Human Made Coding Standards WordPress coding standards, enhanced for modern development. |
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A Human Made project. |
This is a codified version of the Human Made style guide. We include phpcs, ESLint, and stylelint rules.
We welcome contributions to these standards and want to make the experience as seamless as possible. To learn more about contributing, please reference the CONTRIBUTING.md file.
Each ruleset is available individually via Composer or NPM. To install the needed ruleset, use one of the following commands:
- PHPCS:
composer require --dev humanmade/coding-standards
- ESLint:
npx install-peerdeps --dev @humanmade/eslint-config@latest
- stylelint:
npm install --save-dev stylelint @humanmade/stylelint-config
Run the following command to run the standards checks:
vendor/bin/phpcs --standard=vendor/humanmade/coding-standards .
We use the DealerDirect phpcodesniffer-composer-installer package to handle installed_paths
for PHPCS when first installing the HM ruleset. If you an error such as ERROR: Referenced sniff "WordPress-Core" does not exist
, delete the composer.lock
file and vendor
directories and re-install Composer dependencies.
The final .
here specifies the files you want to test; this is typically the current directory (.
), but you can also selectively check files or directories by specifying them instead.
You can add this to your Travis YAML file as a test:
script:
- phpunit
- vendor/bin/phpcs --standard=vendor/humanmade/coding-standards .
This standard includes special support for a .phpcsignore
file (in the future, this should be built into phpcs itself). Simply place a .phpcsignore
file in your root directory (wherever you're going to run phpcs
from).
The format of this file is similar to .gitignore
and similar files: one pattern per line, comment lines should start with a #
, and whitespace-only lines are ignored:
# Exclude our tests directory.
tests/
# Exclude any file ending with ".inc"
*\.inc
Note that the patterns should match the PHP_CodeSniffer style: *
is translated to .*
for convenience, but all other characters work like a regular expression.
Patterns are relative to the directory that the .phpcsignore
file lives in. On load, they are translated to absolute patterns: e.g. */tests/*
in /your/dir/.phpcsignore
will become /your/dir/.*/tests/.*
as a regular expression. This differs from the regular PHP_CodeSniffer practice.
If you want to add further rules (such as WordPress.com VIP-specific rules) or customize PHPCS defaults, you can create your own custom standard file (e.g. phpcs.ruleset.xml
):
<?xml version="1.0"?>
<ruleset>
<!-- Files or directories to check -->
<file>.</file>
<!-- Path to strip from the front of file paths inside reports (displays shorter paths) -->
<arg name="basepath" value="." />
<!-- Set a minimum PHP version for PHPCompatibility -->
<config name="testVersion" value="7.2-" />
<!-- Use HM Coding Standards -->
<rule ref="vendor/humanmade/coding-standards" />
<!-- Add VIP-specific rules -->
<rule ref="WordPress-VIP" />
</ruleset>
You can then reference this file when running phpcs:
vendor/bin/phpcs --standard=phpcs.ruleset.xml .
You can also customise the rule to exclude elements if they aren't applicable to the project:
<rule ref="vendor/humanmade/coding-standards">
<!-- Disable short array syntax -->
<exclude name="HM.Debug.ForceShortArray" />
</rule>
Rules can also be disabled inline. phpcs rules can be disabled with a // @codingStandardsIgnoreLine
comment, and ESLint rules can be disabled with a /* eslint disable ... */
comment.
To find out what these codes are, specify -s
when running phpcs
, and the code will be output as well. You can specify a full code, or a partial one to disable groups of errors.
The phpcs standard is based upon the WordPress-VIP
standard from WordPress Coding Standards, with customisation and additions to match our style guide.
The ESLint package contains an ESLint configuration which you can use to validate your JavaScript code style. While it is possible to run ESLint via phpcs, we recommend you install and use eslint via npm directly or use linter-bot. See the @humanmade/eslint-config
package README for more information on configuring ESLint to use the Human Made coding standards.
Once you have installed the @humanmade/eslint-config
npm package, you may simply specify that your own project-level ESLint file extends the humanmade
configuration. If you install this globally (npm install -g @humanmade/eslint-config
) you can also reference the configuration directly from the command line via eslint -c humanmade .
Alternatively, you can create your own configuration and extend these rules:
.eslintrc
{
"extends": "@humanmade"
}
The stylelint package contains a stylelint configuration which you can use to validate your CSS and SCSS code style. We recommend you install and use stylelint via npm directly or use linter-bot. See the @humanmade/stylelint
package README for more information on configuring stylelint to use the Human Made coding standards.
To integrate the Human Made rules into your project, add a .stylelintrc
file and extend these rules. You can also add your own rules and overrides for further customization.
{
"extends": "@humanmade/stylelint-config",
"rules": {
...
}
}