JSLint
terser
JSLint | terser | |
---|---|---|
18 | 28 | |
3,602 | 8,471 | |
0.2% | 0.5% | |
6.4 | 8.8 | |
2 months ago | 9 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
The Unlicense | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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JSLint
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Misty Programming Language
This is the spec for the language Douglas Crockford (author of the book "JavaScript: The Good Parts", the JSON specification[1], JSLint[2]) had explained in his famous talk: "The Next Programming Language"[3].
The "big things" in the language are the Actor model, favouring immutability and capabilities-based security.
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JSON
[2] https://www.jslint.com/
[3] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R2idkNdKqpQ
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JavaScript Is Weird
Someone should write a book about this [0] and a tool to automate checking your JavaScript code [1].
[0]: https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/javascript-the-good/978...
[1]: https://www.jslint.com/
I'm working on a book called "How to not get your knickers in a twist because you neglected to learn from people who came before you."
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200 Web-Based, Must-Try Web Design and Development Tools
JavaScript Linter
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How To Secure Your JavaScript Applications
One way to achieve this is by using linting tools like ESLint or JSLint. These tools automatically analyze your code for errors, stylistic inconsistencies, and potential security vulnerabilities. By customizing the linting rules to align with coding standards and best practices, you can identify and rectify potential security issues early in the development process. Linting helps maintain a clean and secure codebase.
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JavaScript import maps are now supported cross-browser
>Does this mean that in theory i could skip the build/bundling step entirely?
You can but you must write your app in something the browser understands (js not ts, css not sass etc) and use native modules. For example, here is the test harness for a custom module, written in pure html with no build step: https://github.com/javajosh/simpatico/blob/master/combine2.h.... Here is a more complex (and much older) example from Crockford: https://www.jslint.com/
And yes, the experience developing this way is quite nice!
- How do I tell jslint to ignore this?
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Find ES6 features in any JS code
I came across a problem where I had to find the ES6 features used by any javascript project and other data regarding their use. When I reached out to stackoverflow, I could find only one relevant post which asks you to use linters like jshint/jshint or compilers like babel. Jslint didn't seem to report anything specific to ES6 and Babel converts all the ES6+ features to ES5 but doesn't report anything regarding which constructs were used or how many times they were used. However, Jshint reported all ES6 features used in the code along with some metadata. And, to suit my needs, I ended up writing a python script that calls Jshint on all JS files in a project and presents the features used in the project and the number of times they were used across all files. You can find the code here : jsHintRunner
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The Why & How To Create A Front-End Website Testing Plan
Javascript Linting parses and checks if any syntax is violating the rule. If a violation occurs, a warning is shown explaining unexpected behavior. Use the online version for small projects: JSLint, ESLint or JSHint. For larger projects, it is recommended to use a task runner like Gulp or Grunt. Linters ensure developers are following the best practices as a result of which few bugs appear during project development.
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Disambiguating Jamstack and MACH
Programmers of classical languages hate JavaScript because it's prototype-based, dynamic and weakly typed (among other complaints). It's also the number one most in-demand programming language in 2022 according to a number of independent surveys. JSLint can help you write better JavaScript and JSMin can minify your code before deployment. These tools were created by Douglas Crockford. I would recommend his books JavaScript: The Good Parts for programmers coming to JavaScript for the first time, and How JavaScript Works for experienced JavaScript programmers.
- Thing we can do today to JavaScript is to retire it
terser
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How I use Devbox in my Elm projects
These projects use Caddy as my local development server, Dart Sass for converting my Sass files to CSS, elm, elm-format, elm-optimize-level-2, elm-review, elm-test (only in Calculator), ShellCheck to find bugs in my shell scripts, and Terser to mangle and compress JavaScript code.
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Obfuscating your create react app and routes
During my intial search i came across some outdated libraries like javascript-obfuscator and uglify-js(as if javascript code can get any uglier, am I right?). Then, I stumbled upon Terser, a modern library that supports ES6.
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10 Bad Habits That Can Slow Down Your JavaScript Applications 🐌
Example: You've got a main.js file that's as long as a Tolstoy novel. Fix: Use tools like UglifyJS or Terser to minify your code. They'll squeeze out all the unnecessary bits and give you a sleeker, faster-loading file.
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Things you forgot because of React
They can do it, it is just turned off by default and require more advanced configuration.
https://github.com/terser/terser#cli-mangling-property-names...
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Understanding Source Maps: Simplifying Debugging
Minifying is a common practice for optimizing production code. (for example, using Terser to minify and mangle JavaScript).
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How To Secure Your JavaScript Applications
Minification: UglifyJS, Terser
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Minify private methods in a TypeScript class
Terser is JavaScript compressor that can minified specific method names.
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React Native CI/CD build speed improved by 22% with one line of code
Every release build of React Native uses terser to reduce the size of your JavaScript. And it operation can be omitted for Staging/Beta builds.
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Setting up a custom toolchain
A minifier makes your code more compact so that it loads faster. Popular minifiers: Terser, swc.
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Overview of the next-gen frontend dev tools
There are many minifiers such as terser and uglify. But, because minifying also require to parse the JS, it is actually possible to use esbuild and SWC to minify the code. Here's a benchmark of the main minifiers.
What are some alternatives?
ESLint - Find and fix problems in your JavaScript code.
esbuild - An extremely fast bundler for the web
prettier - Prettier is an opinionated code formatter.
vite - Next generation frontend tooling. It's fast!
JSHint - JSHint is a tool that helps to detect errors and potential problems in your JavaScript code
UglifyJS2 - JavaScript parser / mangler / compressor / beautifier toolkit
jsinspect - Detect copy-pasted and structurally similar code
closure-compiler - A JavaScript checker and optimizer.
Typefont - The first open-source library that detects the font of a text in a image.
Sass - Sass makes CSS fun!
jsfmt - For formatting, searching, and rewriting JavaScript.
PostCSS - Transforming styles with JS plugins