Make sure that your import statements stay consistent no matter who writes them and what their preferences are.
A plugin that makes Prettier organize your imports (i. e. sorts, combines and removes unused ones) using the organizeImports
feature of the TypeScript language service API. This is the same as using the "Organize Imports" action in VS Code.
Features
- 👌 Dependency-free (just peer-dependencies you probably already have).
- 💪 Supports
.js
,.jsx
,.ts
,.tsx
and.vue
files. - 🚀 Zero config.
- 🤓 No more weird diffs or annoying merge conflicts in PRs caused by import statements.
- 🤯 If your editor supports auto-imports, you'll stop thinking about your imports so much that you won't even care about their order anymore.
Caveat
This plugin inherits, extends, and then overrides the built-in Prettier parsers for babel
, babel-ts
, typescript
and vue
. This means that it is incompatible with other plugins that do the same; only the last loaded plugin that exports one of those parsers will function.
npm install --save-dev prettier-plugin-organize-imports
Note that prettier
and typescript
are peer dependencies, so make sure you have those installed in your project.
Automatic plugin discovery has been removed. Thus you need to configure Prettier to use the plugin according to the Plugins docs, for example by adding it to the plugins
config option:
{
"plugins": ["prettier-plugin-organize-imports"]
}
The plugin will be loaded by Prettier automatically. No configuration needed.
Note that automatic plugin discovery is not supported with some package managers, e. g. Yarn PnP (see https://github.com/prettier/prettier/issues/8474). In that case follow the instructions for Prettier 3 above.
Files containing the substring // organize-imports-ignore
or // tslint:disable:ordered-imports
are skipped.
If you don't want destructive code actions (like removing unused imports), you can enable the option organizeImportsSkipDestructiveCodeActions
via your Prettier config.
{
"organizeImportsSkipDestructiveCodeActions": true
}
For compatibility with ESLint or other linters, see "Integrating with Linters" in the Prettier docs. You should have any import order rules/plugins disabled.
Depending on your configuration, if you need the React
import to stay even if it's "unused" (i.e. only needed for the JSX factory), make sure to have the jsx
option set to react
in your tsconfig.json
. For more details click here.
Make sure that you have the optional peer dependency vue-tsc
installed.
npm install --save-dev vue-tsc
If you're using Vue.js with Pug templates, you'll also need to install @vue/language-plugin-pug
as a dev dependency, and configure it in vueCompilerOptions
(see usage).
If something doesn't work, you can try to prefix your prettier
command with DEBUG=true
which will enable this plugin to print some logs.
This plugin acts outside of Prettier's scope because "Prettier only prints code. It does not transform it.", and technically sorting is a code transformation because it changes the AST (this plugin even removes code, i. e. unused imports). In my opinion however, the import statements are not really part of the code, they are merely directives that instruct the module system where to find the code (only true as long as your imports are side-effects free regarding the global scope, i. e. import order doesn't matter), comparable with using
directives in C# or #include
preprocessing directives in C. Therefore the practical benefits outweigh sticking with the philosophy in this case.
See changelog.md.
MIT.