@typescript-eslint/parser
An ESLint parser used to parse TypeScript code into ESLint-compatible nodes, as well as provide backing TypeScript programs. ✨
This is necessary because TypeScript produces a different, incompatible AST format to the one that ESLint requires to work.
For example, this is not valid JavaScript code because it contains the : number
type annotation:
let x: number = 1;
ESLint's native Espree parser would raise an error attempting to parse it.
Additionally, because TypeScript is developed separately and with different goals from ESLint, ESTree, and Espree, its AST also represents nodes differently in many cases. TS's AST is optimized for its use case of parsing incomplete code and typechecking. ESTree is unoptimized and intended for "general purpose" use-cases of traversing the AST.
You can select @typescript-eslint/parser
on the typescript-eslint playground's left sidebar under Options > AST Explorer by selecting ESTree.
Configuration
The following additional configuration options are available by specifying them in parserOptions
in your ESLint configuration file.
interface ParserOptions {
cacheLifetime?: {
glob?: number | 'Infinity';
};
ecmaFeatures?: {
jsx?: boolean;
globalReturn?: boolean;
};
ecmaVersion?: number | 'latest';
emitDecoratorMetadata?: boolean;
extraFileExtensions?: string[];
jsxFragmentName?: string | null;
jsxPragma?: string | null;
lib?: string[];
moduleResolver?: string;
program?: import('typescript').Program;
project?: string | string[] | true;
projectFolderIgnoreList?: string[];
tsconfigRootDir?: string;
warnOnUnsupportedTypeScriptVersion?: boolean;
}
cacheLifetime
This option allows you to granularly control our internal cache expiry lengths.
You can specify the number of seconds as an integer number, or the string 'Infinity' if you never want the cache to expire.
By default cache entries will be evicted after 30 seconds, or will persist indefinitely if the parser infers that it is a single run.
ecmaFeatures
Optional additional options to describe how to parse the raw syntax.
jsx
Default
false
.
Enable parsing JSX when true
.
More details can be found in the TypeScript handbook's JSX docs.
NOTE: this setting does not affect known file types (.js
, .mjs
, .cjs
, .jsx
, .ts
, .mts
, .cts
, .tsx
, .json
) because the TypeScript compiler has its own internal handling for known file extensions.
The exact behavior is as follows:
.js
,.mjs
,.cjs
,.jsx
,.tsx
files are always parsed as if this istrue
..ts
,.mts
,.cts
files are always parsed as if this isfalse
.- For "unknown" extensions (
.md
,.vue
):- If
parserOptions.project
is not provided:- The setting will be respected.
- If
parserOptions.project
is provided (i.e. you are using rules with type information):- always parsed as if this is
false
- always parsed as if this is
- If
globalReturn
Default
false
.
This options allows you to tell the parser if you want to allow global return
statements in your codebase.
ecmaVersion
Default
2018
.
Accepts any valid ECMAScript version number or 'latest'
:
- A version: es3, es5, es6, es7, es8, es9, es10, es11, es12, es13, ..., or
- A year: es2015, es2016, es2017, es2018, es2019, es2020, es2021, es2022, ..., or
'latest'
When it's a version or a year, the value must be a number - so do not include the es
prefix.
Specifies the version of ECMAScript syntax you want to use. This is used by the parser to determine how to perform scope analysis, and it affects the default
emitDecoratorMetadata
Default
undefined
.
This option allow you to tell parser to act as if emitDecoratorMetadata: true
is set in tsconfig.json
, but without type-aware linting. In other words, you don't have to specify parserOptions.project
in this case, making the linting process faster.
extraFileExtensions
Default
undefined
.
This option allows you to provide one or more additional file extensions which should be considered in the TypeScript Program compilation.
The default extensions are ['.js', '.mjs', '.cjs', '.jsx', '.ts', '.mts', '.cts', '.tsx']
.
Add extensions starting with .
, followed by the file extension. E.g. for a .vue
file use "extraFileExtensions": [".vue"]
.
jsxFragmentName
Default
null
The identifier that's used for JSX fragment elements (after transpilation).
If null
, assumes transpilation will always use a member of the configured jsxPragma
.
This should not be a member expression - just the root identifier (i.e. use "h"
instead of "h.Fragment"
).
If you provide parserOptions.project
, you do not need to set this, as it will automatically detected from the compiler.
jsxPragma
Default
'React'
The identifier that's used for JSX Elements creation (after transpilation).
If you're using a library other than React (like preact
), then you should change this value. If you are using the new JSX transform you can set this to null
.
This should not be a member expression - just the root identifier (i.e. use "React"
instead of "React.createElement"
).
If you provide parserOptions.project
, you do not need to set this, as it will automatically detected from the compiler.
lib
Default
['es2018']
For valid options, see the TypeScript compiler options.
Specifies the TypeScript lib
s that are available. This is used by the scope analyser to ensure there are global variables declared for the types exposed by TypeScript.
If you provide parserOptions.project
, you do not need to set this, as it will automatically detected from the compiler.
moduleResolver
Default
undefined
.
This option allows you to provide a custom module resolution. The value should point to a JS file that default exports (export default
, or module.exports =
, or export =
) a file with the following interface:
interface ModuleResolver {
version: 1;
resolveModuleNames(
moduleNames: string[],
containingFile: string,
reusedNames: string[] | undefined,
redirectedReference: ts.ResolvedProjectReference | undefined,
options: ts.CompilerOptions,
): (ts.ResolvedModule | undefined)[];
}
program
Default
undefined
.
This option allows you to programmatically provide an instance of a TypeScript Program object that will provide type information to rules.
This will override any programs that would have been computed from parserOptions.project
or parserOptions.createDefaultProgram
.
All linted files must be part of the provided program(s).
Refer to the TypeScript Wiki for an example on how to write the resolveModuleNames
function.
project
Default
undefined
.
This option allows you to provide a path to your project's tsconfig.json
. This setting is required if you want to use rules which require type information. Relative paths are interpreted relative to the current working directory if tsconfigRootDir
is not set. If you intend on running ESLint from directories other than the project root, you should consider using tsconfigRootDir
.
Accepted values:
// find the tsconfig.json nearest each source file
project: true,
// path
project: './tsconfig.json';
// glob pattern
project: './packages/**/tsconfig.json';
// array of paths and/or glob patterns
project: ['./packages/**/tsconfig.json', './separate-package/tsconfig.json'];If
true
, each source file's parse will find the nearesttsconfig.json
file to that source file.- This is done by checking that source file's directory tree for the nearest
tsconfig.json
.
- This is done by checking that source file's directory tree for the nearest
If you use project references, TypeScript will not automatically use project references to resolve files. This means that you will have to add each referenced tsconfig to the
project
field either separately, or via a glob.Note that using wide globs
**
in yourparserOptions.project
may cause performance implications. Instead of globs that use**
to recursively check all folders, prefer paths that use a single*
at a time. For more info see #2611.TypeScript will ignore files with duplicate filenames in the same folder (for example,
src/file.ts
andsrc/file.js
). TypeScript purposely ignore all but one of the files, only keeping the one file with the highest priority extension (the extension priority order (from highest to lowest) is.ts
,.tsx
,.d.ts
,.js
,.jsx
). For more info see #955.Note that if this setting is specified and
createDefaultProgram
is not, you must only lint files that are included in the projects as defined by the providedtsconfig.json
files. If your existing configuration does not include all of the files you would like to lint, you can create a separatetsconfig.eslint.json
as follows:{
// extend your base config so you don't have to redefine your compilerOptions
"extends": "./tsconfig.json",
"include": [
"src/**/*.ts",
"test/**/*.ts",
"typings/**/*.ts",
// etc
// if you have a mixed JS/TS codebase, don't forget to include your JS files
"src/**/*.js"
]
}
projectFolderIgnoreList
Default
["**/node_modules/**"]
.
This option allows you to ignore folders from being included in your provided list of project
s.
This is useful if you have configured glob patterns, but want to make sure you ignore certain folders.
It accepts an array of globs to exclude from the project
globs.
For example, by default it will ensure that a glob like ./**/tsconfig.json
will not match any tsconfig
s within your node_modules
folder (some npm packages do not exclude their source files from their published packages).
tsconfigRootDir
Default
undefined
.
This option allows you to provide the root directory for relative TSConfig paths specified in the project
option above.
Doing so ensures running ESLint from a directory other than the root will still be able to find your TSConfig.
warnOnUnsupportedTypeScriptVersion
Default
true
.
This option allows you to toggle the warning that the parser will give you if you use a version of TypeScript which is not explicitly supported
Utilities
createProgram(configFile, projectDirectory)
This serves as a utility method for users of the parserOptions.programs
feature to create a TypeScript program instance from a config file.
declare function createProgram(
configFile: string,
projectDirectory?: string,
): import('typescript').Program;
Example usage:
const parser = require('@typescript-eslint/parser');
module.exports = {
parserOptions: {
programs: [parser.createProgram('tsconfig.json')],
},
};