The --fix
option on the command line can automatically fix some of the problems reported by this rule.
This rule enforces spacing around the colon in object literal properties. It can verify each property individually, or it can ensure horizontal alignment of adjacent properties in an object literal.
This rule enforces consistent spacing between keys and values in object literal properties. In the case of long lines, it is acceptable to add a new line wherever whitespace is allowed.
This rule has an object option:
"beforeColon": false
(default) disallows spaces between the key and the colon in object literals."beforeColon": true
requires at least one space between the key and the colon in object literals."afterColon": true
(default) requires at least one space between the colon and the value in object literals."afterColon": false
disallows spaces between the colon and the value in object literals."mode": "strict"
(default) enforces exactly one space before or after colons in object literals."mode": "minimum"
enforces one or more spaces before or after colons in object literals."align": "value"
enforces horizontal alignment of values in object literals."align": "colon"
enforces horizontal alignment of both colons and values in object literals."align"
with an object value allows for fine-grained spacing when values are being aligned in object literals."singleLine"
specifies a spacing style for single-line object literals."multiLine"
specifies a spacing style for multi-line object literals.Please note that you can either use the top-level options or the grouped options (singleLine
and multiLine
) but not both.
Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default { "beforeColon": false }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "beforeColon": false }]*/ var obj = { "foo" : 42 };
Examples of correct code for this rule with the default { "beforeColon": false }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "beforeColon": false }]*/ var obj = { "foo": 42 };
Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "beforeColon": true }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "beforeColon": true }]*/ var obj = { "foo": 42 };
Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "beforeColon": true }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "beforeColon": true }]*/ var obj = { "foo" : 42 };
Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default { "afterColon": true }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "afterColon": true }]*/ var obj = { "foo":42 };
Examples of correct code for this rule with the default { "afterColon": true }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "afterColon": true }]*/ var obj = { "foo": 42 };
Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "afterColon": false }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "afterColon": false }]*/ var obj = { "foo": 42 };
Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "afterColon": false }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "afterColon": false }]*/ var obj = { "foo":42 };
Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default { "mode": "strict" }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "mode": "strict" }]*/ call({ foobar: 42, bat: 2 * 2 });
Examples of correct code for this rule with the default { "mode": "strict" }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "mode": "strict" }]*/ call({ foobar: 42, bat: 2 * 2 });
Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "mode": "minimum" }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "mode": "minimum" }]*/ call({ foobar: 42, bat: 2 * 2 });
Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "align": "value" }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "align": "value" }]*/ var obj = { a: value, bcde: 42, fg : foo() };
Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "align": "value" }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "align": "value" }]*/ var obj = { a: value, bcde: 42, fg: foo(), h: function() { return this.a; }, ijkl: 'Non-consecutive lines form a new group' }; var obj = { a: "foo", longPropertyName: "bar" };
Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the { "align": "colon" }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "align": "colon" }]*/ call({ foobar: 42, bat: 2 * 2 });
Examples of correct code for this rule with the { "align": "colon" }
option:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "align": "colon" }]*/ call({ foobar: 42, bat : 2 * 2 });
The align
option can take additional configuration through the beforeColon
, afterColon
, mode
, and on
options.
If align
is defined as an object, but not all of the parameters are provided, undefined parameters will default to the following:
// Defaults align: { "beforeColon": false, "afterColon": true, "on": "colon", "mode": "strict" }
Examples of correct code for this rule with sample { "align": { } }
options:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "align": { "beforeColon": true, "afterColon": true, "on": "colon" } }]*/ var obj = { "one" : 1, "seven" : 7 }
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "align": { "beforeColon": false, "afterColon": false, "on": "value" } }]*/ var obj = { "one": 1, "seven":7 }
The multiLine
and align
options can differ, which allows for fine-tuned control over the key-spacing
of your files. align
will not inherit from multiLine
if align
is configured as an object.
multiLine
is used any time an object literal spans multiple lines. The align
configuration is used when there is a group of properties in the same object. For example:
var myObj = { key1: 1, // uses multiLine key2: 2, // uses align (when defined) key3: 3, // uses align (when defined) key4: 4 // uses multiLine }
Examples of incorrect code for this rule with sample { "align": { }, "multiLine": { } }
options:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "multiLine": { "beforeColon": false, "afterColon":true }, "align": { "beforeColon": true, "afterColon": true, "on": "colon" } }]*/ var obj = { "myObjectFunction": function() { // Do something }, "one" : 1, "seven" : 7 }
Examples of correct code for this rule with sample { "align": { }, "multiLine": { } }
options:
/*eslint key-spacing: ["error", { "multiLine": { "beforeColon": false, "afterColon": true }, "align": { "beforeColon": true, "afterColon": true, "on": "colon" } }]*/ var obj = { "myObjectFunction": function() { // Do something // }, // These are two separate groups, so no alignment between `myObjectFuction` and `one` "one" : 1, "seven" : 7 // `one` and `seven` are in their own group, and therefore aligned }
Examples of correct code for this rule with sample { "singleLine": { }, "multiLine": { } }
options:
/*eslint "key-spacing": [2, { "singleLine": { "beforeColon": false, "afterColon": true }, "multiLine": { "beforeColon": true, "afterColon": true, "align": "colon" } }]*/ var obj = { one: 1, "two": 2, three: 3 }; var obj2 = { "two" : 2, three : 3 };
If you have another convention for property spacing that might not be consistent with the available options, or if you want to permit multiple styles concurrently you can safely disable this rule.
This rule was introduced in ESLint 0.9.0.
© JS Foundation and other contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://eslint.org/docs/rules/key-spacing