Prettier is an opinionated code formatter with support for:
It removes all original styling* and ensures that all outputted code conforms to a consistent style. (See this blog post)
Table of Contents
Prettier takes your code and reprints it from scratch by taking the line length into account.
For example, take the following code:
foo(arg1, arg2, arg3, arg4);
It fits in a single line so it's going to stay as is. However, we've all run into this situation:
foo(reallyLongArg(), omgSoManyParameters(), IShouldRefactorThis(), isThereSeriouslyAnotherOne());
Suddenly our previous format for calling function breaks down because this is too long. Prettier is going to do the painstaking work of reprinting it like that for you:
foo(
reallyLongArg(),
omgSoManyParameters(),
IShouldRefactorThis(),
isThereSeriouslyAnotherOne()
);
Prettier enforces a consistent code style (i.e. code formatting that won't affect the AST) across your entire codebase because it disregards the original styling* by parsing it away and re-printing the parsed AST with its own rules that take the maximum line length into account, wrapping code when necessary.
*Well actually, some original styling is preserved when practical—see empty lines and multi-line objects.
If you want to learn more, these two conference talks are great introductions:
By far the biggest reason for adopting Prettier is to stop all the on-going debates over styles. It is generally accepted that having a common style guide is valuable for a project and team but getting there is a very painful and unrewarding process. People get very emotional around particular ways of writing code and nobody likes spending time writing and receiving nits.
- “We want to free mental threads and end discussions around style. While sometimes fruitful, these discussions are for the most part wasteful.”
- “Literally had an engineer go through a huge effort of cleaning up all of our code because we were debating ternary style for the longest time and were inconsistent about it. It was dumb, but it was a weird on-going "great debate" that wasted lots of little back and forth bits. It's far easier for us all to agree now: just run Prettier, and go with that style.”
- “Getting tired telling people how to style their product code.”
- “Our top reason was to stop wasting our time debating style nits.”
- “Having a githook set up has reduced the amount of style issues in PRs that result in broken builds due to ESLint rules or things I have to nit-pick or clean up later.”
- “I don't want anybody to nitpick any other person ever again.”
- “It reminds me of how Steve Jobs used to wear the same clothes every day because he has a million decisions to make and he didn't want to be bothered to make trivial ones like picking out clothes. I think Prettier is like that.”
Prettier is usually introduced by people with experience in the current codebase and JavaScript but the people that disproportionally benefit from it are newcomers to the codebase. One may think that it's only useful for people with very limited programming experience, but we've seen it quicken the ramp up time from experienced engineers joining the company, as they likely used a different coding style before, and developers coming from a different programming language.
- “My motivations for using Prettier are: appearing that I know how to write JavaScript well.”
- “I always put spaces in the wrong place, now I don't have to worry about it anymore.”
- “When you're a beginner you're making a lot of mistakes caused by the syntax. Thanks to Prettier, you can reduce these mistakes and save a lot of time to focus on what really matters.”
- “As a teacher, I will also tell to my students to install Prettier to help them to learn the JS syntax and have readable files.”
What usually happens once people are using Prettier is that they realize that they actually spend a lot of time and mental energy formatting their code. With Prettier editor integration, you can just press that magic key binding and poof, the code is formatted. This is an eye opening experience if anything else.
- “I want to write code. Not spend cycles on formatting.”
- “It removed 5% that sucks in our daily life - aka formatting”
- “We're in 2017 and it's still painful to break a call into multiple lines when you happen to add an argument that makes it go over the 80 columns limit :(“
We've worked very hard to use the least controversial coding styles, went through many rounds of fixing all the edge cases and polished the getting started experience. When you're ready to push Prettier into your codebase, not only should it be painless for you to do it technically but the newly formatted codebase should not generate major controversy and be accepted painlessly by your co-workers.
- “It's low overhead. We were able to throw Prettier at very different kinds of repos without much work.”
- “It's been mostly bug free. Had there been major styling issues during the course of implementation we would have been wary about throwing this at our JS codebase. I'm happy to say that's not the case.”
- “Everyone runs it as part of their pre commit scripts, a couple of us use the editor on save extensions as well.”
- “It's fast, against one of our larger JS codebases we were able to run Prettier in under 13 seconds.”
- “The biggest benefit for Prettier for us was being able to format the entire code base at once.”
Since coming up with a coding style and enforcing it is a big undertaking, it often slips through the cracks and you are left working on inconsistent codebases. Running Prettier in this case is a quick win, the codebase is now uniform and easier to read without spending hardly any time.
- “Take a look at the code :) I just need to restore sanity.”
- “We inherited a ~2000 module ES6 code base, developed by 20 different developers over 18 months, in a global team. Felt like such a win without much research.
Purely technical aspects of the projects aren't the only thing people look into when choosing to adopt Prettier. Who built and uses it and how quickly it spreads through the community has a non-trivial impact.
- “The amazing thing, for me, is: 1) Announced 2 months ago. 2) Already adopted by, it seems, every major JS project. 3) 7000 stars, 100,000 npm downloads/mo”
- “Was built by the same people as React & React Native.”
- “I like to be part of the hot new things.”
- “Because soon enough people are gonna ask for it.”
A few of the many projects using Prettier:
Linters have two categories of rules:
Formatting rules: eg: max-len, no-mixed-spaces-and-tabs, keyword-spacing, comma-style...
Prettier alleviates the need for this whole category of rules! Prettier is going to reprint the entire program from scratch in a consistent way, so it's not possible for the programmer to make a mistake there anymore :)
Code-quality rules: eg no-unused-vars, no-extra-bind, no-implicit-globals, prefer-promise-reject-errors...
Prettier does nothing to help with those kind of rules. They are also the most important ones provided by linters as they are likely to catch real bugs with your code!
Install:
yarn add prettier --dev
You can install it globally if you like:
yarn global add prettier
We're using yarn
but you can use npm
if you like:
npm install [--save-dev|--global] prettier
Run Prettier through the CLI with this script. Run it without any arguments to see the options.
To format a file in-place, use --write
. You may want to consider
committing your code before doing that, just in case.
prettier [opts] [filename ...]
In practice, this may look something like:
prettier --single-quote --trailing-comma es5 --write "{app,__{tests,mocks}__}/**/*.js"
Don't forget the quotes around the globs! The quotes make sure that Prettier expands the globs rather than your shell, for cross-platform usage. The glob syntax from the glob module is used.
Prettier CLI will ignore files located in node_modules
directory. To opt-out from this behavior use --with-node-modules
flag.
If you're worried that Prettier will change the correctness of your code, add --debug-check
to the command.
This will cause Prettier to print an error message if it detects that code correctness might have changed.
Note that --write
cannot be used with --debug-check
.
Another useful flag is --list-different
(or -l
) which prints the filenames of files that are different from Prettier formatting. If there are differences the script errors out, which is useful in a CI scenario.
prettier --single-quote --list-different "src/**/*.js"
If you are using ESLint, integrating Prettier to your workflow is straightforward:
Just add Prettier as an ESLint rule using eslint-plugin-prettier.
yarn add --dev prettier eslint-plugin-prettier
// .eslintrc
{
"plugins": [
"prettier"
],
"rules": {
"prettier/prettier": "error"
}
}
We also recommend that you use eslint-config-prettier to disable all the existing formatting rules. It's a one liner that can be added on-top of any existing ESLint configuration.
$ yarn add --dev eslint-config-prettier
.eslintrc.json:
{
"extends": [
"prettier"
]
}
You can use Prettier with a pre-commit tool. This can re-format your files that are marked as "staged" via git add
before you commit.
Option 1. lint-staged
Install it along with husky:
yarn add lint-staged husky --dev
and add this config to your package.json
:
{
"scripts": {
"precommit": "lint-staged"
},
"lint-staged": {
"*.js": [
"prettier --write",
"git add"
]
}
}
See https://github.com/okonet/lint-staged#configuration for more details about how you can configure lint-staged.
Option 2. pre-commit
Copy the following config into your .pre-commit-config.yaml
file:
- repo: https://github.com/prettier/prettier
sha: '' # Use the sha or tag you want to point at
hooks:
- id: prettier
Find more info from here.
Alternately you can save this script as .git/hooks/pre-commit
and give it execute permission:
#!/bin/sh
jsfiles=$(git diff --cached --name-only --diff-filter=ACM | grep '\.jsx\?$' | tr '\n' ' ')
[ -z "$jsfiles" ] && exit 0
# Prettify all staged .js files
echo "$jsfiles" | xargs ./node_modules/.bin/prettier --write
# Add back the modified/prettified files to staging
echo "$jsfiles" | xargs git add
exit 0
The API has three functions: format
, check
, and formatWithCursor
.
const prettier = require("prettier");
format
is used to format text using Prettier. Options may be provided to override the defaults.
prettier.format("foo ( );", { semi: false });
// -> "foo()"
check
checks to see if the file has been formatted with Prettier given those options and returns a Boolean
.
This is similar to the --list-different
parameter in the CLI and is useful for running Prettier in CI scenarios.
formatWithCursor
both formats the code, and translates a cursor position from unformatted code to formatted code.
This is useful for editor integrations, to prevent the cursor from moving when code is formatted.
The cursorOffset
option should be provided, to specify where the cursor is. This option cannot be used with rangeStart
and rangeEnd
.
prettier.formatWithCursor(" 1", { cursorOffset: 2 });
// -> { formatted: '1;\n', cursorOffset: 1 }
If you need to make modifications to the AST (such as codemods), or you want to provide an alternate parser, you can do so by setting the parser
option to a function. The function signature of the parser function is:
(text: string, parsers: object, options: object) => AST;
Prettier's built-in parsers are exposed as properties on the parsers
argument.
prettier.format("lodash ( )", {
parser(text, { babylon }) {
const ast = babylon(text);
ast.program.body[0].expression.callee.name = "_";
return ast;
}
});
// -> "_();\n"
The --parser
CLI option may be a path to a node.js module exporting a parse function.
A JavaScript comment of // prettier-ignore
will exclude the next node in the abstract syntax tree from formatting.
For example:
matrix(
1, 0, 0,
0, 1, 0,
0, 0, 1
)
// prettier-ignore
matrix(
1, 0, 0,
0, 1, 0,
0, 0, 1
)
will be transformed to:
matrix(1, 0, 0, 0, 1, 0, 0, 0, 1);
// prettier-ignore
matrix(
1, 0, 0,
0, 1, 0,
0, 0, 1
)
Prettier ships with a handful of customizable format options, usable in both the CLI and API.
Specify the line length that the printer will wrap on.
For readability we recommend against using more than 80 characters:
In code styleguides, maximum line length rules are often set to 100 or 120. However, when humans write code, they don't strive to reach the maximum number of columns on every line. Developers often use whitespace to break up long lines for readability. In practice, the average line length often ends up well below the maximum.
Prettier, on the other hand, strives to fit the most code into every line. With the print width set to 120, prettier may produce overly compact, or otherwise undesirable code.
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
80 |
--print-width <int> |
printWidth: <int> |
Specify the number of spaces per indentation-level.
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
2 |
--tab-width <int> |
tabWidth: <int> |
Indent lines with tabs instead of spaces
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
false |
--use-tabs |
useTabs: <bool> |
Print semicolons at the ends of statements.
Valid options:
true
- Add a semicolon at the end of every statement.false
- Only add semicolons at the beginning of lines that may introduce ASI failures.
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
true |
--no-semi |
semi: <bool> |
Use single quotes instead of double quotes.
Notes:
- Quotes in JSX will always be double and ignore this setting.
- If the number of quotes outweighs the other quote, the quote which is less used will be used to format the string - Example:
"I'm double quoted"
results in"I'm double quoted"
and"This \"example\" is single quoted"
results in'This "example" is single quoted'
.
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
false |
--single-quote |
singleQuote: <bool> |
Print trailing commas wherever possible.
Valid options:
"none"
- No trailing commas."es5"
- Trailing commas where valid in ES5 (objects, arrays, etc.)"all"
- Trailing commas wherever possible (function arguments). This requires node 8 or a transform.
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
"none" |
--trailing-comma <none|es5|all> |
trailingComma: "<none|es5|all>" |
Print spaces between brackets in object literals.
Valid options:
true
- Example:{ foo: bar }
.false
- Example:{foo: bar}
.
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
true |
--no-bracket-spacing |
bracketSpacing: <bool> |
Put the >
of a multi-line JSX element at the end of the last line instead of being alone on the next line.
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
false |
--jsx-bracket-same-line |
jsxBracketSameLine: <bool> |
Format only a segment of a file.
These two options can be used to format code starting and ending at a given character offset (inclusive and exclusive, respectively). The range will extend:
- Backwards to the start of the first line containing the selected statement.
- Forwards to the end of the selected statement.
These options cannot be used with cursorOffset
.
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
0 |
--range-start <int> |
rangeStart: <int> |
Infinity |
--range-end <int> |
rangeEnd: <int> |
Specify which parser to use.
Both the babylon
and flow
parsers support the same set of JavaScript features (including Flow). Prettier automatically infers the parser from the input file path, so you shouldn't have to change this setting.
Built-in parsers:
Custom parsers are also supported. Since v1.5.0
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
babylon |
--parser <string> --parser ./my-parser |
parser: "<string>" parser: require("./my-parser") |
Specify the input filepath. This will be used to do parser inference.
For example, the following will use postcss
parser:
cat foo | prettier --stdin-filepath foo.css
Default | CLI Override | API Override |
---|---|---|
None | --stdin-filepath <string> |
filepath: "<string>" |
Atom users can simply install the prettier-atom package and use
Ctrl+Alt+F
to format a file (or format on save if enabled).
Emacs users should see this repository for on-demand formatting.
Vim users can simply install either sbdchd/neoformat, w0rp/ale, or mitermayer/vim-prettier, for more details see this directory.
Can be installed using the extension sidebar. Search for Prettier - JavaScript formatter
.
Can also be installed using ext install prettier-vscode
.
Check its repository for configuration and shortcuts
Install the JavaScript Prettier extension.
Sublime Text support is available through Package Control and the JsPrettier plug-in.
See the WebStorm guide.
Prettier attempts to support all JavaScript language features,
including non-standardized ones. By default it uses the
Babylon parser with all language
features enabled, but you can also use the
Flow parser with the
parser
API or --parser
CLI option.
All of JSX and Flow syntax is supported. In fact, the test suite in
tests
is the entire Flow test suite and they all pass.
Prettier also supports TypeScript, CSS, LESS, SCSS, JSON, and GraphQL.
The minimum version of TypeScript supported is 2.1.3 as it introduces the ability to have leading |
for type definitions which prettier outputs.
eslint-plugin-prettier
plugs Prettier into your ESLint workfloweslint-config-prettier
turns off all ESLint rules that are unnecessary or might conflict with Prettierprettier-eslint
passesprettier
output toeslint --fix
prettier-standard
usesprettier
andprettier-eslint
to format code with standard rulesprettier-standard-formatter
passesprettier
output tostandard --fix
prettier-miscellaneous
prettier
with a few minor extra optionsneutrino-preset-prettier
allows you to use Prettier as a Neutrino presetprettier_d
runs Prettier as a server to avoid Node.js startup delay. It also supports configuration via.prettierrc
,package.json
, and.editorconfig
.Prettier Bookmarklet
provides a bookmarklet and exposes a REST API for Prettier that allows to format CodeMirror editor in your browserprettier-github
formats code in GitHub comments
This printer is a fork of recast's printer with its algorithm replaced by the one described by Wadler in "A prettier printer". There still may be leftover code from recast that needs to be cleaned up.
The basic idea is that the printer takes an AST and returns an intermediate representation of the output, and the printer uses that to generate a string. The advantage is that the printer can "measure" the IR and see if the output is going to fit on a line, and break if not.
This means that most of the logic of printing an AST involves
generating an abstract representation of the output involving certain
commands. For example, concat(["(", line, arg, line ")"])
would
represent a concatenation of opening parens, an argument, and closing
parens. But if that doesn't fit on one line, the printer can break
where line
is specified.
More (rough) details can be found in commands.md.
Show the world you're using Prettier →
[![styled with prettier](https://img.shields.io/badge/styled_with-prettier-ff69b4.svg)](https://github.com/prettier/prettier)
See CONTRIBUTING.md.