Command line tool for transforming all double-quoted-strings in JavaScript (.js) file(s) to single-quoted-strings
npm install jsq -g
jsq fileOrDirectory [fileOrDirectory [...]] [-v]
-v
will give you verbose output.
A file containing the code:
var y = "hello";
function x(){
return "hello\" I am a string's for sure";
}
Will contain this, after jsq
is run on it:
var y = 'hello';
function x(){
return 'hello" I am a string\'s for sure';
}
TLDR; No don't worry. Files are just skipped.
When in verbose mode jsq
prints an error for one of two reasons:
- The JavaScript code is invalid and can not be parsed correctly: The file is skipped.
- There is a bug in
jsq
that would cause it to produce malformed JavaScript: The file is skipped.
So basically, jsq
is just letting you know that some files are beeing skipped.
I created this tool because we where initially using both single-quoted and double-quoted strings in our JavaScript code on a project.
Then we decided that our coding-standard should be single-quoted JavaSctipt strings, but the codebase was a mix.
With jsq
I was able to clean up the entire project in a jiff.