It is, but I’d specifically like a rule that enforces this style of import over aliased imports. I.e. when importing a package, the order of importance is:
Relative import (if on same or lower level)
Aliased import (if in ancestor directory or different module)
Current plugin is just about force use aliases instead of relative paths (and back for deprecated aliases).
If you need to sort imports, you may try rule simple-import-sort/imports from https://github.com/lydell/eslint-plugin-simple-import-sort
It is very flexible, so you may customize your own groups. For instance, you may group aliases in one group and relative imports to another group. Check their docs
Sorry, maybe I’m not being clear - I’m not talking about sorting. I’m talking about an ESLint rule that flags alias imports that can be expressed as relative subdirectory imports, but flags other imports that could have been alias imports. Does that make sense?
Examples:
// we're in @/lib/foo// correctimport A from"./foobar/a"import B from"./b"import C from"@/lib/c"import D from"@/d"// incorrectimport A from"@/lib/foo/foobar/a"import B from"@/lib/foo/b"
Could you elaborate your idea.
If i correct understood you, you want to use relative imports inside alias directory. This is possible, you may check test about it https://github.com/vitonsky/eslint-plugin-paths/blob/d5a307866df9cf460a50301820e12e3653eb1cca/src/rules/alias.test.ts#L36-L40
Is it that you need?
It is, but I’d specifically like a rule that enforces this style of import over aliased imports. I.e. when importing a package, the order of importance is:
Current plugin is just about force use aliases instead of relative paths (and back for deprecated aliases).
If you need to sort imports, you may try rule
simple-import-sort/imports
from https://github.com/lydell/eslint-plugin-simple-import-sort It is very flexible, so you may customize your own groups. For instance, you may group aliases in one group and relative imports to another group. Check their docsSorry, maybe I’m not being clear - I’m not talking about sorting. I’m talking about an ESLint rule that flags alias imports that can be expressed as relative subdirectory imports, but flags other imports that could have been alias imports. Does that make sense?
Examples:
// we're in @/lib/foo // correct import A from "./foobar/a" import B from "./b" import C from "@/lib/c" import D from "@/d" // incorrect import A from "@/lib/foo/foobar/a" import B from "@/lib/foo/b"