dart-sdk/pkg/analyzer
Brian Wilkerson 06be97c607 Capture the agreed on style for import prefix names
Change-Id: I6eba4a7e37a72677c58d219892cd2e4c74560356
Reviewed-on: https://dart-review.googlesource.com/c/sdk/+/314220
Reviewed-by: Samuel Rawlins <srawlins@google.com>
Commit-Queue: Brian Wilkerson <brianwilkerson@google.com>
Reviewed-by: Konstantin Shcheglov <scheglov@google.com>
2023-07-18 04:09:58 +00:00
..
doc Capture the agreed on style for import prefix names 2023-07-18 04:09:58 +00:00
example
lib Use 'augmented' for ClassHierarchy. 2023-07-17 21:12:49 +00:00
test Use 'augmented' for ClassHierarchy. 2023-07-17 21:12:49 +00:00
tool Update glossary links and remove content from generated page. 2023-07-17 21:22:42 +00:00
.gitignore
analysis_options.yaml
CHANGELOG.md Deprecate ExecutableElement.returnType, use returnType2 instead. 2023-06-29 23:16:59 +00:00
LICENSE
messages.yaml Update glossary links and remove content from generated page. 2023-07-17 21:22:42 +00:00
OWNERS
pubspec.yaml Add InstanceElement as a super-interface for InterfaceElement and InlineClassElement. 2023-06-28 00:56:05 +00:00
README.md Link to dart.dev for linter rules 2023-06-02 18:26:13 +00:00
TRIAGE.md

pub package package publisher

This package provides a library that performs static analysis of Dart code. It is useful for tool integration and embedding.

End-users should use the dart analyze command-line tool to analyze their Dart code.

Integrators that want to add Dart support to their editor should use the Dart Analysis Server. The Analysis Server API Specification is available. If you are adding Dart support to an editor or IDE, please let us know by emailing our list.

Configuring the analyzer

Both dart analyze and Dart Analysis Server can be configured with an analysis_options.yaml file (using an .analysis_options file is deprecated). This YAML file can control which files and paths are analyzed, which lints are applied, and more.

If you are embedding the analyzer library in your project, you are responsible for finding the analysis options file, parsing it, and configuring the analyzer.

The analysis options file should live at the root of your project (for example, next to your pubspec.yaml). Different embedders of analyzer, such as dart analyze or Dart Analysis Server, may choose to find the file in various different ways. Consult their documentation to learn more.

Here is an example file that instructs the analyzer to ignore two files:

analyzer:
  exclude:
    - test/_data/p4/lib/lib1.dart
    - test/_data/p5/p5.dart
    - test/_data/bad*.dart
    - test/_brokendata/**

Note that you can use globs, as defined by the glob package.

Here is an example file that enables two lint rules:

linter:
  rules:
    - camel_case_types
    - empty_constructor_bodies

Check out all the available Dart lint rules.

You can combine the analyzer section and the linter section into a single configuration. Here is an example:

analyzer:
  exclude:
    - test/_data/p4/lib/lib1.dart
linter:
  rules:
    - camel_case_types

For more information, see the docs for customizing static analysis.

Who uses this library?

Many tools embed this library, such as:

Support

Post issues and feature requests at https://github.com/dart-lang/sdk/issues. These will be triaged according to the analyzer triage priorities.

Questions and discussions are welcome at the Dart Analyzer Discussion Group.

Background

The APIs in this package were originally machine generated by a translator and were based on an earlier Java implementation. Several of the API's still look like their Java predecessors rather than clean Dart APIs.

In addition, there is currently no clean distinction between public and internal APIs. We plan to address this issue but doing so will, unfortunately, require a large number of breaking changes. We will try to minimize the pain this causes for our clients, but some pain is inevitable.

License

See the LICENSE file.