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angular-eslint-logo

Angular ESLint

Monorepo for all the tooling which enables ESLint to lint Angular projects

Build Status NPM Version GitHub license NPM Downloads Codecov Commitizen friendly


This project is made possible thanks to the continued hard work going into https://github.com/typescript-eslint/typescript-eslint, and brilliant work on the original TSLint rule implementations in https://github.com/mgechev/codelyzer.


Quick Start with Angular v12 and later

  1. Follow the latest Getting Started guide on https://angular.io/ in order to install the Angular CLI

  2. Create a new Angular CLI workspace in the normal way, optionally using any of the supported command line arguments and following the interactive prompts:

ng new # --maybe --some --other --flags --here
  1. Change directory into your new workspace and then use the Angular CLI to add @angular-eslint/schematics.
ng add @angular-eslint/schematics

...and that's it!

As well as installing all relevant dependencies, the ng add command will automatically detect that you have a workspace with a single project in it, which does not have a linter configured yet. It can therefore go ahead and wire everything up for you!

You will also see that it added the following in your angular.json:

  "cli": {
    "defaultCollection": "@angular-eslint/schematics"
  }

Read the section on Using ESLint by default when generating new Projects within your Workspace to understand why this is useful.


Quick Start with Angular before v12

  1. Follow the latest Getting Started guide on https://angular.io/ in order to install the Angular CLI

  2. Create a new Angular CLI workspace in the normal way, optionally using any of the supported command line arguments and following the interactive prompts:

ng new # --maybe --some --other --flags --here
  1. Change directory into your new workspace and then use the Angular CLI to add @angular-eslint/schematics:
ng add @angular-eslint/schematics
  1. Before v12, the Angular CLI shipped with a TSLint setup, so you should run the conversion schematic to automatically convert your new project from TSLint to ESLint:
ng g @angular-eslint/schematics:convert-tslint-to-eslint --remove-tslint-if-no-more-tslint-targets --ignore-existing-tslint-config

NOTES:

  • We set --remove-tslint-if-no-more-tslint-targets so that we remove TSLint and Codelyzer from the workspace automatically.
  • We set --ignore-existing-tslint-config so that we jump straight to the up to date recommended ESLint setup, without converting the previous Angular CLI TSLint setup, which is unnecessary for brand new projects.

If you stick to those exact commands above you will also see the following in your angular.json:

  "cli": {
    "defaultCollection": "@angular-eslint/schematics"
  }

Read the section on Using ESLint by default when generating new Projects within your Workspace to understand why this is useful.


Supported Angular CLI Versions

As of v12, we aligned the major version of @angular-eslint with Angular (and Angular CLI).

Therefore, as an example (because these versions may or may not exist yet when you read this):

NOTE: the exact minor and patch versions of each library represented here by x's do not need to match each other, just the first (major) number

For an understanding of Angular CLI version support prior to v12, please see ./docs/ANGULAR_VERSION_SUPPORT.md

Please do not open issues related to unsupported versions of the Angular CLI.


Usage with Nx Monorepos

Nx leans on some, but not all of the packages from this project.

Specifically:

  • It does not use the builder to execute ESLint
  • It does not use the schematics to generate files and config, and is responsible for configuring ESLint via .eslintrc.json files in a way that makes sense for Nx workspaces.

We strongly recommend that you do not try and hand-craft setups with angular-eslint and Nx. It is easy to get things wrong.

  • If using Angular CLI, use the angular-eslint tooling as instructed below
  • If using Nx, defer to the Nx tooling itself to configure things for you, it has been designed and tested specifically for this purpose.

Issues specific to Nx's support of Angular + ESLint should be filed on the Nx repo: https://github.com/nrwl/nx


Packages included in this project

Please follow the links below for the packages you care about.

  • @angular-eslint/builder - An Angular CLI Builder which is used to execute ESLint on your Angular projects using standard commands such as ng lint

  • @angular-eslint/eslint-plugin - An ESLint-specific plugin that contains rules which are specific to Angular projects. It can be combined with any other ESLint plugins in the normal way.

  • @angular-eslint/template-parser - An ESLint-specific parser which leverages the @angular/compiler to allow for custom ESLint rules to be written which assert things about your Angular templates.

  • @angular-eslint/eslint-plugin-template - An ESLint-specific plugin which, when used in conjunction with @angular-eslint/template-parser, allows for Angular template-specific linting rules to run.

  • @angular-eslint/schematics - Schematics which are used to add and update configuration files which are relevant for running ESLint on an Angular workspace.


Package Versions

All of the packages are published with the same version number to make it easier to coordinate both releases and installations.

We publish a canary release on every successful merge to master, so you never need to wait for a new stable version to make use of any updates.

The latest version under the latest tag is:

NPM Version

The latest version under the canary tag (latest commit to master) is:

NPM Version

(Note: The only exception to the automated publishes described above is when we are in the final phases of creating the next major version of the libraries - e.g. going from 1.x.x to 2.x.x. During these periods, we manually publish canary releases until we are happy with the release and promote it to latest.)


Adding ESLint configuration to an existing Angular CLI project which has no existing linter

NOTE: If you are looking for instructions on how to migrate a project which uses TSLint, please see the next section.

If you want to add ESLint configuration (a .eslintrc.json file and an applicable "lint" target in your angular.json) to an existing Angular CLI project which does not yet have a linter set up, you can invoke the following schematic:

ng g @angular-eslint/schematics:add-eslint-to-project {{YOUR_PROJECT_NAME_GOES_HERE}}

If you only have a single project in your Angular CLI workspace, the project name argument is optional


Migrating an Angular CLI project from Codelyzer and TSLint

We have some tooling to make this as automated as possible, but the reality is it will always be somewhat project-specific as to how much work will be involved in the migration.

Step 1 - Add relevant dependencies

The first step is to run the schematic to add @angular-eslint to your project:

ng add @angular-eslint/schematics

This will handle installing the latest version of all the relevant packages for you and adding them to the devDependencies of your package.json.

Step 2 - Run the convert-tslint-to-eslint schematic on a project

If you just have a single project in your workspace you can just run:

ng g @angular-eslint/schematics:convert-tslint-to-eslint

If you have a projects/ directory or similar in your workspace, you will have multiple entries in your projects configuration and you will need to chose which one you want to migrate using the convert-tslint-to-eslint schematic:

ng g @angular-eslint/schematics:convert-tslint-to-eslint {{YOUR_PROJECT_NAME_GOES_HERE}}

The schematic will do the following for you:

  • Read your chosen project's tslint.json and use it to CREATE a .eslintrc.json at the root of the specific project which extends from the root config (if you do not already have a root config, it will also add one automatically for you).
    • The contents of this .eslintrc.json will be the closest possible equivalent to your tslint.json that the tooling can figure out.
    • You will want to pay close attention to the terminal output of the schematic as it runs, because it will let you know if it couldn't find an appropriate converter for a TSLint rule, or if it has installed any additional ESLint plugins to help you match up your new setup with your old one.
  • UPDATE the project's architect configuration in the angular.json to such that the lint "target" will invoke ESLint instead of TSLint.
  • UPDATE any instances of tslint:disable comments that are located within your TypeScript source files to their ESLint equivalent.
  • If you choose YES (the default) for the --remove-tslint-if-no-more-tslint-targets option, it will also automatically remove TSLint and Codelyzer from your workspace if you have no more usage of them left.

Now when you run:

npx ng lint {{YOUR_PROJECT_NAME_GOES_HERE}}

...you are running ESLint on your project! πŸŽ‰


Using ESLint by default when generating new Projects within your Workspace

Regardless of whether or not you added @angular-eslint to a brand new workspace, or you added it in order to convert a project within an existing workspace, it is likely that from now on you want any subsequent projects that you generate in your workspace to also use ESLint.

In order to achieve this, @angular-eslint provides a set of custom generator schematics which sit on top of the default ones that the Angular CLI provides. They provide all the standard Angular CLI options, but just handle removing the default TSLint configuration for you and adding ESLint in each case.

You can always invoke them directly by specifying the collection name as part of the generate command:

# To generate a new Angular app in the workspace using ESLint
ng g @angular-eslint/schematics:app
# To generate a new Angular library in the workspace using ESLint
ng g @angular-eslint/schematics:lib

Or, alternatively, if you don't want to have to remember to set that collection prefix in front of the : every time, you can set the default collection in your angular.json to be @angular-eslint/schematics.

You can either do that by hand by adjusting the JSON, or by running the following Angular CLI command:

ng config cli.defaultCollection @angular-eslint/schematics

The final result in your angular.json will be something like this:

  "cli": {
    "defaultCollection": "@angular-eslint/schematics"
  }

Now your generate commands can just be:

# To generate a new Angular app in the workspace using ESLint (thanks to the defaultCollection set above)
ng g app
# To generate a new Angular library in the workspace using ESLint (thanks to the defaultCollection set above)
ng g lib

Notes on Supported ESLint Configuration File Types

We strongly recommend you stick to using .eslintrc.json.

This is not a constraint we force upon you, and you are more than welcome to use any of ESLint's supported file types for your ESLint config files, e.g. .eslintrc.js, .eslintrc.yml however please note that you will not receive any automated updates to your config from this toolset if you choose to use something other than .eslintrc.json. We will also only generate .eslintrc.json files from our code generators (which you could then convert yourself if you wanted to).

The reason for this is very simple - JSON is a format which is very easy to statically analyze and write transformations for and it is beyond the scope of this community-run project to provide multiple implementations of every possible migration for every possible ESLint configuration file type for every version we release.


Notes on ESLint Configuration Itself

It's important to understand up front that using Angular with ESLint is actually an advanced/complex use-case because of the nature of the files involved:

  • Angular projects use TypeScript files for source code
  • Angular projects use a custom/extended form of HTML for templates (be they inline or external HTML files)

The thing is: ESLint understands neither of these things out of the box.

Fortunately, however, ESLint has clearly defined points of extensibility that we can leverage to make this all work.

For detailed information about ESLint plugins, parsers etc please review the official ESLint documentation: https://eslint.org

The key principle of our configuration required for Angular projects is that we need to run different blocks of configuration for different file types/extensions. In other words, we don't want the same rules to apply on TypeScript files that we do on HTML/inline-templates.

Therefore, the critical part of our configuration is the "overrides" array:

{
  "overrides": [
    /**
     * -----------------------------------------------------
     * TYPESCRIPT FILES (COMPONENTS, SERVICES ETC) (.ts)
     * -----------------------------------------------------
     */
    {
      "files": ["*.ts"],

      // ... applies a special processor to extract inline Component templates
      // and treat them like HTML files
      "extends": ["plugin:@angular-eslint/template/process-inline-templates"]

      // ... other config specific to TypeScript files
    },

    /**
     * -----------------------------------------------------
     * COMPONENT TEMPLATES
     * -----------------------------------------------------
     */
    {
      "files": ["*.html"],
      // ... config specific to Angular Component templates
    }
  ]
}

By setting up our config in this way, we have complete control over what rules etc apply to what file types and our separate concerns remain clearer and easier to maintain.

Seriously, move (mostly) all configuration into overrides

Even though you may be more familiar with including ESLint rules, plugins etc at the top level of your config object, we strongly recommend only really having overrides (and a couple of other things like ignorePatterns, root etc) at the top level and including all plugins, rules etc within the relevant block in the overrides array.

Anything you apply at the top level will apply to ALL files, and as we've said above there is a really strict separation of concerns between source code and templates in Angular projects, so it is very rare that things apply to all files.

Let's take a look at full (but minimal), manual example of a config file (although we recommend deferring to the schematics for automatic config generation whenever possible):

.eslintrc.json

{
  "root": true,
  "overrides": [
    {
      "files": ["*.ts"],
      "parserOptions": {
        "project": [
          "tsconfig.app.json",
          "tsconfig.spec.json",
          "e2e/tsconfig.json"
        ],
        "createDefaultProgram": true
      },
      "extends": [
        "plugin:@angular-eslint/recommended",
        // This is required if you use inline templates in Components
        "plugin:@angular-eslint/template/process-inline-templates"
      ],
      "rules": {
        /**
         * Any TypeScript source code (NOT TEMPLATE) related rules you wish to use/reconfigure over and above the
         * recommended set provided by the @angular-eslint project would go here.
         */
        "@angular-eslint/directive-selector": [
          "error",
          { "type": "attribute", "prefix": "app", "style": "camelCase" }
        ],
        "@angular-eslint/component-selector": [
          "error",
          { "type": "element", "prefix": "app", "style": "kebab-case" }
        ]
      }
    },
    {
      "files": ["*.html"],
      "extends": ["plugin:@angular-eslint/template/recommended"],
      "rules": {
        /**
         * Any template/HTML related rules you wish to use/reconfigure over and above the
         * recommended set provided by the @angular-eslint project would go here.
         */
      }
    }
  ]
}

If I wanted to include other source code related rules extends etc, such as extending from eslint:recommended, then I would include that in the "extends": [] within the *.ts override block, NOT the root of the config object.

Our schematics already do the "right" thing for you automatically in this regard, but if you have to configure things manually for whatever reason, a full reference configuration example can be found in the manual integration test located within this monorepo. Check out the relevant configuration files:

If you are looking for general help in migrating specific rules from TSLint to ESLint, you can check out this incredible project that we depend on in our conversion schematic: https://github.com/typescript-eslint/tslint-to-eslint-config

Premade configs provided by this project

We have several premade configs within this project which you can extend from (and indeed the configs generated by our schematics do just that). For more information about the configs, check out their READMEs

Going fully manual (not recommended)

Our premade configs handle the parser and plugins options for you behind the scenes so that your final config can be more concise.

If for some reason you wanted to not include any of the premade recommended configs, or you wanted to significantly customize your setup, a fully manual example with the right parsers and plugins wired up (but no actual rules activated) would look like this:

{
  "root": true,
  "overrides": [
    {
      "files": ["*.ts"],
      "parser": "@typescript-eslint/parser",
      "parserOptions": {
        "ecmaVersion": 2020,
        "sourceType": "module",
        "project": [
          "tsconfig.app.json",
          "tsconfig.spec.json",
          "e2e/tsconfig.json"
        ],
        "createDefaultProgram": true
      },
      "plugins": ["@typescript-eslint", "@angular-eslint"],
      "rules": {}
    },
    {
      "files": ["*.html"],
      "parser": "@angular-eslint/template-parser",
      "plugins": ["@angular-eslint/template"],
      "rules": {}
    }
  ]
}

Notes for eslint-plugin-prettier users

Prettier is an awesome code formatter which can be used entirely independently of linting.

Some folks, however, like to apply prettier by using it inside of ESLint, using eslint-plugin-prettier. If this applies to you then you will want to read this section on how to apply it correctly for HTML templates. Make sure you read and fully understand the information above on the importance of "overrides" before reading this section.

When using eslint-plugin-prettier, in order to get the full range of scenarios working, namely:

  • ESLint + prettier together should work on Components with external templates
  • ESLint + prettier together should work on the external template HTML files themselves
  • ESLint + prettier together should work on Components with inline templates

We need to use two different overrides for HTML: one which applies @angular-eslint/template rules, one which applies prettier.

Do not apply @angular-eslint/template rules and prettier within the same override block.

The reason for this is down to the internals of the special ESLint processor for inline Component templates mentioned in the overrides section above and the hidden files it generates behind the scenes. Those files have names which match this pattern *inline-template-*.component.html and so we need to get eslint-plugin-prettier to ignore those files, otherwise it will get confused about them not existing directly in your project.

Here is a fully working (tested in VSCode and on the command line via ng lint) example:

.eslintrc.json

{
  "root": true,
  "ignorePatterns": ["projects/**/*"],
  "overrides": [
    {
      "files": ["*.ts"],
      "parserOptions": {
        "project": ["tsconfig.json", "e2e/tsconfig.json"],
        "createDefaultProgram": true
      },
      "extends": [
        "plugin:@angular-eslint/recommended",
        "plugin:@angular-eslint/template/process-inline-templates",
        "plugin:prettier/recommended"
      ],
      "rules": {}
    },
    // NOTE: WE ARE NOT APPLYING PRETTIER IN THIS OVERRIDE, ONLY @ANGULAR-ESLINT/TEMPLATE
    {
      "files": ["*.html"],
      "extends": ["plugin:@angular-eslint/template/recommended"],
      "rules": {}
    },
    // NOTE: WE ARE NOT APPLYING @ANGULAR-ESLINT/TEMPLATE IN THIS OVERRIDE, ONLY PRETTIER
    {
      "files": ["*.html"],
      "excludedFiles": ["*inline-template-*.component.html"],
      "extends": ["plugin:prettier/recommended"],
      "rules": {
        // NOTE: WE ARE OVERRIDING THE DEFAULT CONFIG TO ALWAYS SET THE PARSER TO ANGULAR (SEE BELOW)
        "prettier/prettier": ["error", { "parser": "angular" }]
      }
    }
  ]
}

We are setting the parser for eslint-plugin-prettier explicitly within our relevant override block so that it does not need to rely on inference. In this case we know it should always use its angular parser, because we are wiring it up to only run on angular HTML files within that override. (it's assumed that all HTML files in the project are angular templates)


Linting HTML files and inline-templates with the VSCode extension for ESLint

If you use vscode-eslint, and want to lint HTML files and inline-templates on your Angular Components, you will need to make sure you add the following to your VSCode settings.json:

// ... more config

"eslint.options": {
  "extensions": [".ts", ".html"]
},

// ... more config

"eslint.validate": [
  "javascript",
  "javascriptreact",
  "typescript",
  "typescriptreact",
  "html"
],

// ... more config

Please see the following issue for more information: microsoft/vscode-eslint#922


Usage without Angular CLI Builder

If you're using this without the Angular CLI Builder don't forget to include .html as one of the file extensions when running the eslint CLI, otherwise templates will not be linted, e.g.:

eslint --ext .ts,.html .

Notes on performance

Background and understanding the trade-offs

As you have hopefully understood from the above section on ESLint configuration what we are dealing with here is a set of tools that were not designed and optimized for this specific use-case.

In software development we are permanently faced with trade-offs. In this case you can think about it this way:

On the one hand...

By using ESLint with Angular (both its TypeScript source code, and its HTML templates), we gain access to a truly massive ecosystem of existing rules, plugins and IDE extensions that we can instantly leverage on our projects.

On the other...

The tooling will never be as fast or memory efficient, or as easy to configure, as something which was purpose built for a narrower use-case and which, well, does less...

TSLint was more in the latter camp - it was purpose built for linting TypeScript source code (note, not HTML), and so it was (depending on the codebase) faster and more efficient at doing it - but it was hugely lacking in community support, features, plugins, rules etc...

Ok, so now we know which side of this particular trade-off we are on. That's an important start.

ESLint configs and performance

Given the increased complexity around configuration, it is possible to end up with non-performant setups if we are not careful.

The first thing is to understand that if you are majorly deviating from the configs that this tooling generates for you automatically, you are greatly increasing the risk of you running into those issues.

The most important piece of ESLint configuration with regards to performance is the parserOptions.project option.

It is what informs typescript-eslint what tsconfigs should be used to create TypeScript Programs behind the scenes as the lint process runs. Without this, it would not be possible to leverage rules which take advantage of type information, we could only lint based on raw syntax.

If parserOptions.project has been configured, by default typescript-eslint will take this as a sign that you only want to lint files that are captured within the scope of the TypeScript Programs which are created. For example, let's say you have a tsconfig.json that contains the following:

{
  // ...more config
  "include" [
    "src/**/*.ts"
  ]
}

If you provide that file as a reference for typescript-eslint, it will conclude that you only want to lint .ts files within src/. If you attempt to lint a file outside of this pattern, it will error. Seems reasonable, right?

Unfortunately, for us in the context of the Angular CLI, we have an added complication. The Angular CLI generates one or more files which are not included in any tsconfig scopes (such as environment.prod.ts).

To prevent this causing errors for users, we therefore enable the createDefaultProgram option for typescript-eslint when we generate your config (it's false by default). This flag tells typescript-eslint not to error in the case in finds a file not in a Program, and instead create a whole new Program to encapsulate that file and then carry on.

This is not ideal, but it works. However, can you see what we've now exposed ourselves to by enabling this?

Now if we run linting - any files which are included in the lint run (e.g. by the glob patterns in the builder config in angular.json) will be linted, and if they are not in scope of an existing tsconfig a whole new Program will be created for each one of them.

Having patterns which do not makes sense together (files to lint vs provided tsconfigs) is usually how seriously non-performant setups can originate from your config. For small projects creating Programs takes a matter of seconds, for large projects, it can take far longer (depending on the circumstances).

Here are some steps you can take if you're linting process feels "unreasonably" slow:

  • Run the process with debug information from typescript-eslint enabled:
DEBUG=typescript-eslint:* ng lint
  • Full explanation of this command:
    • ng lint is being invoked as normal (you would run the full command above in the same way you run ng lint normally in whatever terminal you use), but we are also setting an environment variable called DEBUG, and giving it a value of typescript-eslint:*.
    • DEBUG is a relatively common environment variable because it is supported by some common logging/debugging libraries as a way to toggle how verbose the overall output is at runtime.
    • The value of typescript-eslint:* will get picked up by the logger within the typescript-eslint library and cause it to log very verbosely to the standard output of your terminal as it executes.

You will now see a ton of logs which were not visible before. The two most common issues to look out for are:

  • If you see a lot of logs saying that particular files are not being found in existing Programs (the scenario we described above) and default Programs have to be created
  • If you see files included for a project that should not be

If you are still having problems after you have done some digging into these, feel free to open and issue to discuss it further, providing as much context as possible (including the logs from the command above).




The ultimate fallback solution to performance problems caused by the Program issues described above is to stop piggybacking on your existing tsconfig files (such as tsconfig.app.json, tsconfig.spec.json etc), and instead create a laser-focused, dedicated tsconfig file for your ESLint use-case:

  • Create a new tsconfig file at the root of the project within the workspace (e.g. a clear name might be tsconfig.eslint.json)
  • Set the contents of tsconfig.eslint.json to:
    • extend from any root/base tsconfig you may have which sets important compilerOptions
    • directly include files you care about for linting purposes

For example, it may look like:

tsconfig.eslint.json

{
  "extends": "./tsconfig.json",
  "include": [
    // adjust "includes" to what makes sense for you and your project
    "src/**/*.ts",
    "e2e/**/*.ts"
  ]
}
  • Update your project's .eslintrc.json to use the new tsconfig file instead of its existing setting.

For example, the diff might look something like this:

  "parserOptions": {
    "project": [
-     "tsconfig.app.json",
-     "tsconfig.spec.json",
-     "e2e/tsconfig.json"
+     "tsconfig.eslint.json"
    ],
-   "createDefaultProgram": true
+   "createDefaultProgram": false
  },

As you can see, we are also setting "createDefaultProgram" to false because in this scenario we have full control over what files will be included in the Program created behind the scenes for our lint run and we should never need that potentially expensive auto-fallback again. (NOTE: You can also just remove the "createDefaultProgram" setting altogether because its default value is false).

If you are not sure what "createDefaultProgram" does, please reread the section above on ESLint Configs and Performance.


Using eslint-disable comments in Angular templates

If you want to be able to use eslint-disable comments in your Angular templates you just need to ensure you are using:

  • @angular CLI tooling packages version 11.2.8 or higher
  • @angular-eslint tooling packages version 2.1.0 or higher

Make sure you are using valid HTML comments, i.e. <!-- this syntax -->, not the kind of comments you use in TypeScript code.


Status of Codelyzer Rules Conversion

The table below shows the status of each Codelyzer Rule in terms of whether or not an equivalent for it has been created within @angular-eslint.

If you see a rule below that has no status against it, then please feel free to open a PR with an appropriate implementation. You can look at the Codelyzer repo and the existing plugins within this repo for inspiration.

Explanation of Statuses
βœ… = We have created an ESLint equivalent of this TSLint rule
🚧 = There is an open PR to provide an ESLint equivalent of this TSLint rule
πŸ™… = This TSLint rule has been replaced by functionality within the Angular compiler, or should be replaced by a dedicated code formatter, such as Prettier

Functionality

Codelyzer Rule ESLint Equivalent Status
contextual-decorator @angular-eslint/contextual-decorator βœ…
contextual-lifecycle @angular-eslint/contextual-lifecycle βœ…
no-attribute-decorator @angular-eslint/no-attribute-decorator βœ…
no-lifecycle-call @angular-eslint/no-lifecycle-call βœ…
no-output-native @angular-eslint/no-output-native βœ…
no-pipe-impure @angular-eslint/no-pipe-impure βœ…
prefer-on-push-component-change-detection @angular-eslint/prefer-on-push-component-change-detection βœ…
template-accessibility-alt-text @angular-eslint/template/accessibility-alt-text βœ…
template-accessibility-elements-content @angular-eslint/template/accessibility-elements-content βœ…
template-accessibility-label-for @angular-eslint/template/accessibility-label-for βœ…
template-accessibility-tabindex-no-positive @angular-eslint/template/no-positive-tabindex βœ…
template-accessibility-table-scope @angular-eslint/template/accessibility-table-scope βœ…
template-accessibility-valid-aria @angular-eslint/template/accessibility-valid-aria βœ…
template-banana-in-box @angular-eslint/template/banana-in-box βœ…
template-click-events-have-key-events @angular-eslint/template/click-events-have-key-events βœ…
template-mouse-events-have-key-events @angular-eslint/template/mouse-events-have-key-events βœ…
template-no-any @angular-eslint/template/no-any βœ…
template-no-autofocus @angular-eslint/template/no-autofocus βœ…
template-no-distracting-elements @angular-eslint/template/no-distracting-elements βœ…
template-no-negated-async @angular-eslint/template/no-negated-async βœ…
use-injectable-provided-in @angular-eslint/use-injectable-provided-in βœ…
use-lifecycle-interface @angular-eslint/use-lifecycle-interface βœ…

Maintainability

Codelyzer Rule ESLint Equivalent Status
component-max-inline-declarations @angular-eslint/component-max-inline-declarations βœ…
no-conflicting-lifecycle @angular-eslint/no-conflicting-lifecycle βœ…
no-forward-ref @angular-eslint/no-forward-ref βœ…
no-input-prefix @angular-eslint/no-input-prefix βœ…
no-input-rename @angular-eslint/no-input-rename βœ…
no-output-on-prefix @angular-eslint/no-output-on-prefix βœ…
no-output-rename @angular-eslint/no-output-rename βœ…
no-unused-css
prefer-output-readonly @angular-eslint/prefer-output-readonly βœ…
relative-url-prefix @angular-eslint/relative-url-prefix βœ…
template-conditional-complexity @angular-eslint/template/conditional-complexity βœ…
template-cyclomatic-complexity @angular-eslint/template/cyclomatic-complexity βœ…
template-i18n @angular-eslint/template/i18n βœ…
template-no-call-expression @angular-eslint/template/no-call-expression βœ…
template-use-track-by-function @angular-eslint/template/use-track-by-function βœ…
use-component-selector @angular-eslint/use-component-selector βœ…
use-component-view-encapsulation @angular-eslint/use-component-view-encapsulation βœ…
use-pipe-decorator N/A, see explanation above πŸ™…
use-pipe-transform-interface @angular-eslint/use-pipe-transform-interface βœ…

Style

Codelyzer Rule ESLint Equivalent Status
angular-whitespace N/A, see explanation above πŸ™…
component-class-suffix @angular-eslint/component-class-suffix βœ…
component-selector @angular-eslint/component-selector βœ…
directive-class-suffix @angular-eslint/directive-class-suffix βœ…
directive-selector @angular-eslint/directive-selector βœ…
import-destructuring-spacing N/A, see explanation above πŸ™…
no-host-metadata-property @angular-eslint/no-host-metadata-property βœ…
no-inputs-metadata-property @angular-eslint/no-inputs-metadata-property βœ…
no-outputs-metadata-property @angular-eslint/no-outputs-metadata-property βœ…
no-queries-metadata-property @angular-eslint/no-queries-metadata-property βœ…
pipe-prefix @angular-eslint/pipe-prefix βœ…
prefer-inline-decorator N/A, see explanation above πŸ™…

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