internet-programming/lab3/node_modules/eslint-plugin-import/docs/rules/no-absolute-path.md

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2023-11-02 02:38:40 +04:00
# import/no-absolute-path
🔧 This rule is automatically fixable by the [`--fix` CLI option](https://eslint.org/docs/latest/user-guide/command-line-interface#--fix).
<!-- end auto-generated rule header -->
Node.js allows the import of modules using an absolute path such as `/home/xyz/file.js`. That is a bad practice as it ties the code using it to your computer, and therefore makes it unusable in packages distributed on `npm` for instance.
This rule forbids the import of modules using absolute paths.
## Rule Details
### Fail
```js
import f from '/foo';
import f from '/some/path';
var f = require('/foo');
var f = require('/some/path');
```
### Pass
```js
import _ from 'lodash';
import foo from 'foo';
import foo from './foo';
var _ = require('lodash');
var foo = require('foo');
var foo = require('./foo');
```
### Options
By default, only ES6 imports and CommonJS `require` calls will have this rule enforced.
You may provide an options object providing true/false for any of
- `esmodule`: defaults to `true`
- `commonjs`: defaults to `true`
- `amd`: defaults to `false`
If `{ amd: true }` is provided, dependency paths for AMD-style `define` and `require`
calls will be resolved:
```js
/*eslint import/no-absolute-path: [2, { commonjs: false, amd: true }]*/
define(['/foo'], function (foo) { /*...*/ }) // reported
require(['/foo'], function (foo) { /*...*/ }) // reported
const foo = require('/foo') // ignored because of explicit `commonjs: false`
```