Enforce the closing bracket location for JSX multiline elements.
Fixable: This rule is automatically fixable using the --fix
flag on the command line.
This rule checks all JSX multiline elements and verifies the location of the closing bracket. By default this one must be aligned with the opening tag.
The following patterns are considered warnings:
<Hello
lastName="Smith"
firstName="John" />;
<Hello
lastName="Smith"
firstName="John"
/>;
The following patterns are not considered warnings:
<Hello firstName="John" lastName="Smith" />;
<Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
There are two ways to configure this rule.
The first form is a string shortcut corresponding to the location
values specified below. If omitted, it defaults to "tag-aligned"
.
"react/jsx-closing-bracket-location": <enabled> // -> [<enabled>, "tag-aligned"]
"react/jsx-closing-bracket-location": [<enabled>, "<location>"]
The second form allows you to distinguish between non-empty and self-closing tags. Both properties are optional, and both default to "tag-aligned"
. You can also disable the rule for one particular type of tag by setting the value to false
.
"react/jsx-closing-bracket-location": [<enabled>, {
"nonEmpty": "<location>" || false,
"selfClosing": "<location>" || false
}]
Enforced location for the closing bracket.
tag-aligned
: must be aligned with the opening tag.line-aligned
: must be aligned with the line containing the opening tag.after-props
: must be placed right after the last prop.props-aligned
: must be aligned with the last prop.
Defaults to tag-aligned
.
For backward compatibility, you may pass an object { "location": <location> }
that is equivalent to the first string shortcut form.
The following patterns are considered warnings:
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': 1
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, 'tag-aligned']
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, 'line-aligned']
<Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
<Say
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith">
Hello
</Say>;
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': 1
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, 'tag-aligned']
var x = <Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
var x = function() {
return <Say
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
>
Hello
</Say>;
};
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, 'line-aligned']
var x = <Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
var x = function() {
return <Say
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
>
Hello
</Say>;
};
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, 'after-props']
<Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith" />;
<Say
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith">
Hello
</Say>;
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, 'props-aligned']
<Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
<Say
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
>
Hello
</Say>;
The following patterns are not considered warnings:
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': 1
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, 'tag-aligned']
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, 'line-aligned']
<Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
<Say
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
>
Hello
</Say>;
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': 1
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, 'tag-aligned']
var x = <Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
var x = function() {
return <Say
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
>
Hello
</Say>;
};
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, 'line-aligned']
var x = <Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
var x = function() {
return <Say
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
>
Hello
</Say>;
};
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, {selfClosing: 'after-props'}]
<Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith" />;
<Say
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
>
Hello
</Say>;
// 'jsx-closing-bracket-location': [1, {selfClosing: 'props-aligned', nonEmpty: 'after-props'}]
<Hello
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith"
/>;
<Say
firstName="John"
lastName="Smith">
Hello
</Say>;
If you are not using JSX then you can disable this rule.