* Added more biome rules * Fixes * Added a few more rules * Added global phaser to biome * Fix tpyo * Updated biome to 2.1.4; improved docs on linting/localization; added vcs support Also added `.build` to gitignore cuz reasons * Fixed tpyo * dd * Applied linter fixes * Partially fixed some private property issues * Upgraded to Biome 2.2.0; added `operatorLinebreak` and a few new rules * Moved operator linebreaks before lines * Applied kev's suggestions * Update biome.jsonc Co-authored-by: NightKev <34855794+DayKev@users.noreply.github.com> * added like all the rules and then some * modify biome.jsonc * apply biome formatting * Reverted changes to balance folder * fixed stuff * Fixed biome stripping trailing globstars from everything * made `noInvertedElse` an error rule * Add & apply fixes for `useExplicitLengthCheck`, `useAtIndex` and `noNonNullAssertedOptionalChain` * Bumped biome to 2.2.3 * Fixed a few syntax errors * Removed trailing globstars since biome actually fixed their shit * Final clean up * foobarbaz * Fixed remaining issues * Fixed a few errors in SSUI * fixed rounding issue * Fixed test to not round funky * Fixed biome false positive for vitest hooks * Apply biome:all --------- Co-authored-by: NightKev <34855794+DayKev@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Sirz Benjie <142067137+SirzBenjie@users.noreply.github.com>
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Linting & Formatting
Writing clean, readable code is important, and linters and formatters are an integral part of ensuring code quality and readability.
It is for this reason we are using Biome, an opinionated linter/formatter (akin to Prettier) with a heavy focus on speed and performance.
Installation
You probably installed Biome already without noticing it - it's included inside package.json
and should've been downloaded when you ran pnpm install
after cloning the repo. If you haven't done that yet, go do that first.
Using Biome
For the most part, Biome attempts to stay "out of your hair", letting you write code while enforcing a consistent formatting standard and only notifying for errors it can't automatically fix.
On the other hand, if Biome complains about a piece of code, there's probably a good reason why. Disable comments should be used sparingly or when readabilty demands it - your first instinct should be to fix the code in question, not disable the rule.
Editor Integration
Biome has integration with many popular code editors. See these pages for information about enabling Biome in your editor of choice.
Automated Runs
Generally speaking, most users shouldn't need to run Biome directly; in addition to editor integration, a pre-commit hook will automatically format and lint all staged files before each commit.
![WARNING] You will not be able to commit code if any staged files contain
error
-level linting problems.
If you, for whatever reason, absolutely need to bypass Lefthook for a given commit, pass the--no-verify
flag togit commit
.
We also have a Github Action to verify code quality each time a PR is updated, preventing bad code from inadvertently making its way upstream.
These are effectively the same commands as run by Lefthook, merely on a project-wide scale.
Running Biome via CLI
To run you Biome on your files manually, you have 2 main options:
-
Run the scripts included in
package.json
(pnpm biome
andpnpm biome:all
).
These have sensible defaults for command-line options, but do not allow altering certain flags (as some cannot be specified twice in the same command) -
Execute the Biome executable manually from the command line like so:
pnpm exec biome check --[flags]
This allows customizing non-overridable flags like
--diagnostic-level
on a more granular level, but requires slightly more verbosity and specifying more options.
A full list of flags and options can be found on their website, but here's a few useful ones to keep in mind:
--write
will cause Biome to write all "safe" fixes and formatting changes directly to your files (rather than just complaining and erroring out).--changed
and--staged
will limit checking to all changed or staged files respectively. Biome sources this info from the relevant version control system (in this casegit
).diagnostic-level=XXX
will only show diagnostics with at least the given severity level (info/warn/error
). Useful to only focus on errors causing a failed workflow run or similar.
Linting Rules
We primarily use Biome's recommended ruleset for linting JS/TS files, with some customizations to better suit our project's needs1.
Some things to consider:
- We have disabled rules that prioritize style over performance, such as
useTemplate
. - Some rules are currently marked as warnings (
warn
) to allow for gradual refactoring without blocking development. Do not write new code that triggers these rules! - The linter is configured to ignore specific files and folders (such as excessively large files or ones in need of refactoring) to improve performance and focus on actionable areas.
Any questions about linting rules can be brought up in the #dev-corner
channel in the community Discord.
-
A complete list of rules can be found in the
biome.jsonc
file in the project root. Many rules are accompanied by comments explaining the reasons for their inclusion (or lack thereof). ↩︎