I never liked jsLint... tries to enforce some overzealous conventions. I've seen some comments on JSHint. Haven't tried it, but it looks nice, lets you decide your coding standard.
~Daniel Friesen (Dantman, Nadir-Seen-Fire) [http://daniel.friesen.name]
On 11-04-12 08:50 PM, Ryan Kaldari wrote:
Awesome. It seems to work well in FF4. Now we just need to tack on a jsLint button :) (Although we would have to get an exception to their "good not evil" licensing clause!)
Ryan Kaldari
On 4/12/11 5:40 PM, Brion Vibber wrote:
While pondering some directions for rapid prototyping of new UI stuff, I found myself lamenting the difficulty of editing JS and CSS code for user/site scripts and gadgets:
- lots of little things to separately click and edit for gadgets
- no syntax highlighting in the edit box
- no indication of obvious syntax errors, leading to frequent edit->preview
cycles (especially if you have to turn the gadget back off to edit successfully!)
- no automatic indentation!
- can't use the tab key
Naturally, I thought it might be wise to start doing something about it. I've made a small gadget script which hooks into editing of JS and CSS pages, and embeds the ACE code editor (http://ace.ajax.org -- a component of the Cloud9 IDE, formerly Skywriter formerly Mozilla Bespin). This doesn't fix the usability issues in Special:Gadgets, but it's a heck of a lot more pleasant to edit the gadget's JS and CSS once you get there. :)
The gadget is available on www.mediawiki.org on the 'Gadgets' tab of preferences. Note that I'm currently loading the ACE JavaScript from toolserver.org, so you may see a mixed-mode content warning if you're editing via secure.wikimedia.org. (Probably an easy fix.)
Go try it out! http://www.mediawiki.org/wiki/MediaWiki:Gadget-CodeEditor.js
IE 8 kind of explodes and I haven't had a chance to test IE9 yet, but it seems pretty consistently nice on current Firefox and Chrome and (barring some cut-n-paste troubles) Opera.
I'd really love to be able to use more content-specific editing tools like this, and using Gadgets is a good way to make this sort of tool available for testing in a real environment -- especially once we devise some ways to share gadgets across all sites more easily. I'll be similarly Gadget-izing the SVG-Edit widget that I've previously done as an extension so folks can play with it while it's still experimental, but we'll want to integrate them better as time goes on.
-- brion