Trim trailing spaces from each line of the selected files
This plugin requires Grunt ^1.1
and Node.js
version to be minimum of 14.15.0
, which is the active Long Term Support (LTS) version.
Add this to your project's Gruntfile.js
configuration:
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-trimtrailingspaces');
Then add grunt-trimtrailingspaces
to your "package.json" dependencies. This can be done with:
npm install grunt-trimtrailingspaces --save-dev
Or by manually editing the package.json
file by adding the following line inside devDependencies
object:
"grunt-trimtrailingspaces": "^6.0.1"
Later on it would be possible to install the plugin with the command npm install
It can be updated with the command npm update
, in case there is a newer version in the
npm
registry.
The name to use in your own task definitions is trimtrailingspaces
.
Add an entry to your Gruntfile.js
, within the initConfig
object, which will define the
files of which will the trailing spaces to be removed.
By using the src
property for selecting files to be processed, they are replaced by the ones processed.
By setting the failIfTrimmed
option to true, the grunt task will fail after
trimming all files if any whitespace was removed. This is very useful for
running trimtrailingspaces as a pre-commit task (in combination with
grunt-githooks
), because it will
prevent the commit from going through which would not include the trimming
changes.
The examples below are using the built-in custom filter property.
...
trimtrailingspaces: {
main: {
src: ['public_html/js/**/*.js'],
options: {
filter: 'isFile',
encoding: 'utf8',
failIfTrimmed: false
}
}
}
...
It is possible to save the processed files to a different location by using the files
property, as shown below.
The destination (key) should be a directory path in which the src files (array value) are stored.
No trailing slash needed.
Please note that this method will create a flat directory of the result.
...
trimtrailingspaces: {
main: {
files: {
'public_html/js/trimmed': ['public_html/js/**/*.js']
},
filter: 'isFile',
encoding: 'utf8'
}
}
...
For further information on how files are matched, please see the
documentation of the minimatch
package,
as it is used underneath Grunt.
To run it:
grunt trimtrailingspaces
"A Beginner's Guide to Open Source: The Best Advice for Making your First Contribution".
Also there is a blog post about "45 Github Issues Dos and Don’ts".
Linting is done with ESLint and can be executed with npm run lint
.
There should be no errors appearing after any JavaScript file changes.
Copyright (c) Juga Paazmaya [email protected]
Licensed under the MIT license.