deno lint, linterdeno lint [OPTIONS] [files]...Lint JavaScript/TypeScript source code.
deno lint
deno lint myfile1.ts myfile2.js
Print result as JSON:
deno lint --json
Read from stdin:
cat file.ts | deno lint -
cat file.ts | deno lint --json -
List available rules:
deno lint --rules
To ignore specific diagnostics, you can write an ignore comment on the preceding line with a rule name (or multiple):
// deno-lint-ignore no-explicit-any
// deno-lint-ignore require-await no-empty
To ignore linting on an entire file, you can add an ignore comment at the top of the file:
// deno-lint-ignore-file
--compact Output lint result in compact format.
--fix Fix any linting errors for rules that support it.
--ignore Ignore linting particular source files.
--json Output lint result in JSON format.
--rules List available rules.
--rules-exclude Exclude lint rules.
--rules-include Include lint rules.
--rules-tags Use set of rules with a tag.
--allow-import Short flag: -I
Allow importing from remote hosts. Optionally specify allowed IP addresses and host names, with ports as necessary. Default value: deno.land:443,jsr.io:443,esm.sh:443,cdn.jsdelivr.net:443,raw.githubusercontent.com:443,user.githubusercontent.com:443.
--config Short flag: -c
Configure different aspects of deno including TypeScript, linting, and code formatting. Typically the configuration file will be called deno.json or deno.jsonc and automatically detected; in that case this flag is not necessary.
--deny-import Deny importing from remote hosts. Optionally specify denied IP addresses and host names, with ports as necessary.
--ext Specify the file extension to lint when reading from stdin.For example, use jsx to lint JSX files or tsx for TSX files.This argument is necessary because stdin input does not automatically infer the file type.Example usage: cat file.jsx | deno lint - --ext=jsx.
--no-config Disable automatic loading of the configuration file.
--permit-no-files Don't return an error code if no files were found.
--no-clear-screen Do not clear terminal screen when under watch mode.
--watch Watch for file changes and restart process automatically. Only local files from entry point module graph are watched.
--watch-exclude Exclude provided files/patterns from watch mode.
For a complete list of supported rules, visit List of rules documentation page.
To ignore a whole file use // deno-lint-ignore-file at the top of the file:
// deno-lint-ignore-file
function foo(): any {
// ...
}
You can also specify the reason for ignoring the file:
// deno-lint-ignore-file -- reason for ignoring
function foo(): any {
// ...
}
The ignore directive must be placed before the first statement or declaration:
// Copyright 2018-2024 the Deno authors. All rights reserved. MIT license.
/**
* Some JS doc
*/
// deno-lint-ignore-file
import { bar } from "./bar.js";
function foo(): any {
// ...
}
You can also ignore certain diagnostics in the whole file:
// deno-lint-ignore-file no-explicit-any no-empty
function foo(): any {
// ...
}
If there are multiple // deno-lint-ignore-file directives, all but the first one are ignored:
// This is effective
// deno-lint-ignore-file no-explicit-any no-empty
// But this is NOT effective
// deno-lint-ignore-file no-debugger
function foo(): any {
debugger; // not ignored!
}
To ignore specific diagnostics use // deno-lint-ignore <codes...> on the preceding line of the offending line.
// deno-lint-ignore no-explicit-any
function foo(): any {
// ...
}
// deno-lint-ignore no-explicit-any explicit-function-return-type
function bar(a: any) {
// ...
}
You must specify the names of the rules to be ignored.
You can also specify the reason for ignoring the diagnostic:
// deno-lint-ignore no-explicit-any -- reason for ignoring
function foo(): any {
// ...
}
ban-unused-ignore itself deno lint provides ban-unused-ignore rule, which will detect ignore directives that don't ever suppress certain diagnostics. This is useful when you want to discover ignore directives that are no longer necessary after refactoring the code.
In a few cases, however, you might want to ignore ban-unused-ignore rule itself. One of the typical cases would be when working with auto-generated files; it makes sense to add file-level ignore directives for some rules, and there's almost no need for detecting unused directives via ban-unused-ignore in this case.
You can use // deno-lint-ignore-file ban-unused-ignore as always if you want to suppress the rule for a whole file:
// deno-lint-ignore-file ban-unused-ignore no-explicit-any
// `no-explicit-any` isn't used but you'll get no diagnostics because of ignoring
// `ban-unused-ignore`
console.log(42);
Do note that ignoring ban-unused-ignore itself only works via file-level ignore directives. This means that per line directives, like // deno-lint-ignore ban-unused-ignore, don't work at all. If you want to ignore ban-unused-ignore for some special reasons, make sure to add it as a file-level ignore directive.
For more information about linting and formating in Deno, and the differences between these two utilities, visit the Linting and Formatting page in our Fundamentals section.
© 2018–2025 the Deno authors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://docs.deno.com/runtime/reference/cli/lint