In this tutorial you'll learn how to setup a Next.js project with Airbnb ESLint, Prettier, Typescript and Tailwind CSS in a correct way so that you don't need to turn off a lot of rules inside .eslintrc.json
anymore.
Create Project
I recommend starting a new Next.js app using create-next-app
, which sets up everything automatically for you.
npx create-next-app@latest
Remember to select Yes
for these 3 prompts to have a basic setup for TypeScript, ESLint and Tailwind CSS:
Would you like to use TypeScript? No / Yes
Would you like to use ESLint? No / Yes
Would you like to use Tailwind CSS? No / Yes
Prettier
Prettier is an code formatter. You can install it with your package manager:
yarn add --dev --exact prettier
npm install --save-dev --save-exact prettier
Then, create a config file named .prettierrc.json
.
Check out all possible config options. If you don't need to set any options, just leave a {}
.
Example:
{
"singleQuote": true,
}
At this point you can run the Prettier and it should works!
yarn prettier . --write
npx prettier . --write
You can also setup Prettier for your editor so that you can run Prettier efficiently with keymap. See docs.
Tailwind CSS
There's an official Prettier plugin for Tailwind CSS that scans your files for class attributes containing Tailwind CSS classes, and then sorts those classes automatically following the recommended class order.
Install the plugin:
yarn add --dev prettier prettier-plugin-tailwindcss
npm install --save-dev prettier prettier-plugin-tailwindcss
Add the following line into the prettier config:
"plugins": ["prettier-plugin-tailwindcss"]
Now the example config becomes:
{
"singleQuote": true,
"plugins": ["prettier-plugin-tailwindcss"]
}
If you run Prettier now, the Tailwind CSS classes name will be sorted!
ESLint
ESLint is a tool for identifying and reporting on patterns found in ECMAScript code, with the goal of making code more consistent and avoiding bugs.
You can add community plugins, configurations, and parsers to extend the functionality of ESLint.
Airbnb's rules for ECMAScript 6+ and React
npx install-peerdeps --dev eslint-config-airbnb
Add airbnb
and airbnb/hooks
to .eslintrc.json
:
{
"extends": [
"airbnb",
"airbnb/hooks",
"next/core-web-vitals"
]
}
(next/core-web-vitals
is the default rule set by create-next-app
)
If you run lint now:
yarn run lint
npm run lint
You'll see error like:
JSX not allowed in files with extension '.tsx'
which means that we don't have the TypeScript support in our setting now.
Airbnb's rules for TypeScript
Install:
yarn add eslint-config-airbnb-typescript \
@typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin@^6.0.0 \
@typescript-eslint/parser@^6.0.0 \
--dev
npm install eslint-config-airbnb-typescript \
@typescript-eslint/eslint-plugin@^6.0.0 \
@typescript-eslint/parser@^6.0.0 \
--save-dev
Add airbnb-typescript
and parserOptions
to .eslintrc.json
:
{
"extends": [
"airbnb",
"airbnb-typescript",
"airbnb/hooks",
"next/core-web-vitals"
],
"parserOptions": {
"project": "./tsconfig.json"
}
}
Integrate Prettier with ESLint
Finally, we need to turn off all rules that are unnecessary or might conflict with Prettier, which can be done with the following package:
yarn add --dev eslint-config-prettier
npm install --save-dev eslint-config-prettier
Add it to .eslintrc.json
:
{
"extends": [
"airbnb",
"airbnb-typescript",
"airbnb/hooks",
"next/core-web-vitals",
"prettier"
],
"parserOptions": {
"project": "./tsconfig.json"
}
}
Each rule will extend or overwrite the previous ones, and in this situation we want to turn off the rules that might conflict with Prettier, so we should put it at the end of the list.
Final Words
After following this tutorial, you should setup an awesome environment for developing Next.js project. All of the installation and setup commands are taken from the following official docs. You can check them out for more detail explanation:
- Next.js
- Prettier
- Tailwind CSS Plugin
- eslint-config-airbnb
- eslint-config-airbnb-typescript
- Integrating Prettier with Linters
Thatβs a wrap. Thanks for reading. If you like this kind of stuff, consider following for more.
You can also see what I am working on my Personal Website and GitHub.
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