jslint4java can be run as an executable jar file:
$ java -jar jslint4java-1.3.1.jar usage: jslint [options] file.js ... --adsafe If adsafe should be enforced --bitwise If bitwise operators should not be allowed --browser If the standard browser globals should be predefined --cap If upper case html should be allowed --css If css workarounds should be tolerated --debug If debugger statements should be allowed --eqeqeq If === should be required --evil If eval should be allowed --forin If for in statements must filter --fragment If html fragments should be allowed --immed If immediate invocations must be wrapped in parens --indent The number of spaces used for indentation (default is 4) --laxbreak If line breaks should not be checked --newcap If constructor names must be capitalized --nomen If names should be checked --on If html event handlers should be allowed --onevar If only one var statement per function should be allowed --passfail If the scan should stop on first error --plusplus If increment/decrement should not be allowed --regexp If the . should not be allowed in regexp literals --rhino If the rhino environment globals should be predefined --safe If use of some browser features should be restricted --sidebar If the system object should be predefined --strict Require the "use strict"; pragma --sub If all forms of subscript notation are tolerated --undef If variables should be declared before used --white If strict whitespace rules apply --widget If the yahoo widgets globals should be predefined using jslint version 2009-06-12 $
The list of options is derived from the Option enum. For fuller documentation of each option, see the jslint web site.
You must pass a number of javascript files on the command line. For each one, jslint4java will produce a list of errors on stdout. If any errors are found, an exit code of 1 will be returned.
Sample error output:
$ cat dodgy.js someVar = 42 $ java -jar jslint4java-1.3.1.jar dodgy.js jslint:dodgy.js:0:12:Missing semicolon. $
The fields are colon separated and consist of:
Most command line flags are boolean. If you wish to pass a value to a flag
(e.g. --indent
), add it using an equals. For example:
$ cat happy.js var x; if (x) { x = 42; } $ java -jar jslint4java-1.3.1.jar --white happy.js jslint:happy.js:2:2:Expected 'x' to have an indentation of 4 instead of 2. $ java -jar jslint4java-1.3.1.jar --white --indent=2 happy.js $