.4",
    "@vue/cli-plugin-eslint": "^3.0.4",
    "@vue/cli-service": "^3.0.4",
    "babel-eslint": "^10.0.1",
    "eslint": "^5.8.0",
    "eslint-plugin-vue": "^5.0.0-0",
    "vue-template-compiler": "^2.5.17"
  },
  "eslintConfig": {
    "root": true,
    "env": {
      "node": true
    },
    "extends": [
      "plugin:vue/essential",
      "eslint:recommended"
    ],
    "rules": {
        "no-console": "off"
    },
    "parserOptions": {
      "parser": "babel-eslint"
    }
  },
  "postcss": {
    "plugins": {
      "autoprefixer": {}
    }
  },
  "browserslist": [
    "> 1%",
    "last 2 versions",
    "not ie <= 8"
  ]
}
1
  • this is helpful if one generated a vue project trough vue-cli or vue ui and it contains a vue.config.js and package.json. Edit the package.json.
    – swiesend
    Feb 7, 2019 at 22:37
9

2018 October,

just do:

// tslint:disable-next-line:no-console

the anothers answer with

// eslint-disable-next-line no-console

does not work !

0
9

If you're still having trouble even after configuring your package.json according to the documentation (if you've opted to use package.json to track rather than separate config files):

"rules": {
      "no-console": "off"
    },

And it still isn't working for you, don't forget you need to go back to the command line and do npm install again. :)

1
  • Interesting, that what happened to me. Why did we need to run npm install again? Or perhaps I just needed to restart with npm run serve. Jul 31, 2020 at 12:53
5

In package.json you will find an eslintConfig line. Your 'rules' line can go in there like this:

  "eslintConfig": {
   ...
    "extends": [
      "eslint:recommended"
    ],
    "rules": {
      "no-console": "off"
    },
   ...
  },
4

You should add one rule and add your env:

{
  "rules": {
    "no-console": "off"
  },
  "env": {
    "browser": true
  }
}

you can add other envs.

3

Alternatively, you can restrict only some methods on the console object with:

"rules": {
    ...
    "no-console": [
      "error",
      {
        "allow": [
          "log",
          "error"
        ]
      }
    ],
    ...
  },
2

in "rules", "no-console": [false, "log", "error"]

1

To just allow console.error()

warn the consoles for the debug proposes.

Add other console types in the array if needed.

module.exports = {
// ...
  rules: {
     // ...
    "no-console": ["warn", { "allow": ["error"] }],
  },
// ...
};

0

My 2 cents contribution:

Besides removing the console warning (as shown above), it's best to remove yours logs from PROD environments (for security reasons). The best way I found to do so, is by adding this to nuxt.config.js

  build: {
   terser: {
      terserOptions: {
        compress: {
          //this removes console.log from production environment
          drop_console: true
        }
      }
    }
  }

How it works: Nuxt already uses terser as minifier. This config will force terser to ignore/remove all console logs commands during compression.

0

Just a workaround to avoid using the eslint-disable-next-line no-console, or adding rule in .eslintrc, or getting an Eslint warning. You can create a tempotary variable and call it instead.

const cons = console;
cons.log('My message here'); // <- won't see warning here
-1

make sure that the name of the folder that the flutter project is in. Doesn't have spaces. that was my error

-6

Use Window Object

window.console.log("..")

1
  • This answers the question succinctly and should not be downvoted. In my case, I either have to edit an .env file then rebuild or use a comment // eslint-disable-next-line no-console. Both of which are more tedious than this approach. I can simply use this for quick testing then remove when I'm done. Thank you!
    – DoloMike
    Jul 14, 2022 at 16:25

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.