Rely on jest for now until we get a better and less hacky solution to running tests in the browser, probably a totally different test suite with different behavior/goals.
- Add missing object-assign dependency
- Add batchedUpdates to ReactDOMClient, rename the two addons to `unstable_`
- Delete react/addons/* (leaving react/addons with a slightly updated warning)
- Add README.md, LICENSE, PATENTS to each addons package
- babel-eslint ^3.1.14 fixesbabel/babel-eslint#120
- babel updated from ^5.3.3 to ^3.5.5, which changes stuff, I guess
- eslint updated from ^0.21.2 to ^0.22.1, which makes `no-shadow` also
check class declarations
spicyj noticed newer versions of babel-eslint seemed not to error on
no-unused-vars, and I was able to repro. It seems like something broke
between 3.1.9 and 3.1.10. (Smaller repro case and babel-eslint bug
report to come)
His commit failed on travis, but not on his local machine:
https://travis-ci.org/facebook/react/jobs/65468729
See #2869
Checks that the *second* argument of warning and invariant are a literal
string, or a concatination of literal strings, and that the number of
arguments is correct based on the number of %s substrings.
This commit also fixes a few places where the existing code had broken
error messages!
The rule itself is pretty straightforward, although adding the tests
ended up being a bit painful, as eslint-tester depends on mocha, and
therefore needs to be run in a separate grunt task.
Closes#3971.
> After #3968, the next thing we should do is start linting our tests.
> Historically we've ignored them due to lack of parser compatibility.
> But that shouldn't be a problem anymore. We may want to integrate
> https://www.npmjs.com/package/eslint-plugin-react to more aggressively
> lint our JSX in tests.
I understand this diff touches a lot of stuff, so I tried to keep it to
a near-minimal set of changes to make eslint happy.
- Removes esprima-fb dependency
- Tightens up eslintrc with some minor rules we were pretty-much
following anyways.
- Adds pretty colors to the `grunt lint` output
- Breaks block-scoped-var :(
Size comparison:
```
raw gz Compared to master @ 6ed98ec0c8
= = build/JSXTransformer.js
-15736 -3247 build/react-with-addons.js
+287 +7 build/react-with-addons.min.js
-14412 -2887 build/react.js
+274 +15 build/react.min.js
```
Differences mostly look to be various bits of whitespace that Babel ends up removing during its transforms (https://gist.github.com/spicyj/21ef31f4d95fb7a58daf). In minified files, mostly additions of `"use strict";`.
Update links to use https:// where it is supported. There's probably a lot
more that could be fixed, but these are the core ones I found (especially
the download links in order to prevent MITM attacks). Note that there are
some fb.me links that will redirect to http:// even while accessed over
https://, but this seemed like the best way to fix those for now.
NOTE: Only non-third-party files were modified. There are references to
http:// URLs in vendored/third-party files, but seems appropriate to fix
upstream for those rather than editing the files.
Also, copy one image locally to the blog, as it was hotlinking to a site
that did not support https://.
Last, use youtube-nocookie.com instead of youtube.com for video embeds,
as the former doesn't try to set a cookie on load (privacy enhancement).
Eslint now allows us to use a different parser, which allows us to use
esprima-fb explicitly. This means we don't have to wait for espree to add
things like rest-param parsing. Though we do need eslint to upgrade its rules
to handle that AST.
I had hoped to enable parsing of our tests but we can't do that until we
change esprima-fb's XJS nodes to JSX.
While I was here, I also enabled the no-unused-vars rule since eslint
understands template strings. I also made the single quote enforcement
actually fail instead of just warn.
In 1.4.0 we can use the TypeScript API directly to preprocess our files.
This lets us get rid of a dependency.
https://github.com/Microsoft/TypeScript/wiki/Using-the-Compiler-API
We can also use this to provide our default libraries so that we don't
need to keep the references in the test file.